loader from loading.io

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 62 - Warrior Spirit Through Sacred Kali and Mayari - Interview with Imee

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Release Date: 06/12/2024

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 65 - You're Already Beautiful show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 65 - You're Already Beautiful

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Today I’m sharing “You’re Already Beautiful”—a folk-fantasy tale I wrote in the middle of an £D relapse, when my body d*$m0rph1@ felt louder than my own heartbeat. Crafting this story was my way of whispering back to that voice: magic doesn’t ask for beauty; it asks to be believed. This was inspired by the tale “How the Town of Marikina Got Its Name”. In this story (and in my own journey) I found that every time the wind touched my face, every time I felt a river-stone underfoot, the earth carried medicine. Reconnecting with the land—letting cold water hold me, letting...

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 64 - the white key show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 64 - the white key

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

This poem is based on my experience working in a non-profit, and working under a boss who did not understand how racist she actually truly was. If you've experienced the subtle ways white supremacy crushes your spirit at work, this poem is for you. This first appeared in the ROOTed Rhythms Colours of Culture Exhibition, and you can read it here https://www.rootedrhythms.ca/exhibitions/2025-exhibition/the-white-key

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 63 - Lady of the Nightbloom show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 63 - Lady of the Nightbloom

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

When brilliance meets community pressure, what blossoms—and what withers? This episode retells the Filipino folk-inspired myth of Evangelina, a prodigious artist who withdraws from the glittering buzz of social expectations. Gifted but suffocated by gossip, envy, and “crab mentality,” Evangelina seeks solace in solitude, only to transform into the nocturnal bloom known as Dama de Noche. This retelling of the "The Legend of the Flower Dama Noche" is a cultural commentary and a reflection on how modern creatives navigate praise, pressure, and personal peace. This episode explores how...

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 62 - Warrior Spirit Through Sacred Kali and Mayari - Interview with Imee show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 62 - Warrior Spirit Through Sacred Kali and Mayari - Interview with Imee

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Imee Dalton (she/her) understands what it’s like to walk the world as someone disconnected from her roots. She has been dedicated to her own healing and remembrance journey for decades. Known as “the Mayari Moon”, Imee is a kali instructor, content creator and one of the hosts of the Babaylan Bruha Book Club Podcast. She lives on the ancestral lands of the mound builders that are the Hopewell and Adena. I interview her today on the podcast! Seven years ago, she started training in kali, a Filipino martial art (FMA). Since then, it has ignited a passion within her to help others like...

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 61 - Bathala, Bathalismo and the Infinite God show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 61 - Bathala, Bathalismo and the Infinite God

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

I am back with a new podcast season! In my first episode of the new season, let’s uncover the ancient tale of Infinito Dios, the Infinite God. Bathala is the supreme deity in Tagalog mythology, but he was turned into ‘God’ when the Spanish came. One story that has endured is the story behind the Bathalismo, the Infinite God, who refused to be baptized.  Please read 'Back from the Crocodile's Belly'. The essay I reference is: "Bathala is Anting-Anting or why Bathala Hides inside the Stone by Nenita Pambid Domingo".

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 60 - Mindanao - Mandaya and Subanun - The Children of the Limokon - The Sun and the Moon - The Widow’s Son show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore - Episode 60 - Mindanao - Mandaya and Subanun - The Children of the Limokon - The Sun and the Moon - The Widow’s Son

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Hello all! This is my last episode of the year. I perform more Mindanao tales, from Mandaya and Subanun. The stories are: The Children of the Limokon, The Sun and the Moon, and The Widow’s Son.

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 59 - Mindanao - Bilaan - The Story of the Creation - In the Beginning show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 59 - Mindanao - Bilaan - The Story of the Creation - In the Beginning

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

I'm back with more fairy tales from Mindanao, from Bilaan. I perform The Story of the Creation and In the Beginning. Y'all, please please look into the history of Mindanao if you can. Their issues are underreported by the news. I chose to tell these tales as a prayer this past month for those affected by the earthquake in Mindanao; and those who have been affected by the ongoing regional issues, including the war in Cotobato City.

