Showing posts with label week 9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label week 9. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2016

Back Up and Review: Atlas


Atlas Source

While browsing through announcements that I may have missed this week, I came across this picture of Atlas. I'm also in a Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy class, and we learned that the bone at the top of the spine attaching to the head is named the atlas as well. I think it's really cool that we use the analogy of Atlas holding up the world to that bone holding up our world. 

Growth Mindset: Thinking is Part of Doing


"Thinking is part of doing." Source


While I don't believe this is necessarily always true, unfortunately, I believe that most good things happen when they are well thought out. You are much more likely to succeed if you have a plan for whatever you are going to do, rather than flying by the seat of your pants.

Tech Tip: Canvas Mobile App

So, I recently downloaded the Canvas mobile app, and I found it really easy to use! I think it's a great way to be able to see when things are due and check on your class grades without having to log onto a desktop computer. I highly recommend it!


Wikipedia Trails: From Lucifer to Roman mythology

I began with Lucifer because I had just read a story about him and his fall from grace. I next went to Dante's Inferno because I've never read the book and really would like to. Dante was led by the ancient roman poet Virgil, who I had never heard of, so I went there next. Finally, I ended up at Roman mythology.

Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome   Source

Reading Notes: Biblical Stories

I have read the book of Genesis a few times, and it's still one of my favorite parts of the bible. The fall of Lucifer, who was once perfect, and the Lord's favorite angel, is one of the deepest stories in the bible in my opinion. It is almost like one of Aesop's fables regarding ambition. Because Lucifer believed himself to be so perfect he could rival our Creator himself, he was cast away from heaven. 

From The Legends of Jews by Louis Ginzberg   Link to Story

The Fall of Satan   Source

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Reading Notes: Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest Part B

It's really funny to me how most of the folk stories that we read use animals as the main or supporting cast with human qualities. Sometimes when they are telling the story I imagine "crow" not actually being a crow, but a person with the name Crow. Wind is another example from The Children of Cloud. I wonder if the author was trying to say that there was a man who controlled all wind, or if there was only wind at the house. Either way I don't really understand how a cloud can have a child unless they mean that his children were literally lightning and thunder.

Notes on The Children of Cloud from Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest 

How are thunderstorms made?
Lightning   Source

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Reading Notes: Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest part A

File:A Sky View of Earth From Suomi NPP.jpg
Earth Wikimedia Commons
While reading through part a of the reading notes this week, I came upon Spider's Creation. There were some really strange parts such as the parcels that he sang into people and the fact that the spider sang everything into existence. I plan to go a route that uses a spider's actual talents instead of weirdly singing.

From "Spider's Creation" from Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest by Katharine Judson    Link to story

Monday, October 17, 2016

Wikipedia Trails: From Web Widget to Fight Club

Fight Club.ico by anilokur13
Fight Club    Source
So I had just done my tech tip for a weather widget when I realized I had no clue what a widget actually is or does! Thus began my wiki trail. Next, I saw a link to blogs and was curious about how they were started, so I went there. On this page I saw a link which said "Zero Hedge". It turns out this is a financial blog with tons of information which goes over my head. Interestingly, many of the posts are signed with the signature of a character from the movie Fight Club. I ended my wikipedia trail on the wiki for the movie.

Storytelling Week 9: Spider's Woven World

In the beginning, there was but a single being. An ancient spider by the name of Susstistinnako. He lived in darkness as spiders love. However, uncharacteristically of a spider, he became lonely. He did not know what this sensation was, nor how to respond to it. This feeling began to burden him heavily. To take his mind off of it, he began to weave his web. Not in the traditional way which he always weaved, but in a way such that there were now protrusions out of the dark earth. Everywhere there were fields of his web, and in some places massive columns. When he had finished weaving these, he noticed that the feeling had not gone away, so he began to weave his web into new shapes. He weaved his silk as strong as steel into masses of all shapes and sizes filled with all the intricacies his imagination could fulfill. He worked in this fashion for eon upon eon, still fashioning shapes which he had no name for, but felt right for him to create.

Don't kill the spiders in your yard. They will kill your mosquitoes. Spiders that build webs outside in the yard are not poisonous.
Spider web     Source: Pinterest
Finally, Susstistinnako realized that he no longer possessed neither the capabilities for weaving in his ancient limbs, nor the will to go on. And so Susstistinnako returned to his home and silently passed away. Susstistinnako's spirit left the earth to a place far above in the sky. It split into two pieces, one much larger than the other, but the other so bright and powerful that it lit the earth as far as the eye could see. The part of his spirit that had become the sun illuminated a sea of silvery structures. As the light began to warm these structures something very peculiar happened. Wind began to blow on the surface of the earth, and the structures began to move. Not with purpose in the beginning, but rather letting the wind take them where they would. After a time, the bright part of Susstistinnako's spirit had sent so much of itself to the earth that these forms began to come alive. Instead of merely flowing with the wind they were able to go against it. The heat from the sun had melded the fields of hairlike protrusions into grass and the tall columns into trees. His most intricate creations had become all sorts of animals and insects. Humans, fish, and all manner of life now inhabited the earth.

The moon had been taking in light from the sun for some time as well and awoke. This was Susstistinnako's consciousness. From his new perch high in the sky he could see all of his creations wandering the earth. He realized that in order to keep moving they would need moisture, and so using the power of the moon he drew the water out of the earth and towards the surface toward him. He realized that this is what he had been missing all that time in the dark. Watching his pale creations take on all the colors of the rainbow filled a place he had never known was empty. And so the moon, the sun, and all of the inhabitants of the earth were made.



Story inspired by "Spider's Creation" from Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest by Katharine Judson    Link to story

Author's note:

Spider's Creation was a story in which a spider sings the world and all of its living things into existence. The story was a bit different to me, as it began with the spider setting two "parcels" at opposite ends of the world. After stringing a line across the world connecting the two parcels, the spider began to sing. Eventually, two people come out of the parcels. These people go on to become the sun and the moon. This was perhaps the strangest part of the story for me. I just didn't think that any of this really had anything to do with spider. Also, the original story never really tells what happens to spider, so my story focused on him more. I was inspired to try writing a story like this myself, and in a way that actually utilized the amazing talents of the spider. I also knew that many spiders died soon after giving birth to a new generation of spiders, so I thought that was a good way to explain life coming about the earth. I imagined a silvery world shrouded in darkness before spider became the sun and the moon. I really enjoyed writing this story since it was the first that I have written of this type.