Friday, October 1, 2021

Giants - Real and Imaginary - Mingle with Us

Giants  - Real and Imaginary - Mingle with Us

"Children who believed in giants made good in life, 
better than those who did not. " - avr

Dr Abe V Rotor
 
Bigfoot, also commonly referred to as Sasquatch, is an ape-like creature that is purported to inhabit the forests of North America. 

Giants fascinate children most, and mothers do not run out of stories about the kapre or Jack and the Beanstalk or the giant squid that attacked Captain Nemo’s submarine in Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea to keep them at home or eat their vegetables.

Giants to the young mind are living creatures bigger than life, and they possess supernatural powers that they unleash either for good or evil.
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There are friendly giants, ugly giants, sleeping giants, giants of the deep, the forests and fields, and almost everywhere.
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They are either aggressive or passive, visible or hidden, loved and hated. It is the enigma about them that heightens their stories, and in fact the stories themselves make them real giants.   

H
ere are popular giants from books and stories, which are often featured in comics and cartoons:


• Bigfoot is believed to be a huge hairy creature roaming the forests of North America. It is projected as a prehistoric man with beast like characteristics.

 Kapre is the Filipino version of a supernatural being, more of a beast than human, that lives in trees and abandoned places.

• Nessie in Loch Ness (Scotland) is believed to be a prehistoric reptile. It continues to attract tourists, even after a century after someone took a photo of the monsters on the murky water.

• Abominable Snowman or Yeti (PHOTO) has been sighted on a number of occasions by residents on the snowy slopes of the Himalayas.

Giants in fiction stories and novels are virtually endless.
  • Take the case of Gulliver of Lilliput by Jonathan Swift. King Kong the ape monster that crushed cares and leveled buildings.
  • Greek mythology would not be as exciting if there were no giants. Giants made Hercules a legendary hero. Imagine the giants he fought - the cyclops, the hydra, among others, during his ten years of wandering. Remember the Minotaur - half man, half bull - whom Theseus killed in order to liberate the monster's hostages?
  • How big was Goliath in the bible whom the boy hero, David slew?
  • Then we have our own Bernardo Carpio, and Angalo (PHOTO), most popular Philippine epics. 
  • A favorite bedtime story is Jake and Beanstalk. I wonder how the story can lull children to sleep - specially when the giant comes crushing down to earth!
  • Recently Honey I Shrunk the Kids and its opposite - Honey I Blew Up the Baby became cinema's box office attractions.
 
Pinsal Fall in Sta. Maria Ilocos Sur is believed to be a footprint of the giant Angalo, a popular myth of the Ilocanos. Left, Pinsal Fall in the rainy season painting by the author; Pinsal Fall in summer showing its basin which appears like a huge footprint.     

TRIVIA: What is the biggest living creature that ever lived on earth? Is this creature still alive? 

* Original title: Giants mingle with the spirits, too, on Halloween
Reference: The Living with Nature book series by AVRotor  ~

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