Monday, March 31, 2014

Haides

     

HAIDES


     Haides (Aides, Aidoneus, or Hades) was the King of the Underworld, the god of death and the dead. He presided over funeral rites and defended the right of the dead to due burial. Haides was also the god of the hidden wealth of the earth, from the fertile soil with nourished the seed-grain, to the mined wealth of gold, silver and other metals.

     Haides was depicted as a dark-bearded, regal god. He was depicted as either Aidoneus, enthroned in the underworld, holding a bird-tipped sceptre, or as Plouton, the giver of wealth, pouring fertility from a cornucopia. The Romans named him Dis, or Pluto, the Latin form of his Greek title Plouton, "the Lord of Riches."

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Persephone (Greek mythology)

PERSEPHONE


She is the daugther of Zeus and Demeter.

    Persephone was the goddess queen of the underworld, and wife of the god Haides. She was also the goddess of spring growth, who was worshipped alongside her mother: Demeter.
In other myths, Persephone appears exclusively as the queen of the underworld, receiving the likes of Herakles and Orpheus at her court.  


     Once upon a time when she was playing in a flowery meadow with her Nymph companions, Persephone was seized by Haides and carried off to the underworld as his bride. Because the girl had tasted of the food of Haides she was forced to forever spend a part of the year with her husband in the underworld. Her annual return to the earth in spring was marked by the flowering of the meadows and the sudden growth of the new grain. Her return to the underworld in winter, conversely, saw the dying down of plants and the halting of growth.

     Persephone was usually depicted as a young goddess holding sheafs of grain and a flaming torch. Sometimes she was shown in the company of her mother and the hero Triptolemos, the teacher of agriculture. At other times she appears enthroned beside Haides.

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Quote


"The happier person is the one that take chances and explore life, not the one that stays safely at home"`~Cindy Ortega

Monday, February 24, 2014

Hallucination Essay


HALLUCINATION

Hallucinations are defined as a perception of and external object when no object is really present.
The false perceptions can occur in any of the five sensory modalities. Therefore, a hallucination essentially is seeing, hearing, tasting, feeling, or smelling something that is not there. The false perceptions are not accounted for by the person's religious or cultural background, and the person experiencing hallucinations may or may not have insight into them. Therefore, some people experiencing hallucinations may be aware that the perceptions are false, whereas others may truly believe that what they are seeing, hearing, tasting, feeling, or smelling is real. In cases when the person truly believes the hallucination is real, the individual may also have a delusional interpretation of the hallucination.

CAUSES:

There are many causes of hallucinations, including:
  • Being drunk or high, or coming down from such drugs as marijuanaLSD, cocaine (including crack), PCP, amphetamines, heroin, ketamine, and alcohol
  • Delirium or dementia (visual hallucinations are most common)
  • Epilepsy that involves a part of the brain called the temporal lobe (odor hallucinations are most common)
  • Fever, especially in children and the elderly
  • Psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and psychotic depression
  • Sensory problem, such as blindness or deafness
  • Severe illness, including liver failure, kidney failure, AIDS, and brain cancer