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    folktale

    Explore " folktale" with insightful episodes like "All Things Relatable Podcast", "Simple shifts create big waves- living a life you love: Christina Lecuyer", "Point Nemo & Bell Witch", "16.a A Costume for Rangi" and "April fools" from podcasts like ""All Things Relatable", "All Things Relatable", "Oddities: A Podcast of the Strangest by the Curious", "Global Storytime Podcast" and "Myth Matters"" and more!

    Episodes (100)

    All Things Relatable Podcast

    All Things Relatable Podcast

    Candace believes in the magic a story can hold. Each week she will share a personal story, a guest interview or a conversation on various topics that will leave you enlightened, ignited and inspired.  Her hope is that you walk away from every episode changed, even if it's in the most subtle way.

     

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    Candace Dunaway is the Host of the All Things Relatable podcast. Candace practices daily gratitude and believes that this practice is the key to living a joyful life. Candace sees the world through an optimistic lens and looks for the silver linings, even in the most difficult of times. She believes that life is a collection of simple moments of joy that compound to create a happy life.

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    Simple shifts create big waves- living a life you love: Christina Lecuyer

    Simple shifts create big waves- living a life you love: Christina Lecuyer

    In this episode, Christina talks about mindset. She shares how she had the looks, the money and the career, but was still unhappy and hated herself, and her transition to loving herself and her daily life. She still has struggles, but they have gone from bad days to bad moments. She offers some strategies that anyone can use in their own life to start living a life they love. 

     

    Bio

    Christina Lecuyer is a former professional golfer turned Confidence and Success Coach, Motivational Speaker, and Host of “Decide It’s Your Turn: The Podcast”. 

    Through one-on-one coaching, mastermind programs, immersive events such as “Decide It’s Your Turn: Live” and “Decide It’s Your Turn: The Retreat”; Christina helps you shatter limiting beliefs, become more confident, and holds you accountable to creating and executing your most purposeful and profitable life!

     

     

    Christina Lecuyer Resources:

     

    Follow Candace on IG

    Candace Dunaway is the Host of the All Things Relatable podcast. Candace practices daily gratitude and believes that this practice is the key to living a joyful life. Candace sees the world through an optimistic lens and looks for the silver linings, even in the most difficult of times. She believes that life is a collection of simple moments of joy that compound to create a happy life.

    Follow Candace on Instagram

    Use coupon code candace10 to receive 10% off your set of Now by Solu Meditation Speakers

    Get your meditation speakers here

    Point Nemo & Bell Witch

    Point Nemo & Bell Witch

    Welcome back to Oddities, the podcast where no topic is too *~*StRaNgE*~*.

    Dive into the sea to find the oceanic point of inaccessibility with Anna and then flip through the historical archives to figure out who or what the Bell Witch truly was.

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    Email: Oddities.talk@gmail.com
    Huge shout out to Kyle Head for our awesome new intro! Check out his amazing Music!
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    16.a A Costume for Rangi

    16.a  A Costume for Rangi
    This week I'm bringing you a story from the Maori in New Zealand! 'A Costume for Rangi' is a tale all about how the earth and the night sky as we see it were created. It is the perfect story to follow Earth Day. The retelling of this story is written by from the book 'The Celestreal River: Creatioin Tales of the Milky Way' by Andrea Stenn Stryer. To learn more about New Zealand and its history and culture, listen to Episode 16.b. Let's Learn About New Zealand! Comments or critiques are sooo welcome. You can email the show at globalstorytimepodcast@gmail.com. Follow the podcast on Facebook or Instagram @globalstorytimepodcast All sound effects and music fall under a Creative Commons 0 license and were found on freesounds.com and the Free Music Archive. Intro song: 'Pokarekare Ana' by YouTuber cparkplay Transition Song: Pokarekare Ana ukulele instrumental Outro Song: 'Aotearoa' Stan Walker feat. Ria Hall, Troy Kingi & Maisey Rika

    April fools

    April fools

    "April 1st is the day upon which we are reminded of what we are the other three hundred and sixty-four days."    Mark Twain

    There's been so much abuse of the truth, deception, and erosion of our trust in each other that April Fool's Day feels a bit dicey. And yet, laughter is more than the best medicine. Laughter is life.

