Tag Archives: hero

“Supermoon”

Supermoon

Cape as long as night,

humans made you a hero /

and you were unlucky.

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#supermoon #cape #humans #hero #unlucky #photo #poem #poetry #haiku #senryu #august #wednesday #083023 #2023

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Filed under 2023, haiku, photo, Photo by author, photo by David E. Booker, poem, poetry, poetry by author, Poetry by David E. Booker

“Heroes”

Heroes

Chose heroes wisely. /

Summer breeze may raise their capes, /

But not lift your hopes.

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#heroes #breeze #summer

#capes #hope #wise #photo #poem #poetry #haiku #davidebooker #superman #illinois #august #tuesday #080922 #2022 #060717

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Filed under 2017, 2022, haiku, photo, Photo by Beth Booker, poem, poetry, Poetry by David E. Booker

Monday morning writing joke: “Writer from Chicago”

There once was writer from Chicago,

Who fancied himself a hero in Key Largo.

So, he packed up his crap,

But misread his map,

And is living near zero in Fargo.

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Filed under 2020, Monday morning writing joke, Poetry by David E. Booker

Photo finish Friday (and haiku): “Heroes”

Have our heroes left? /
Skipped a generation? /
Children move mountains.

Superman and girl 100dpi_6x9_4c_6167 copy

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Filed under 2018, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday, poetry by author

Haiku to you Thursday: “Only one”

Love hangs on a cross, /

the object of endless quests. /

The hero does not.

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Filed under 2017, Haiku to You Thursday, poetry by author

Haiku to you Thursday: “Hero”

There are no heroes — /

then I see you with Lauren /

and I know better.

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Writing tip Wednesday: “Hero’s Adventure”

HOW TO MAP OUT YOUR HERO’S ADVENTURE IN YOUR MANUSCRIPT

Source: http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/how-to-map-out-your-heros-adventure-in-your-manuscript?et_mid=688770&rid=239626420

How do the most successful authors of our time construct their stories? If you read them, and if you also read some ancient myths, you will begin to see parallels. You will feel smacked upside the head with parallels. You’ll realize that the top authors of today use storytelling techniques that writers used back when plans were being drawn up for the pyramids.

An excellent book about ancient myths is The Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell. The title says it all. Across cultures and generations, some variation of a hero figures into every beloved story. And the typical story is about an individual who goes on a quest or a journey. By the end, the individual becomes a hero. This is called the Hero’s Adventure.

The Hero’s Adventure is the most archetypal story of all because it’s the basis for more novels than any other kind of story. Novels of all different genres, from romances to thrillers to sci-fi, are based on the Hero’s Adventure.

So what is the Hero’s Adventure? You know it already, and you may even have elements of it in the story you’re working on. But I suspect you haven’t yet methodically and thoroughly appropriated it for yourself.

The Hero’s Adventure Basic Recipe

Joseph Campbell

Joseph Campbell

Here is a basic recipe to demonstrate how the Hero’s Adventure plays out. This is a template you can apply to your own work-in-progress—you might be surprised by how closely it matches elements you already have in play.

  1. A messenger comes. The messenger might be human, or a message might come from an experience—like a brush with death or a dream. At any rate, something has gone wrong; the natural order of the world has been disturbed.
  2. A problem is presented. Perhaps something has been taken away from the tribe, or some misfortune or malfeasance has occurred.
  3. Someone is marked out as the person to solve this problem. She is chosen according to some past deed of her parents or by her own reputation or happenstance. This person, of course, emerges as the hero at the end.
  4. A challenge takes shape. The challenge may be refused, at first. “No way, I’m not going to risk my neck for that!”
  5. A refusal, often. But eventually the hero decides to accept the challenge. She might even be forced to accept it by circumstances.
  6. The challenge is accepted. The adventure begins.
  7. The hero leaves the familiar world. And she sets off into another world. It’s dangerous. The hero could use some help, and very often …
  8. Helpers materialize. A helper might have special skills the hero doesn’t have, or he might have special insights or wisdom, in which case he takes the form of a mentor.
  9. Setbacks occur. The hero is tested, she makes gains, she endures setbacks, she fights for what is right, she resists evil. The going’s tough!
  10. The hero regroups and gains some ground again. Maybe she needs another visit to a mentor, or maybe she makes a personal breakthrough and overcomes a great inner obstacle, perhaps her own fear.
  11. The foe is vanquished or the elixir is seized. Eventually she defeats the foe or comes into possession of something that will restore the natural order—a cure, or new knowledge that will bring justice or the return of prosperity.
  12. The hero returns to the familiar world. And the problem is fixed, or justice is done. The natural order is restored.

