A Germanic Tale
There was a girl who lived beyond the sea,

one of such strength she challenged

all the heroes in the country to compete with her.

She could throw a stone across a field and then,

jumping, make it to the other side before the stone fell.

She said she'd never be with any man who could not

beat her - not once, not twice, but three times in a row.



~Germanic Tales of the Nibelungen


In myth, women compete with men as well as with other women. Many cultures have some variety of the Germanic myth of Brynhild, who demanded that a man show himself to be stronger than she was before she would agree to be his mate. And she did not hold herself back in the competition; she did not fix the  game so that a man could win. In this, she acted more honestly than  contemporary women who hide their true strength.

Strength is not unfeminine. Strength is a fact of women's being. Some are
strong emotionally, some intellectually, some physically. To pretend to be
less than what we are is to insult the universe that has endowed us with
gifts. And, in myth, the woman who shows her strength finally finds a partner
to match her. Had she hidden her strength, she would always have been aware of her partner's true weakness in comparison to her. And that, ultimately, would  have destroyed their bond.

Source Unknown
Men cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore.
-Unknown-
The term "dog days" has nothing to do with dogs. It dates back to Roman times, when it was believed that Sirius, the Dog Star, added its heat to that of the sun from July3 to August 11, creating exceptionally high temperatures. The Romans called the period dies caniculares, or "days of the dog."
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