going back first into ancient Greece, and the answer is, every single mythological story that our listeners might know about has multiple versions, and most of the Greek mythology that we know about is written down during what is basically called the golden age of Greece. And so the Greeks that are writing this down are trying to portray Greece in a certain light. But in fact, those stories come from an oral tradition that was not written down, sometimes 1000s of years before the golden age of Greece. Really writes down the versions that I tell my students, the one that rises to the top, the one that finally gets published, to say it that way. But if you think about the Demeter story, there is 100 versions of the Demeter story. The Greeks. We think of the city states. We think of them as the birthplace of democracy, but these city states were still fiercely independent places. So the Demeter story in Athens, in Sparta, in thessalonia, these are all different versions of the same story. Finally, one of them gets to the top, rises to the top. And so when we take these stories today, like through Percy Jackson or Disney, of course, is going to clean up these stories, it has to, and we say, Well, are they corrupting them? My response to anyone who says that is absolutely not. These are corrupted stories before the ones that you read in high school or junior high school that you ever saw in the first place, think of a 1000 year old game of telephone, right? They had been spoken for 1000 years before they got written down. Are your students ever surprised to learn the origin of some of the things they might be familiar with from other stories, from other religious iterations, from other things they may have heard. Oh, that's the same story. It's just a different version that the Greeks were telling. Sure, the easiest of all compare. Well, there's two easy, easy comparisons. In Greek mythology, there's a flood story in Judeo Christianity, there's a flood story in Egypt, there's a flood story in in South. East Asia, there is a flood story that goes back to our friend Joseph Campbell, who explored mythologies across the world. We know that there are multiple versions of the flood story, but even the basic hero template of Jason or Theseus or Perseus, or for the Greeks, it was Herakles, not Hercules, but of Heracles. The earlier template for that actually comes out of Mesopotamia through Gilgamesh. And we know that the Greeks didn't have the written version of Gilgamesh, but they had the oral stories, because you can see it picked up in all of the Greek hero stories. And so they learned that, they learned that those stories really do come from a much older tradition.