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When are we having a new story
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Looking forward to the stories you’ll share.
Welcome, Neil! I love the focus on storytelling and tradition. Ireland has such a rich cultural heritage—looking forward to hearing the tales you share.
Tír na nÓg ( land of the young)
Tír na nÓg is part of the "other" world in irish mythology, first written on parchment in the 12th century but orally the story is much much older. This other world, its a kind of parallel dimension where theres no sickness, no ageing and no sorrow. A land of forever and eternal youth, beauty and feasting.. ... now Come in close, and I’ll tell it the way it was told to me — not from a book, not from a screen, but from the firelight, where stories breathe properly. You see, Ireland has always had two worlds. The one your boots stand on… and the one just a breath beyond it. Most people walk their whole lives and never feel the seams between them. But sometimes — only sometimes — that seam opens. That’s where Tír na nÓg waits. Long before churches dotted the hills of wicklow and beyond, before saints walked with crosses, there were the Fianna — warriors of courage and wild laughter, loyal to their leader Fionn mac Cumhaill. And among them was his son, Oisín. A poet as much as a fighter, which is a dangerous combination. A man who could split a shield with his sword and split your heart with a song. One evening, when the sun was turning the fields to gold and the deer were moving like shadows along the treeline, something strange stirred the air. The wind went still. The birds hushed. Even the dogs raised their heads. Across the sea mist came a rider. She did not splash through the waves. The sea itself seemed to carry her. A white horse, tall and luminous, hooves barely touching water, mane flowing like spun silver. And seated upon it was a woman so radiant the day seemed dull beside her. Niamh Chinn Óir. Niamh of the Golden Hair. Her hair wasn’t just golden in colour — it shone as though it held sunlight within it. Her eyes held that far-away look, the kind you see in someone who knows more than this world can contain. She did not bow to the Fianna. She did not ask permission. She looked only at Oisín. And she told him she had heard of him — of his courage, his poetry, his kindness. In Tír na nÓg, across the veil of worlds, his name had reached her ears. She had fallen in love with the sound of him before ever laying eyes upon him.
Tír na nÓg ( land of the young)
THE MORRÍGAN.!
We get back our hero Cú Chulainn, and introduce "the morrígan".. she's an entity in irish mythology that honestly kinda scares me, it seems theres still a large number of people who still worship her to this day. A simple Facebook search will find pages upon pages about her! so lets tread lightly on this one... Come friends and settle in . This one isn’t for rushing, out of respect for a real dark spiritual element. This one you tell low, when the room has gone quiet and the fire’s down to a steady glow. You want the Morrígan and Cú Chulainn? Then you have to understand first — she was never just a woman with a temper. She was the edge of the land itself. The breath before battle. The knowing that comes before a spear is thrown. It was during the great cattle raid — the time when all of Ulster lay stricken by that strange curse, and only Cú Chulainn stood able to fight. Just a young man then, though already carrying more fury than most armies. He was resting by a ford one evening, cleaning blood from his spear. The sky low and red, the river running dark as iron. And she came to him. Not as a crow. Not as a shadow. But as a woman. Young. Beautiful. Calm in a way that makes you wary. She spoke gently , told him she admired his strength, offered him love — and more than that, offered him her power beside him in battle. Now here’s the thing about Cú Chulainn. He was brave. But he was proud. And he didn’t see what stood before him. He dismissed her. Told her he had no need of a woman’s help. Some versions of the story say he even mocked her. That was the biggg mistake. Because her face changed then. Not grotesque. Not twisted. Just… older. Colder. “You will need me,” she said, “and you will not have me.” She told him she would stand against him in the battles to come. And she did. The next day, as he faced a champion in single combat, something wrapped around his legs beneath the river — slick, strong, sudden. An eel. It nearly dragged him under. He crushed it, though, wounded it badly.
THE MORRÍGAN.!
A retelling of the banshee of county Clare
https://youtu.be/DGcqyG9H9b4?si=Undt5grb5wU6wcuP
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IRISH STORIES & MYTHOLOGY
skool.com/irish-stories-mythology-6301
Feed your soul on some ancient tales.!
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