    Here are some fun facts about April Fool's and a handful of humorous tales.  I hope they give you laugh, and some perspective, and help you feel that you belong.

    "The first of April, some do say,
    is set apart for All Fool's day,
    but why the people call it so,
    Nor I, nor they themselves do know.
    But on this day people are sent
    on purpose for pure merriment."

    ---Poor Robin's Almanac (1760)

     

     

    Support the show

    Email Catherine at drcsvehla@mythicmojo.com
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    Buy me a coffee. Thank you!

    Her Eyes Held all The Mourning of the Darkest Sea

    Her Eyes Held all The Mourning of the Darkest Sea

    In this episode we wander along the coastlines of many Northern places; these are often stark and lonely places, the people who live there quiet to outsiders, but somehow a tale is always shared around a campfire as the whiskey passes from hand to hand.

    The tales of of the SEAL PEOPLE, the special magical selkies sometimes called silkies, sometimes thought to be quite different from the seals you normally see tearing apart your fishing nets. Don't run afoul of these beings or you might rue the day! Legend has it that these are the beings made from the souls of the drowned, those lost at sea, now magically changed.

    Join me on this little walk as we share the tale of the Seal People.

    Podchaser verify codse 
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    REFERENCES
    Episode title is from, "The Selkie Wife's Daughter", Jeannine Hall Gailey. 2006. "Jeannine Hall Gailey's poems have appeared in The Iowa Review, Rattle, Columbia Poetry Review, and other journals. The poem, which is based on selkie legends, first appeared in Becoming the Villainess (Steel Toe Books, 2006). For more information, visit the author's blog."

    Tales of the Seal People, Duncan Williamson, 1992; 2019. "A collection of 14 selkie (half-seal half-human creatures) tales from the Orkney and Shetland islands off the northern tip of Scotland which embrace the fantasy, romance and unusual perspective of the Scottish travellers."

    On Mermaids, Meroveus, and Melusine; Reading the Irish Seal Woman and Melusine as Origin Legend, Gregory Darwin (August 2015), Folklore Journal issue 126. "‘The Seal Woman’, a migratory legend attested throughout north-western Europe, is commonly associated with particular families in Ireland. A structural reading of this legend reveals similarities with other tales and dynastic origin myths involving supernatural, aquatic female ancestor figures, and identifies similar social functions for such narratives."

    David Thomson (2018) The People of the Sea: Celtic Tales of the Seal-folk:  "Introduced by Seamus Heaney, The People of the Sea brings to life the legend of the mythical selchies, in beautiful, poetic prose."

    Want more selkie tales? Visit Orkneyjar, a website curated by folk enthusiasts and those historically minded. You can read many tales here, some selkie, and find out more just in general about these kinds of stories.

    WILDERNESS IRELAND, “Irish Myths & Legends Part 4: The Selkie,” Dawn Rainbolt. This is just a super fun website with stories and little facts and more. 

    PART TWO: And They Ride, And We Hide

    PART TWO: And They Ride, And We Hide

    Welcome to PART TWO, or another two-part episode of LOST IN THE RABBIT HOLE. In this episode, we cover just some of the variants of The Wild Hunt tales, which come from Europe, but can also be found in some form all over the world.

    The Wild Hunt is a tale of a pack of spectral beings riding horses, sometimes flying, late at night. Sometimes there are demon dogs, or other packs of animals. These tales are moral tales, with the riders or hunters presaging something really bad -- war, plague, discord, or even the death of the person who sees the riders.

    We see in this episode (both parts) that the frame of the pack of ghost hunters carries across cultures, but with some interesting shifts and detail changes.

