From Cork to New York
Welcome to a deeply moving episode of From Cork to New York. In this gathering of the storytelling circle, hosts Jim Brule and Maria are joined by special guest Hears Crow, a seasoned storyteller from the woodlands of Vermont who lives in the Eastern Woodlands Long House tradition of the Narragansett. Together, they weave a beautiful tapestry of grief, survival, and the enduring power of oral tradition to heal both the living and the ancestors. OUR GUEST - HEARS CROW Nootauau Kaukontuoh, “she hears it from him, the crow,” is a Narragansett storyteller, educator, and poet. With over 35 years of experience, she shares Longhouse Tales and Native culture through oral traditions, workshops, and published works, including poetry and a forthcoming children's novel. See a photo of Hears Crow at https://healingmonsters.community/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Hears-Crow.jpg [https://healingmonsters.community/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Hears-Crow.jpg] THE STORIES SHARED IN THIS EPISODE * "The Stone Canoe" – An Eastern Woodlands (Narragansett) legend told by Hears Crow. * "The Sceál of the Butter Box Baby" – An Irish folklore-inspired tale of Samhain and ancestral love told by Maria. * "Tarvaa, the Bard of Mongolia" – A traditional Mongolian oral legend told by Jim Brule. THE HOOK What happens when grief takes us to the very edge of the underworld? In this episode, our tellers explore how the ultimate remedy for deep loss is not solitary withdrawal, but an active return to community. Through the lens of a stone canoe, a hidden butter box on a misty Cork night, and a blind bard who chose storytelling over jewels, we discover how stories act as the ultimate "shawl:" draping over our shared wounds and carrying us home. THE CHAPTERS [00:00] Welcoming Hears Crow to the Circle Jim and Maria welcome guest Hears Crow from her Vermont forest home. She shares her forty-year journey of native storytelling and introduces the rich Long House traditions of the Nanhiganeac (Narragansett) people. [03:16] The Story of the Stone Canoe Hears Crow shares a poignant legend of a young hunter who, devastated by the sudden death of his bride, travels south to the Land of Souls. To cross the great lake to paradise, he must shed his body and sail in a shimmering white stone canoe - only to learn from the Great Mystery (Cautantowwit) that his earthly work is not yet finished. [19:45] Sitting in the Nourishment of Grief The hosts and Hears Crow reflect on the beautiful, delicate dance with grief. They discuss how the young hunter’s pain could have swallowed him, but he found healing by returning to live a life of duty, service, and leadership for his people. [24:25] The Ceo Draíochta and the Butter Box Baby Maria transports us to a misty, modern-day Halloween (Oíche Shamhna) in Cork. Skeptical young Tom is caught in a magical mist (ceo draíochta), coming face-to-face with a ghostly father carrying a deceased, unbaptized child in a wooden butter box, desperate to lay his baby to rest. [35:18] Workarounds of Love and Healing the Ancestors The circle explores the historical concept of neart bog (gentle strength) shown by Irish mothers who found compassionate "workarounds" to bury lost babies in sacred ground. Jim shares his belief that speaking these heavy stories has the power to heal the wounds of our ancestors. [39:22] Tarvaa, the Bard of Mongolia Jim weaves a profound Mongolian legend of a young man who stays behind to care for plague victims and journeys to the underworld. Offered any treasure by the Khan of Death, Tarvaa bypasses gold and jewels to bring the ultimate gift back to the living world: the art of storytelling. [47:23] Draped in the Shawl of Community Hears Crow shares a touching image of elder women using their shawls to make "little tents" of privacy for young mothers. Maria recalls the historic "shawlies" of Cork, celebrating how community and oral tradition drape around us like a warm, restorative hug. [51:10] The Wooden Spoon and the Road Ahead The episode wraps up with playful banter about childhood encounters with the maternal "wooden spoon" in Ireland and America, closing with a warm, shared blessing for all travelers walking the Story Road. KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. Action as the Antidote to Despair Both The Stone Canoe and Blind Tarvaa demonstrate that moving through profound loss requires active engagement with the living. Healing is found not in solitary escape, but in dedicating oneself to serving, feeding, and leading others. 2. Narrative as Ancestral Healing Stories have a unique power to travel backward through time. By speaking aloud painful historical secrets—such as the fate of unbaptized infants—we acknowledge, honor, and help soothe the generational trauma carried by those who came before us. 3. The Ultimate Currency is Connection When Tarvaa is offered the riches of the underworld, he bypasses gold and jewels for Storytelling, recognizing that empathy, song, laughter, and shared narrative are the only treasures capable of sustaining a community through a plague. 4. "Neart Bog" (Gentle Strength) Over Dogma The maternal "workarounds" of Irish folklore remind us that human compassion will always find a way to circumvent harsh dogmas, weaving soft, protective spaces for the vulnerable. CLOSING If you felt the comforting weight of these stories drape over you today, we invite you to join our growing circle. Subscribe to the Healing Monsters Substack [https://healingmonsters.substack.com] for weekly essays on myth, folklore, and the monsters we must befriend to heal. Until we meet again on the Story Road: be safe, be warm, and keep listening.
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