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 58 - Mindanao - Bagobo - Origin - Lumabet show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 58 - Mindanao - Bagobo - Origin - Lumabet

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Hello! I'm back with fairy tales from Mindanao | Bagobo. The two fairy tales are: Origin and Lumabet.

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 57 - Mindanao - Bukidnon Pt 2 - How Children Became Monkeys - Bulanawan and Aguio show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 57 - Mindanao - Bukidnon Pt 2 - How Children Became Monkeys - Bulanawan and Aguio

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Hello! I am back with two fairytales: How Children Became Monkeys - Bulanawan and Aguio. These two tales are from Mindanao.

info_outline
Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 56 - Snow White and the Seven Dwarves: Breaking the Mirror of Narcissism show art Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folk Tales - Episode 56 - Snow White and the Seven Dwarves: Breaking the Mirror of Narcissism

Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore

Had this modern interpretation concept of Snow White in my mind since I heard the new plot line for the upcoming Snow White movie. I don't want anymore diversity checklist-esque "empowered" women. I want a broken hero that's escaping a narcissist mother, which was what the fairytale was about in my opinion. One who finds a loving community and it feels too good to be true. One who doesn't wake up to true love's kiss. The love that wakes Snow White is the promise that one can overcome even the darkest of influences with the power of self-love and support from those who truly care.

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Imee Dalton (she/her) understands what it’s like to walk the world as someone disconnected from her roots. She has been dedicated to her own healing and remembrance journey for decades. Known as “the Mayari Moon”, Imee is a kali instructor, content creator and one of the hosts of the Babaylan Bruha Book Club Podcast. She lives on the ancestral lands of the mound builders that are the Hopewell and Adena. I interview her today on the podcast!

Seven years ago, she started training in kali, a Filipino martial art (FMA). Since then, it has ignited a passion within her to help others like herself to start to gain the confidence they need to walk the world without fear, remembering their truest selves. Kali is an ancient martial art form from the Philippines, that involves bamboo sticks, swords, knives and empty hand techniques. Kali, arnis, and escrima are different names for the practice of Filipino Martial Arts.

What Imee offers in her kali circles has been given to her by her guides, ancestors and the Tagalog and Kapampangan goddess of the moon, Mayari. Imee uses the energy of kali to heal from colonial trauma. She asks her students to sit with their shadow and confront where colonization still lives within them. Her book club podcast focuses on Filipinx spiritual books which are also inclusive of diverse spiritual practices across cultures, world history and lived experiences.

“I started practicing kali 7 years ago. My partner, who is half Filipino, had been training for a few years already. He kept asking me to join the gym where he was training FMA, saying I'd really like it. At the time, physical hobbies weren't my thing, so I kept declining his invitations,” Imee recollects. “Finally, on a whim, I decided to come to the FMA gym. I fell in love immediately. Once I picked up kali sticks, I never put them down."

The first step of decolonization is remembering who you are and to look to the past so you can move into the future. One life lesson I learned in joining Imee’s class is not to leave half of yourself at the door. There is a constant you across all energies, from the ages of your life and to the shapes of your body. The exploration of solar and lunar practices in her class set me on this unique path of healing.

“One of my main inspirations is Mayari. Looking back, both the moon and the lunar goddess have always been on the edges of my life calling to me,” says Imee. “It wasn't until I started training in kali that I stumbled across Mayari's story. She was a moon goddess who looked like me and had kali sticks like me! The representation healed something in me from childhood. With her being the goddess of the moon and a warrior, it called to a deep place in me that felt disempowered and disconnected.”

In a modern tale, the Tagalog worshiped Mayari, who had two sisters, Hanan, the goddess of the morning, and Tala, goddess of the stars. They were daughters of the supreme god, Bathala. Mayari also had a brother named Apo Laki, the god of the sun and war. He is a part of Tagalog, Pangasinan and Kapampangan mythology. In a Kapampangan myth, Mayari fought against her brother for equal rulership over the world. During the battle, Apo Laki strikes Mayari and blinds her in one eye. He immediately regrets his violence upon his sister and the two rule equally together. Mayari rules the night and her brother rules the day.