    PART ONE: focuses on the background of the tale frame; from WODEN/ODIN leading the pack to the HERLE KING, this is an old lore that is still somehow very elastic. Part one includes the history of FRAU BERCHTA , one of the female figures to lead the pack of night riders.

    PART TWO: shares other cultures' tales, including THE NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS from Japan, HAWAIIAN NIGHT MARCHERS, the Canadian New Years tale of THE BEWITCHED CANOE, and the Old American West tale of the GHOST RIDERS.

    References for Part Two of this episode:

    NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS
    Elizabeth Lillehoj, in her article “Transfiguration: Man-Made Objects as Demons in Japanese Scrolls” (Asian Folklore Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp 7-34; 1995)
    Michael Dylan Foster  (Author), Shinonome Kijin (Illustrator), The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese Folklore
    Masako Watanabe, Storytelling in Japanese Art
    Matthew Meyer's Night Parade of One Hundred Demons
    Maria Kitsunebi's blog, HYAKKI YAGYO: THE NIGHT PARADE OF ONE HUNDRED YOKAI
    Amelia Starling's blog, Tsukumogami: Japan’s Household Spirits, is also really fun

    LA CHASSE-GALARIE
    Donovan King, Haunted Montreal
    Honoré Beaugrand, La chasse galerie: Légendes Canadiennes

    THE HAWAIIAN HUAKA'I PO
    Martha Warren Beckwith, Hawaiian Mythology
    Wounded: A Native True Crime Podcast, Night Marchers: Huaka'i Po'
    This is a blog post from the To Hawaii website The Legend of the Nightmarchers

    AMERICAN OLD WEST GHOST RIDERS
    Fairweather Lewis's blog post on the song Ghost Rider's In The Sky

    PART ONE: And They Ride, And We Hide

    PART ONE: And They Ride, And We Hide

    Welcome to another two-part episode of LOST IN THE RABBIT HOLE -- this is PART ONE. In this episode, we cover just some of the variants of The Wild Hunt tales, which come from Europe, but can also be found in some form all over the world.

    The Wild Hunt is a tale of a pack of spectral beings riding horses, sometimes flying, late at night. Sometimes there are demon dogs, or other packs of animals. These tales are moral tales, with the riders or hunters presaging something really bad -- war, plague, discord, or even the death of the person who sees the riders.

    We see in this episode (both parts) that the frame of the pack of ghost hunters carries across cultures, but with some interesting shifts and detail changes.

    PART ONE: focuses on the background of the tale frame; from WODEN/ODIN leading the pack to the HERLE KING, this is an old lore that is still somehow very elastic. Part one includes the history of FRAU BERCHTA , one of the female figures to lead the pack of night riders.

    PART TWO: shares other cultures' tales, including THE NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS from Japan, HAWAIIAN NIGHT MARCHERS, the Canadian New Years tale of THE BEWITCHED CANOE, and the Old American West tale of the GHOST RIDERS.

    References for Part One of this episode:

    Jacob Grimm, German Mythology, volume 1

    D. L. Ashliman, THE WILD HUNT LEGENDS

    Katharine Briggs, An Encyclopedia of Fairies, Hobgoblins, Brownies, Boogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures

    Brian Branston, The Lost Gods of England

    Ari Berk and William Spytma, Penance, Power, and Pursuit: On the Trail of the Wild Hunt

    Jennifer Westwood. Albion: A Guide to Legendary Britain

    The Old Magic of Christmas, Linda Raedisch

    The Krampus and the Old, Dark Christmas: Roots and Rebirth of the Folkloric Devil, by Al Ridenour

