I read R.K. Narayan's version of the Mahabharata for this week’s reading. I really enjoyed reading his version of the Ramayana and thought it would be fun to continue to use his work for this and next week’s reading. Jumping into reading the stories it was like seeing an old friend. The style felt familiar and it made it easy to get back into it. The story starts out with the tale of a king who has no wife. He meets a woman by a river and immediately falls in love with her. This woman turns out to be Ganga, the earth goddess. They have eight children together, of which she drowns seven for crimes they committed in a past life. The eighth is allowed to live, and Ganga leaves. The king, now without a wife, happened upon a beautiful girl in the forest. He wanted to wed her, but her father demanded that he make their son the heir. The son of the king visited the fisherman and made a promise to be celibate. The king was thus allowed to marry the daughter of the fisher man. The k...
Hi John,
ReplyDeleteI have read similar articles throughout my time here at OU. I have used this 'addiction to stress and productivity' many times to complete assignments and papers at the last minute, but in this class, I realized that my writing and work comes out boring and plain when I do that.