Since I decided to go as Medusa this year for Halloween, I thought I should brush up on my Greek myths and not just rely on my memories of the 1981, stop-motion-tastic film Clash of the Titans . In Ovid's rendition, this symbol of female power was once a beautiful, virginal priestess, "the jealous aspiration of many suitors," in the temple of Athena. When Poseidon decides he will have her, he "ravishes" (i.e. rapes) her as she prays in temple in front of the altar of Athena. The goddess Athena punishes Medusa's transgression by causing snakes to grow out of her head, tearing their way through her scalp to take the place of her much admired hair. Athena gives Medusa boar's tusks and turns her skin to scales. (The myth doesn't mention how Athena takes vengeance on Poseidon.) After this torturous transformation Medusa is banished to the island of Cristhene, off the coast of Ethiopia in the Red Sea. In exile she is pursued as she ...
This is a blog about beliefs and behaviors-- mine, yours, society's.. but mostly mine.

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