I Used To Believe
Why The Sea Is Salty
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When I was little around five I think, every afternoon my mother would tell us a story about nature, animals and other stuff.
I knew that she wants us to go to sleep so that she could wash our clothes without being distracted by our afternoon playtime. It would only be appropriate of course if the rules should be a ‘Story - Milk - Sleep’. One afternoon, she told us about ‘why the ocean water was salty’.
Since we live in the Island province, we thought that this must be really true. It was scary at the same time because the ocean is truly enormous. It covers more than twice as much of the Earth as land does.
It still remained a mystery to me. Here’s the story.
Many years ago, the sea tasted like ordinary rainwater. It was bland and tasteless. Fortunately, the people living in the islands knew about a friendly giant who kept mounds of salt in his cave.
The people would cross the ocean on their boats to reach the gentle giant’s island, and that is how they were able to bring salt back to their villages, in order to prepare tastier meals.
One time, however, the ocean was quite rough and they could not sail out to gather salt. They eventually ran out of salt and the villagers no longer enjoyed their tasteless meals. They wondered how they could get salt again, when a child suggested they ask the giant to stretch out his legs over the ocean so that they could walk to his island instead.
The kind giant agreed, and villagers with empty salt sacks walked along the giant’s leg. Unfortunately, the giant’s foot landed on an anthill, and the ferocious red ants started biting the enormous leg.
“Hurry!” pleaded the giant, who strained to keep his itchy legs still.
As soon as the people reached the giant’s island, he immediately withdrew his foot and scratched the itchy bites. The villages just smiled at how a giant could be bothered by tiny ants.
Anyway, the people got their salt and the giant again stretched his leg over the ocean. Immediately, the ants began biting his swollen foot. Once again, the giant asked the people to hurry up, but the heavy salt sacks slowed them down.
Besides, the people didn’t believe that the tiny ants could really affect the giant, so they idly chatted away, and walked rather slowly.
Before the villagers could cross the ocean, the giant cried out and thrust his ant-bitten foot into the ocean. All the packed salt fell into the plain-water sea and melted.
The giant saved the people from drowning, but no one was able to recover the spilled salt. From that day onwards, the sea became salty.
I believed this for a longest time. Do you have any make-believe story when you were a kid? For the Mothers out there, do you read story books to your children before going to bed?
Did you ever wonder why dogs wag their tails? Ok, that’s another story.
Waah, that pic clearly suggests something different.
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Exactomento. Hahaha, I’ve done that many times in public - say if you’re planning on swimming at the Repulse Bay beach this summer, then you’ll know why.
di ako kinukwentuhan ng nanay ko ng ganyang mga stories pero i love reading book so nung bata ako i used to read Adarna books maraming alamat akong natutunan doon … i miss being a kid. i miss the carefree life …
airwind’s last blog post..Ilocos Trip
Airwind adik ako ng komiks nun at mga kwentong ENG-ENG. I grew up listening to Simatar every night and we even copycatting Eng-eng’s high-pitched evil laugh. If you’re not familiar, Simatar is a young prince from a way way place like fairyland and Eng-eng is a witch. The biggest mystery really was the fact that I was ageing every year but Simatar stayed the same age.
And I remember di-gas lang ilaw namin nun kaya it adds to the excitement of scary radio drama/horror stories.
i remember as a kid, my mother, to coax us to undergo the hideous “suyod’ bit every weekend, would tell the story of Mt.Makulot, the prison of all headlouse-infested children. the story was scary enough encourage me to be lice-free every week. the funny thing is that when I met fellow batagnuenos at work, one of their vivid recollections of their own childhood is that dread of being carried off by a swarm of lice to Mt. Makulot!
brotherutoy’s last blog post..My Top Ten Coolest Parables, Part I
halos lahat ng mga alamat pinaniwalaan ko nung bata ako.
gumawa pa nga ng libro ang nanay ko about mga alamat, ni-compile niya yung mga alam niya, tapos pinabasa niya sa amin. uto-uto no? hehehe.
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