    Ridenour also has a terrific podcast, here is the episode on Frau Berchta

    Also, from 2011, the VoVatia blog, Baby, Baby, It's a Wild Hunt 

    7. It Could Always be Worse

    7.  It Could Always be Worse
    This week i'm bringing you a Yiddish folktale called 'It Could Always Be Worse'. It's a funny story about, well, how things could always be worse. We'll also learn about this history of the Yiddish language and the Jewish diaspora. This reading of 'It Could Always Be Worse' is based on the book of the same title by Margot Zemach. Test you Yiddish knowledge and see if you know any of these words! https://grammar.yourdictionary.com/word-lists/list-of-english-words-of-yiddish-origin.html Comments or critiques are sooo welcome. You can email the show at globalstorytimepodcast@gmail.com. Follow the podcast on Facebook or Instagram @globalstorytimepodcast This episode features Klezmer music which is often associated with the Yiddish language. Intro Song: 'Klezmer Hora' by Ardei Iute (Moldavian string band) Tranistion and ending song: the Eastern Watershed Klezmer Quartet

    PART TWO: Getting Lost, Being Found

    PART TWO: Getting Lost, Being Found

    Are you ready for PART TWO, where we continue the tale of the abandoned children, "Little Brother and Little Sister", aka Hansel and Gretel?

    "Tale Types: Abandoned Children
    What’s always so fun about these tales is to see how they are often mash-ups of other sorts of tales, but with a core narrative running through. For many of these abandoned children tales, we have three recurrent patterns:  

    1. the children are lost in some manner in a forest, 
    2. they meet an ogre, 
    3. there’s a “show me how” moment within the tale, and 
    4. the children return home."


    Versions Referenced in this episode:

    Reference Materials
    The Golden Age of Folk and Fairy Tales: From the Brothers Grimm to Andrew Lang  by Jack Zipes
    The Classic Fairytales, Iona and Peter Opie
    The Third Horseman A STORY OF WEATHER, WAR, AND THE FAMINE HISTORY FORGOT By William Rosen

    PART ONE: Getting Lost, Being Found

    PART ONE: Getting Lost, Being Found

    This is HUGE! For the month of DECEMBER the LOST IN THE RABBIT HOLE podcast will be a TWO PARTER!

    Join me as I delve into the variant tales of abandoned children. Hansel and Gretel are only a part of this story.

    We begin: "Long, long ago, beside one such Winter forest there lived a poor woodcutter with his wife and their two children – a little boy and a little girl. They lived humbly in a house made of wattle and daub, all snug together under their thatch roof. There was a little coop around back for the chickens, and the woodcutter’s wife kept a vegetable garden full of lush, ripe tomatoes in the summer and squash in the fall. The house was perfectly placed between two aspen sentries, each guarding a side."

    Come along down the sugared path and I promise, no one will bite.
    PART TWO is available immediately.

    Versions Referenced in this episode:

    Reference Materials

    The Golden Age of Folk and Fairy Tales: From the Brothers Grimm to Andrew Lang  by Jack Zipes
    The Classic Fairytales, Iona and Peter Opie
    The Third Horseman A STORY OF WEATHER, WAR, AND THE FAMINE HISTORY FORGOT By William Rosen

    5. Basket Lady Swing & Beaver and Echo

    5. Basket Lady Swing & Beaver and Echo
    This week I bring you 2 stories from the Tulalip Tribes from Washington state, told by two guest storytellers, Notosha Gobin and Michelle Myles. Notosha and Michelle are educators for the Hibulb Culutral Center and they teach the Lushootseed language. They have two stories that they want to share with you: 'Basket Lady Swing' and 'Beaver and Echo'. I hope you enjoy them! Welcome to the Global Storytime Podcast! Every two weeks I will bring a story from a different corner of the world so that we can get a glimpse into another place and culture. I will do my best to explain the potentially unfamiliar to provide context and will end each episode with some information about the country so we can get to know it better! Comments or critiques are sooo welcome. You can email the show at globalstorytimepodcast@gmail.com. This episode features traditional Salish songs: Intro Song: 'Canoe Song', Ha7lh Kwakwayel Transitions Song: 'Greeting of the Day', Ha7lh Kwakwayel Closing Song: 'Wolf', Swalklanexw Dallas

