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Red Pill Wisdom from the Brothers Grimm
#5

Red Pill Wisdom from the Brothers Grimm

Just a note: The fairytale about the Golden Fish, fisherman and his wife is a universal folk tale of Europeans - the brother's Grimm didn't write it, they just wrote down folk wisdom and gave it literal tuning.

Folk tales are incredibly dark and red pill, most of time modern authors taking them and giving them literal tuning ruins that dark wisodm of their trough, so when searching for fairy tales always try to find the oldest version possible. Chances are it will sound bizarre and scary to the initiated, unstable to sensibilities of modern pampered children, but the wise man will see the deep wisdom in this.

A good example of this is the fairy tale about the Selkie - a mythological figure in Irish and Icelandic folklore. Selkies are similar to mermaids, but instead of being always half human/half fish, they are seals who can take off their seal skins and become humans on land.

The tale goes like this (my own quick version as I coudn't find the original in google any more, only versions ruined by modern authors):

A group of selkie women go ashore to have some fun dancing and they put their seal skins away. A fisherman goes by and sees these beautiful naked women dancing, he finds one seal skin hidden under a bush or stone and takes it. When all selkies return at sea, one cannot because her seal skin is lost. The fisherman then approaches the selkie woman and offers to marry her. The woman agrees because she has nowhere else to go. Years go on and the selkie woman is a very good wife, beautiful and industrious, the man feels very happy, they have many children and she is a good loving mother and wife, who cleans house and feeds her family well. She has forgotten her former life at sea and loves the fisherman and their children. All this time the man has her seal skin safely hidden somewhere in the house. So it happens that one time a man goes out from the house for a longer time. The wife becomes curious about some part of house she has never seen, because fisherman keeps it locked away, she explores it and finds her old selkie skin. As she takes it she remembers her previous life at sea, she runs to shore puts on her seal skin and swims away forewer. The fisherman comes home and finds the house empty, his wife and seal skin gone.

Now the original meaning of this fairy tale is about the woman's nature being like a force of nature. About civilization requiring to keep that nature in check to transform women out of beast into loving housewives and keeping them away from endless swimming in the wast seas of wild parties. From religious dogmas and various social norms to genital mutilation(not condoning the latter), each civilization keeps their women in check somehow to make them productive members of human society otherwise they become feral and destroy their family and society.

The modern literal versions of this fairy tale become increasingly feminist telling how the woman finding her true nature is a good thing and the fisherman was either a cruel evil man for taking it away or how he was in the end cuck enough to be happy for the woman returning to sea because he loved her and wanted her to be happy.

Another example is the usual Mermaid so well know to us: In the brother Grimm version the plot is already twisted and has lost most of it's wisdom, yet some tragedy remains. The Dysney version is completly feminized of course with it's cartoonish happy ending. But what is the original meaning behind the mermaid character?. Well it is a siren of course! If a sailor listens to siren's call he loses himself and gets dragged in the abyss. It's is about the lizard/fish brain of females - about how women appear as human above waist, but are animals below waist. Warm and welcoming above water, but cold and unforgiving below the water. Water surface symbolizes the line between the overt and the occult, between the outer appearances and the inner nature. The sailor is a man and the voyage is euphemism for life and the voices of beautiful sirens are symbols for devious temptations in his life, most of whom have to do with women putting on good appearances but being feral below the waist or how modern science would say having their lizard/fish brain taking control over the new human part of the brain.

Contemplate how grotesque it is that this scary, horror character intended as a warning for young men in ancient times is today a Disney princess and something girls grow up trying to be like. Kudos to the Pirates of Caribbean 4 trough, they got it right.

I recommend for anyone to try to find the oldest versions of fairy tales and pass them on to your children ( for the few married men here) in their oldest and rawest form possible.
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