VIDEO: Real Mermaids Were Caught on Camera
Who doesn’t love mermaids? Every single little girl has wanted to be a mermaid at least once, the Ariel version of course, not the man-killing version.
According to usareturn.com, the reality of mermaids was assumed during medieval times, when they were depicted matter-of-factly alongside known aquatic animals such as whales.
Hundreds of years ago sailors and residents in coastal towns around the world told of encountering the sea maidens.
One story dating back to the 1600s claimed that a mermaid had entered Holland through a dike, and was injured in the process.
She was taken to a nearby lake and soon nursed back to health.
She eventually became a productive citizen, learning to speak Dutch, perform household chores, and eventually converted to Catholicism.
With most of our blue planet covered by water, it’s little wonder that, centuries ago, the oceans were believed to hide mysterious creatures including sea serpents and mermaids.
Merfolk (mermaids and mermen) are, of course, the marine version of half-human, half-animal legends that have captured human imagination for ages.
One source, the “Arabian Nights,” described mermaids as having “moon faces and hair like a woman’s but their hands and feet were in their bellies and they had tails like fishes.”
C.J.S. Thompson, a former curator at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, notes in his book “The Mystery and Lore of Monsters” that “Traditions concerning creatures half-human and half-fish in form have existed for thousands of years, and the Babylonian deity Era or Oannes, the Fish-god … is usually depicted as having a bearded head with a crown and a body like a man, but from the waist downwards he has the shape of a fish.” Greek mythology contains stories of the god Triton, the merman messenger of the sea, and several modern religions including Hinduism and Candomble (an Afro-Brazilian belief) worship mermaid goddesses to this day.
Many children are perhaps most familiar with the Disney version of “The Little Mermaid,” a somewhat sanitized version of a Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale first published in 1837.
In some legends from Scotland and Wales mermaids befriended — and even married — humans.
Meri Lao, in her book “Seduction and the Secret Power of Women,” notes that “In the Shetland Islands, mermaids are stunningly beautiful women who live under the sea; their hybrid appearance is temporary, the effect being achieved by donning the skin of a fish.
They must be very careful not to lose this while wandering about on land, because without it they would be unable to return to their underwater realm.”
There is no clear proof that mermaids exist and every time people seem to be close to proving it someone comes along and proves that it’s not real.
Depending on which version of the mermaids you think could exist, there are some people that would not want them to be real if they are creatures that lure people to kill them.
Either way it would be endlessly amazing to see them and meet them and understand them better if they would be real.