    4. Forty Fortunes

    4. Forty Fortunes
    This week I’m sharing a story from Iran. 'Forty Furtunes' is about staying true to yourself and how to think on your feet. What will happen to our hero, Ahmed, when he pretends to be a fortune teller? The retelling of this timeless tale based on by Aaron Shepard's 'Forty Fortunes'. Welcome to the Global Storytime Podcast! Every two weeks I will bring a story from a different corner of the world so that we can get a glimpse into another place and culture. I will do my best to explain the potentially unfamiliar to provide context and will end each episode with some information about the country so we can get to know it better! Comments or critiques are sooo welcome. You can email the show at globalstorytimepodcast@gmail.com. All sound effects and music fall under a Creative Commons 0 license and were found on freesounds.com or the Youtube Free Library. Intro Song: 'Avarah' by Mamak Khadem Transition Song: 'Oud Taksim' by Sherita Closing Song: 'The Prince of Persia' by Metastaz

    Here, In the Dappled Shadows

    Here, In the Dappled Shadows

    In this episode we are lost in the dark woods, the enchanted forests, and we come upon the sleeping beauty. 

    How many times have we walked through a small grove or copse of trees and been startled from a rattle just off to our right? Was it a little bird, or maybe a squirrel? But when you looked, nothing else moved. Except the shadows; shadows don’t make any noise. Do they?

     Angela Carter tells us how “The woods enclosed. Like a net, like a cage.” She says, “There is no way through the wood any more…Once you are inside it, you must stay there until it lets you out again…”

     And we see in our folktales that these woods hide secrets, we lose our sense of self, and our identities are hidden. There’s a different kind of beating heart deep in the woods, with a blood stream literal streams pumping life to the dark center. The lungs are high overhead, rattling a leafy canopy, and we know all around, the woods are alive.

    Folktales, fairytales, myths, legends, medieval romances, plays, and even today in contemporary works of literature and movies, forests and woods and even just clumps of trees in the distance manifest as representations of…something…something big, something small, something dark, something needed. 



    Episode Notes

    For more information on all of the stories and authors and themes
    VARIATIONS of Sleeping Beauty tales of Aarne-Thompson-Uther type 410
    translated and/or edited by D. L. Ashliman
    Disney's, Sleeping Beauty
    Andrew Lang's, The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood (1891, The Blue Fairy Book)
    The Grimms, Little Briar Rose
    Charles Perrault's, The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood
    Giambattista Basile's, The Sun, The Moon, and Talia

    References Used

    1. Angela Carter, "The Erl King", from The Bloody Chamber
    2. Sara Maitland Gossip from the Forest: The Tangled Roots of Our Forests and Fairy Tales 
    3. Amelia Starling, “Sleeping Beauty: The Meaning of Fate, Sleep, and Death” WILLOW WEB 
    4. The Enchanted Forest of the Brothers Grimm”, Jack Zipes 


    2. Anansi and the Impossible Quest

    2. Anansi and the Impossible Quest
    Welcome to the Global Storytime Podcast! Every two weeks I will bring a story from a different corner of the world so that we can get a glimpse into another place and culture. I will do my best to explain the potentially unfamiliar to provide context and will end each episode with some information about the country so we can get to know it better! This week I bring you a story from Ghana. Anansi and the Impossible Quest is one of the many folktales that feature the legendary figure and here, Kwaku Anansi, the spider-man. This spider-man is different from the American Marvel superhero and can be depicted in a few different ways. Sometimes he’as regular storybook talking spider, sometimes he’s a spider the size of a human, in this story he’s more like a human with some extra limbs. He is clever and resourceful, two characteristics that will serve him well on this Impossible Quest! The retelling of this timeless tale based on Gcina Mhlophe’s African Tales: A Barefoot Collection. Comments or critiques are sooo welcome. You can email the show at globalstorytimepodcast@gmail.com. All sound effects and music fall under a Creative Commons 0 license and were found on freesounds.com or the Youtube Free Library. Intro/transition Song: ‘High Life’ unknown artist Closing Song: Celebration recorded in Apinamang, Ghana. Recorded by ikbenraar.

