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XXX Ancient Sissy Challenge
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As I was enjoying reading the sissy stories on this site, I began to recall the fact that crossdressing stories were around for millennia. (Babification stories are fairly recent) Examples include: Thor and Loki plotting to retrieve a stolen Mjolnir (Thor's hammer) from Jotenheim by having Thor dress up as Freyja and Loki, the bridesmaid and attempting to marry the king of the Frost Giants, Achilles dressing up as a girl and hiding on an island of women forcibly by his mother Thesis so that he could hide from Odysseus and not have to go to Troy and die there. Odysseus visited the island in a suspicion, and tried to weed out the man in the group by giving gifts to all the girls: all perfumes, combs, and clothes, but he put in one sword. When Odysseus saw one girl practicing swordfighting with it, he realized this was Achilles and dragged him off to war. There is also the myth that Heralds went insane and murdered Iphitus, and as punishment had to be a slave to Omphale and crossdress while doing it. Tiresias was a Greek prophet who had been changed into a woman and back again, Elagabalus was a roman emperor (historical) who would dress as a woman and flirt with the Praetorian guard and even put a reward for any doctor who could physically turn him into a woman, plus need I even mention Robin Hood? Now, my challenge for you is... can you take at least one of the above stories and make it into a modern sissy story like you would find here? Do research, make it as close to the original as possible in terms of events and historical accuracy but other than that, have fun with it.
I won't take up the challenge just yet...(Miki? Sounds like your cup of tea...), but I will say "thank you" for acknowledging my namesake, Tiresias. Chose his/her name precisely because of his/her ability to straddle two worlds as a shaman...the fluid gender issue...his/her challenge to the gods....and because he/she is a prominent player in the great poem of the 20th century, T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land."
Cheers, and walk in Beauty,
Tiresias Rex...the Queen
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I won't take up the challenge just yet...(Miki? Sounds like your cup of tea...), but I will say "thank you" for acknowledging my namesake, Tiresias. Chose his/her name precisely because of his/her ability to straddle two worlds as a shaman...the fluid gender issue...his/her challenge to the gods....and because he/she is a prominent player in the great poem of the 20th century, T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land."
Cheers, and walk in Beauty,
Tiresias Rex...the Queen
Cheers, and walk in Beauty,
Tiresias Rex...the Queen
You're welcome. Yeah... Tiresias is the epitome of gender fluidity and thus I was always interested in the story. Admittedly, he isn't a very well known character in that you're average layperson has no idea who he was which I account for due to the fact that the media likes to portray Ancient Greece as a time of intense masculinity and heroism, and being that Tiresias' main point of interest was his gender fluidity and seeing abilities which often predicted tragedy and brought trouble (remember Oedipus Rex?), neither of which fit into the whole masculine heroism stereotype. In reality, ancient Greece was full of Gender fluidity even outside of myth. In ancient Greece, it was acceptable for young men (not kids) to have sex with elder men in exchange for learning their trade. I recall a scene in Plato's Symposium where Aristophanes makes a creation myth up on the spot to explain homosexuality and treats homosexuality as normal, not as an abomination as later happened in the late Roman period onwards. Alcibiades even comes in and professes his sexual love for Socrates towards the end, (this was probably political slander as young men could have sex with older men, but once it was two old men it was weird but it still showed a better gender fluidity in society than today.) The Romans were a completely different story. Elagabalus was an example of Roman hatred of femininity but I already mentioned him.
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