『OniroMythos - Mythology Podcast for Sleep, Chill and Relax』のカバーアート

OniroMythos - Mythology Podcast for Sleep, Chill and Relax

OniroMythos - Mythology Podcast for Sleep, Chill and Relax

著者: Oniro Pod
無料で聴く

OniroMythos - Podcast for Mythology Lovers now on Spotify!Copyright Oniro Pod アート
エピソード
  • The full Odissey Story for Sleep | Mythology For Sleep Podcast - Greek Mythology Stories from Ancient Greece and myth Podcasts for Chilling/
    2026/06/13
    It is the oldest road trip ever recorded, the original story of a man trying desperately to get home, and three thousand years after it was first sung aloud around fires in ancient Greece, it has lost none of its power to move, terrify, and astonish. Homer's Odyssey is not simply an adventure story. It is a meditation on identity, endurance, cunning, and the question that haunts every long absence: when you finally return, will anyone — including yourself — still recognize who you are?The Odyssey picks up where the Iliad leaves off. Troy has fallen. The Greek kings are sailing home with their plunder and their ghosts. Most arrive within weeks. Odysseus, the cleverest man alive, will take a decade more — not because he is weak, but because the sea god Poseidon has marked him for suffering, and because the universe seems constitutionally unwilling to let a man this interesting reach his destination without first wringing every possible lesson from his journey. As a Greek Mythology Podcasts episode devoted to epic literature's deepest structures, we treat the Odyssey not as a sequence of adventures but as a single, unified argument about what it means to be human.Homer structures his masterpiece with extraordinary sophistication. We do not meet Odysseus immediately. We meet his son Telemachus first — a boy becoming a man in his father's absence, learning to stand in a house overrun by arrogant suitors consuming his inheritance. This Mythology Explained Podcast episode pays careful attention to the Telemachy, as scholars call it, because the parallel journeys of father and son — one trying to return home, one trying to become worthy of it — give the poem its emotional spine.When we finally find Odysseus, he is weeping on a beach. He is alive, physically unharmed, and utterly trapped on the paradise island of the nymph Calypso, who loves him and offers him immortality. He weeps anyway, every single day, staring toward Ithaca. As a Mythology for Sleep Podcast attuned to mythology's quieter emotional registers, that image — a man choosing grief and mortality over painless eternal pleasure — is the Odyssey's thesis statement in its purest form.The adventures that follow are among the most vivid sequences in all of Greek Mythology Stories — the Lotus Eaters who make men forget home entirely, the Cyclops Polyphemus, the enchantress Circe, the terrifying descent into the underworld, the Sirens, the twin horrors of Scylla and Charybdis, the cattle of the Sun. Each encounter is a test of a different human quality, and Odysseus passes them through intelligence and adaptability rather than brute heroic strength. This Ancient Greece Myths Podcast reads each trial as a distinct moral examination disguised as monster mythology.His return to Ithaca — disguised as a beggar, recognized first by his dog and his nurse — is among world literature's most emotionally layered homecoming sequences. As a Mythology Podcast, we believe the Odyssey endures because it understands something timeless: the longest journey any person ever takes is always, ultimately, the journey back to themselves.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 時間 42 分
  • The Mythology of Fairies and how bad they actually were | Mythology for sleep Podcast Stories and Myths Explained
    2026/06/12
    They are not the tiny, glittering, butterfly-winged creatures that Victorian illustrators decided they were. The original fairies — the ones that kept medieval peasants from wandering into certain forests after dark, that made farmers leave offerings of cream on their doorsteps, that caused parents to examine their newborns with anxious, searching eyes — were something far older, far stranger, and considerably more dangerous than anything a children's book has ever dared portray. Tonight, we go back to the real fairy mythology, and it will surprise you.The word "fairy" itself traces back through Old French faerie to the Latin fata — the Fates themselves. That etymological root is not accidental. In the oldest layers of European folk belief, fairies were not decorative magical creatures but powerful, morally ambiguous beings whose relationship with humanity was as likely to result in catastrophe as in blessing. They were called by careful, respectful euphemisms — the Good Folk, the Fair Folk, the Gentry — because speaking their actual name too casually was considered an invitation to disaster. As a Mythology for Sleep episode drawn to the quiet dread embedded in ancient folk traditions, we find that careful, hedging language one of folklore's most revealing psychological artifacts.Fairy mythology spans an extraordinary geographic range, appearing in remarkably consistent forms across the Celtic traditions of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany, while echoing in the Germanic concept of elves, the Scandinavian huldrefolk, the Italian folletti, and the Slavic rusalki. Each tradition differs