The person who accepts the challenge and prevails is elevated to a special position, somewhere above human, somewhere below god. She is the hero.

For examples of this in literature: http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/how-to-map-out-your-heros-adventure-in-your-manuscript?et_mid=688770&rid=239626420

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Filed under writing tip, Writing Tip Wednesday, writing tips

Are All Movie Heroes the Same Person? – Pacific Standard: The Science of Society

Are All Movie Heroes the Same Person? – Pacific Standard: The Science of Society.

Perhaps you’ve heard they’re making another Star Wars film. Perhaps you’ve read up on the backgrounds of the new cast members and heard that the Oscar-winning Lupita Nyong’o will also be joining the crew on their adventures in a galaxy far, far away. Maybe you delivered a furtive fist pump upon seeing the leaked production photos, which show actual physical buildings and creatures on set in Abu Dhabi, as opposed to studio rooms adorned with green screens. Whether you’re a fan of the nearly 40-year-old franchise or not, the hype surrounding its next installment—scheduled for release in December 2015—is pretty hard to ignore.

While several factors deserve credit for Star Wars’ ongoing popularity—the ballet-like lightsaber duels, the roguish charm of Harrison Ford’s Han Solo, the massive amounts of toy merchandising—it’s quite possible that the space opera’s greatest strength lies in its reliance upon the work of American mythologist Joseph Campbell.

Read the rest at: http://www.psmag.com/navigation/books-and-culture/movie-heroes-person-joseph-campbell-monomyth-83796/#.U6SbO7MNr_o.facebook

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Filed under Joseph Campbell, mythology

So, you want to be a hero? Part III

A place to meet

Batman has his Batcave. Superman has his Fortress of Solitude. Do you and your family have a place to meet should there be a natural or man-made catastrophe and you are all in different places?

If you don’t, then you need to decide on at least one place where everybody would meet.

Assume that telephone communication is out, including cell phone. Where would you meet? Where would be your Fortress away from your home?

Unlike Batman or Superman, this will not be a place where you will stay (though I guess it could be), but a designated place you all know to go to should there be a calamity large enough to keep you from returning to your home.

You might also want to have a backup for this meeting place, in case this rendezvous point is also destroyed.

After all, the calamity might just happen when you are at work or school.

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Filed under CERT, certificate, hero, Random Access Thoughts, rendezvous, training

So, you want to be a hero?

If you want to be a hero, maybe the first step is to take CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) training. I am.

Okay, for those of you who know me, you can stop laughing now. The idea of me being a hero is a bit laughable, and in reality, CERT training will not make you a hero, even though if you complete the seven week/one-night-a-week/2.5-hours-each-night course you do get a certificate suitable for framing. Hey, even Superman never seemed to have a certificate. Of course, in his league, a certificate might not mean much.

All humor aside, CERT training will help you be prepared in case of an emergency. It is not meant to make you part of a volunteer civilian core that will get called out in the event of a natural disaster, technological met down, terrorist attack, or even a three-car pileup on the Interstate.

It is meant to help you be prepared, and with that, help your family be prepared (if you have a family nearby), and even help out your neighbors should it be necessary. In short, the training is to help you be a little more self-reliant in the event of an emergency. That emergency could be the power going out in the middle of the coldest snap in winter. That emergency could be needing to leave your house in five minutes due to a tanker truck overturning nearby and the truck is carrying a chemical that reacts with water or air to create a poisonous gas. The emergency doesn’t have to be a tornado pulling up houses in your neighborhood as if they were petunias or flood waters rising high enough to whisk your car slip-sliding away.

I hope to post some information on what I learn in the coming weeks, but by no means take what I write as the be-all end-all of information. I would think a better place to start finding out the be-all end-all of information is a place like http://knoxtnlepc.com/getready or http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/.

The idea started in Los Angeles, CA in 1984, after people in that city government visited Japan to see how a similar program they had worked. Those officials proposed a program much like the one today to the LA city council, which turned it down, saying good idea but it costs too much. Then the 1987 earthquakes in California happened, and they decided maybe it didn’t cost too much to invest in such a program. Not as much as earthquake damage, anyway.

Since then, the idea has moved across the U.S. CERT training was adopted by FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) in 1994, and was given more importance after 9/11. It has been in Knoxville/Knox County since 2004, spearheaded initially by the Knoxville Police Department. Now, almost all emergency response agencies in Knoxville/Knox County participate in some way to provide training. The most notable exception is the Knox County Sheriff’s Department.

Why? I don’t know. Maybe one of the Knox County mayoral candidates who is was sheriff at the time can answer that question.

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Filed under CERT, certificate, hero, Random Access Thoughts, training