    Here We Go, Into the Woods

    Here We Go, Into the Woods

    In this episode, we explore "Little Red Riding Hood," the origins, but also some of the lesser known grotesqueries, naughty bits, and other things.

    QUOTABLES:
    In The Grandmother’s Tale, when our girl says, “"I'll take the Path of Pins.” The bzou replies, "Why then, I'll take the Path of Needles, and we'll see who gets there first."

    The bzou follows her to the banks of the river and demand that the washerwomen help him cross. They agree, but once he is halfway across the river, they drown him.

    Or maybe I’m the little black cat – the one that knows bad things are happening, but no one will listen. Instead, I get a shoe tossed at me for even trying.

    To read The Grandmother's Tale and other variations of this tale
    To read more from Jack Zipes
    To read more from Marina Warner
    To read more from Maria Tatar
    For more on The Path of Pins and the Path of Needles
    Music Darkest Child by Kevin MacLeod
    Original Podcast Artwork created by Heather Scheeler



    1. Grandma and the Great Gourd

    1. Grandma and the Great Gourd
    Welcome to the first episode of the Global Storytime Podcast! Every two weeks I will bring a story from a different corner of the world so that we can get a glimpse into another place and culture. I will do my best to explain the potentially unfamiliar to provide context and will end each episode with some information about the country so we can get to know it better! This week I bring you a story from the Bengal region in India. Grandma and the Great Gourd is a folktale about a courageous grandma and how she makes it through a dangerous forest with the help of her clever daughter. The retelling of this timeless tale is based on Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s Grandma and the Great Gourd: A Bengali Folktale. Comments or critiques are sooo welcome. You can email the show at globalstorytimepodcast@gmail.com. All sound effects and music fall under a Creative Commons 0 license and were found on freesounds.com and the Youtube Free Library. Intro Song: ‘Wheel of Karma’ Audionautix Transitions Song: ‘Bansure Raga’ Doug Maxwell Closing Song: ‘Holi Day Riddum’ Konrad Oldmoney

    07 - Taro and the Tofu

    07 - Taro and the Tofu

    Today's Episode:
    Today's episode is Taro and the Tofu with a Simple Mindfulness Breathing Exercise. The Closing thought is about Integrity.

    TITLE: Taro and the Tofu

    AUTHOR: : Masako Matsuno

    ILLUSTRATED BY: Kazue Mizumura

    Taro and the Tofu was written by Masako Matsuno who passed away in 2011. The version read in this video was published by the World Publishing Company in 1962 which was also acquired by the Times Mirror Company in 1962. In 1972 it was sold to Collins Publishers who, in 1980, broke up World Publishing and sold the children's line to the Putnam Publishing Group, which was bought by the Penguin Group in 1996. In 2013, Penguin merged with Bertelsmann's Random House, forming Penguin Random House.  This rendition of "Taro and the Tofu" is for Entertainment and Informational purposes only and is not intended, nor will it be used, for commercial use.

    If you'd like to hang out with me more, check out my YouTube Channel - TierTwo Works


    Suggestions, Comments, and Requests are Welcomed!
    Email me directly at readingwithcari@gmail.com

    Podcast Elevator Pitch:
    Settle into bed, tuck in the covers, and snuggle up as Cari reads you a bedtime story; or grab a copy and read along!  Hello and Welcome to “Reading with Cari” a Mindfulness Podcast series that can be used as a Sleep Aid or to ease your anxiety and relieve your stress. I am your host, Cari Favole, and I am so thankful that you’ve decided to spend some time with me.

    INTRO & OUTRO SONG CREDITS:
    Easy Lemon 30 Second by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    Source: https://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1200078
    Artist: http://incompetech.com/


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