in its details but shares a common architecture: beings of great beauty and power living parallel to the human world, occasionally intersecting with it in ways that leave the human participant permanently changed. This Mythology Stories Podcast episode maps those traditions across cultures, tracing the common threads that suggest something very deep and very old in the human imagination generating these stories independently across an entire continent.The Irish fairy tradition is among the richest and most elaborately documented. The Tuatha Dé Danann — the divine race that inhabited Ireland before the human Gaels arrived — retreated underground into the sídhe, the fairy mounds, rather than leave their beloved island entirely. They became the fairies of Irish tradition: the aos sí, powerful, proud, and deeply territorial about the landscape they now shared invisibly with the humans above them. Iron repelled them. Running water blocked them. Turning your coat inside out confused them. Every protective folk practice encoded a specific understanding of fairy nature, and this Mythology Podcast episode decodes each one with genuine folkloric scholarship.Changelings — fairy children left in place of stolen human babies — represent one of the darkest and most historically consequential threads in fairy mythology. The belief was widespread, persistent, and had real, tragic consequences for children born with disabilities or developmental differences in communities that interpreted such differences as signs of fairy substitution. As a Mythology Stories Podcast committed to honest, unflinching engagement with mythology's darker implications, we handle this chapter with both scholarly rigor and deep human compassion.The fairy mythology that endures today — softened, sweetened, made safe for nurseries — is a relatively recent invention. The original Fair Folk demand something older from us: not delight, but respect, attention, and the wisdom to know that some doors, once opened, do not easily close again.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 22 分
  • Ulysses and his incredibly unlucky return story | Mythology for Sleep Podcast Greek Mythology Stories and Ancient Greece Myths
    2026/06/11
    Ten years fighting the bloodiest war the ancient world had ever seen — and then ten more years just trying to get home. No hero in all of mythology travels further, suffers longer, or pays a higher personal price for the simple act of returning to the people he loves than Odysseus of Ithaca. His name means "man of pain" in ancient Greek, and Homer's Odyssey earns that definition on every single page.Odysseus left Ithaca as a young king with a newborn son, a devoted wife, and an aging father. He returns, if he returns at all, as a weathered stranger whom almost nobody recognizes. The journey between those two moments spans a Cyclops's cave, a witch's island, the land of the dead, a whirlpool, a six-headed monster, a shipwreck, and seven years imprisoned on a paradise island by a goddess who loves him and will not let him leave. As a Mythology for Sleep Podcast captivated by the interior dimensions of ancient epic, we find Odysseus's relentless homesickness — his willingness to refuse immortality itself just to see Ithaca again — among the most quietly devastating emotional through-lines in all of literature.The trouble begins before the ships even leave Troy. Odysseus blinds the Cyclops Polyphemus — son of Poseidon — and cannot resist shouting his real name as he sails away. It is a moment of fatal pride, and Poseidon spends the next decade making him pay for it. This Greek Mythology Stories episode treats that moment with the psychological seriousness it deserves, because Odysseus's greatest enemy throughout the Odyssey is not any monster or god — it is the tension between his legendary cunning and his very human need to be known and credited for it.His crew dies almost entirely through their own failures — eating the sacred cattle of Helios despite explicit divine warning, breaking oaths, losing patience. Odysseus survives precisely because he listens, adapts, and endures. He survives the Sirens by having himself lashed to the mast. He navigates Scylla and Charybdis by accepting that some losses cannot be prevented. He spends seven years with the nymph Calypso, offered immortality, and chooses Ithaca. As a Mythology Explained Podcast devoted to reading these choices carefully, his rejection of godhood for mortal love is the philosophical heartbeat of the entire poem.Back in Ithaca, his wife Penelope holds off over a hundred arrogant suitors with breathtaking intelligence — unraveling her weaving each night to delay a remarriage she refuses to accept. As a Greek Mythology Podcasts episode attentive to the women behind the heroes, Penelope receives here the full recognition she is so often denied. She is not waiting passively. She is fighting, in her own arena, just as hard as Odysseus is fighting in his.The reunion, when it finally comes, is earned across twenty years of separation. This Ancient Greece Myths Podcast episode walks every nautical mile of that journey alongside him. As a proud Mythology Podcast, we believe no story in the ancient world understands human longing more deeply than this one.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    2 時間 33 分
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません