Wow. As you said the reasons why people were accused of being changlings, all I heard was diabetes, autism, teenage hormones, and so many other medical conditions. What a heartbreaking history.
@PatrickRsGhost19 сағат бұрын
Before she even got into the medical side of it, all I could think of was autism, down syndrome, and other physical or mental afflictions that people passed off as changelings. Some wouldn't be noticeable until the child had grown a bit more, like at age 1 to 2 years, whereas some, like a clubbed foot or cleft palate, would be noticeable instantly at birth. I wonder how those were handled, the ones whose physical afflictions were noticeable right away. The mother was probably accused of witchcraft, thought to have been cursed, accused of adultery/infidelity, or maybe r***ed by the Devil himself.
@tytesseract16 сағат бұрын
@@PatrickRsGhost pretty sure that throughout the vast majority of history women would have been accused of "consorting with the devil", blamed and cast out, rather than being seen as victims
@apex20007 сағат бұрын
Good thing less superstitious people was allowed to do science (was very restrictive once)
@apex20007 сағат бұрын
@@PatrickRsGhostyou killed newborns if obviously urm "defective or deformed" so to avoid becoming a burden to the family
@ziizification18 сағат бұрын
A few reminders: Cruelty against the disabled is not a thing of the past, and kindness towards the disabled is not a recent invention either. Many profoundly disabled people have led beautiful productive lives throughout history as long as humans have been human. My personal favorite will always be Shanidar 1, a Neanderthal man who was likely deaf and blind on one side and had mobility limiting injuries and birth defects and still lived to old age in a time where that would only have been possible with community care.
@musicgirl1235717 сағат бұрын
Oh, I remember hearing about that from Trey the Explainer
@himesilva17 сағат бұрын
Tfw neanderthals were kinder than than some "more advanced" humans
@kristinthomsen317513 сағат бұрын
As a disabled person, I concur. I have zero trust in anyone.
@skybluskyblueify13 сағат бұрын
"[L]ed beautiful productive lives.." but we, the disabled, don't need to lead "productive" lives to be respected or valued (or be considered human and not a changeling [!]).
@athena879411 сағат бұрын
Jane Goodall was once asked what she considered the first sign of civilization. She cited a neandertal skeleton with a healed femur fracture. They *would not* have lived long enough to heal without community support.
@עומרשרייבר-ל4ר20 сағат бұрын
Ngl Changelings always disturbed me. Not from their myths, but how people treated those so called Changelings. Most of those cases feels like a child was born autistic or with any other disorders and sense people back then didnt know about this kind of stuff they just assumed their child was abducted and was replaced with well, a thing. And turns out they did horrifc things to those so called Changelings and this makes the whole thing even more messed up.
@aureyd251518 сағат бұрын
I have to wonder if the myth evolved to make it pychologically easier for people to allow children with issues to die. When families were barely surviving, trying to care for a child with health issues could have meant that other members of that family might not survive.
@RedJester6819 сағат бұрын
When you mentioned examples that later included older adults, I immediately thought of people diagnosed with dementia who start acting differently.
@sunderedpsyche428915 сағат бұрын
My grandmother who is in her 100's "we didn't see people with disabilities in my day." Me watching this video... "yeah, I can see why."
@healinggrounds1911 сағат бұрын
That's because most disabled people were locked up in Disappointment Rooms inside houses.
@rami_ungar_writer19 сағат бұрын
As someone on the autism spectrum, as well as someone with other disabilities, I've read and heard quite a bit about how changelings have been used to explain disability. And honestly, I believe it. We come up with crazy ideas to explain why we don't have the "perfect" child we've always dreamed of, and then sometimes do horrible things in the hope of getting that fantasy to come back. Also, I have really got to read Victor LaValle's The Changeling one of these days. It's been on my Audible wishlist for a while now.
@t.vinters312818 сағат бұрын
"The Moorchild" is my favourite changeling-themed book, written from the perspective of a fey child. I read it as a kid, and, being a neurodivergent child who didn't belong anywhere, it stuck a nerve. It's also surprisingly good at depicting fairies as slightly unnerving creatures you really don't want to meet, and not pretty humans with wings.
@denisejeffries267516 сағат бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. I immediately went to my library website and found the ebook. I look forward to reading it!
@pyrovix16 сағат бұрын
This has been one of my favorite books since I was eight! It’s also my comfort book, and I love that it subverted most fae tropes way back when it was written. Would love to see a faithful adaption.
@MDuarte-vp7bm16 сағат бұрын
Lol nobody wants to meet fae. My assumption is that they eat kids.
@christabelle__6 сағат бұрын
Thanks for the recommendation, I was JUST wondering about if there were any stories written from the perspective of the changeling themselves!
@jackielinde756817 сағат бұрын
Got to love the switch in tone from "You're too smart to be our child. You must be a changeling." to "You're too dumb to be our child. You must be a changeling." Like a lot of hateful things, the story is never consistent.
@lysan144519 сағат бұрын
The message was obvious: Don't be different. It's harrowing how those assumed 'changelings' were treated. Unfortunately, the message is still around, and people are still being beaten or even killed for being 'different'.
@CMansfield18 сағат бұрын
Humans - and some other species - have always had a problem with "the different." In many cases, we will invent differences where there are none, or where the difference is slight. It's no surprise that infants and children (our most vulnerable) have historically been treated so poorly.
@Jay-ql4gp19 сағат бұрын
This one was gruesome. Justifying cruelty to abuse the autistic, diabetics, and so much more. And doing something truly bizzare to 'expose' the changeling because somehow normal people wouldn't question it.
@vanessamacneil597815 сағат бұрын
Changeling lore breaks my heart - especially as the parent of a child who would probably have been considered as one. It's heartbreaking to think of how many children suffered through changeling trials, and the wild mix of emotions their parents must have experienced as their child appeared to change with no other ready explanation.
@y_fam_goeglyd14 сағат бұрын
Me too. My son is on the Asperger's spectrum and my youngest daughter has ADD. I was particularly precocious as a youngster - I learned to read & write by the time I was 3, and that wasn't the most "intelligent" thing I did. (Unfortunately I didn't remain so smart!) I can't imagine what I would have gone through, let alone my kids 😢.
@jessicajayes832619 сағат бұрын
As someone on the spectrum, this hits hard. Imagine your kid developing normally then all of sudden stopping? I imagine that's how my mom felt. It took looking at my family tree to realize she did nothing wrong. This story could have been used to explain SIDS or Capgras delusion as well.
@pbsstoried17 сағат бұрын
Absolutely. It’s a really heartbreaking and scary “monster.”-*Dr.Z*
@mythicalcreaturesdoctorsor358917 сағат бұрын
Changeling : 🇮🇪 Ireland traditional night forest house
@sventer1983 сағат бұрын
The part where the channeling just “disappears” one day gave me the shivers because what a convenient excuse to use after you killed the child.
@jannetteberends873018 сағат бұрын
Children with Prader-Willi syndrome could be one explanation for the child keep on eating. And because the baby starts with problems with eating, and suddenly changes its eating pattern when it’s a toddler. This children can’t stop eating.
@maugos16 сағат бұрын
It's truly amazing the lengths people will go to to force their reality on others hurting innocents in such horrible ways. Even sadder that it continues to this day. That said, this was an interesting video and I appreciate all the research you put into your series.
@pendragon201219 сағат бұрын
Damn. Hits different when you work around neurodivergents.
@LKMNOP15 сағат бұрын
I just adore that if you were slow in your reasoning you were considered to be a changeling. But if you were very fast and intelligent in your reasoning then you were a changeling....
@PokhrajRoy.20 сағат бұрын
1:36 Martin Luther had no chill. He woke up and chose to recommend demon slaying. Also, parents would rather scare their child than try to understand them.
@twell19845 сағат бұрын
I'm unable to find any sources for this story about Martin Luther and the changeling except this video and the English wikipedia (German version does not have it). If you want to cancel Martin Luther, just use his anti-semitism, do not make stuff up.
@clockworkgnome18 сағат бұрын
As a physically disabled person who also has ASD, this video is honestly heartbreaking…
@skybluskyblueify13 сағат бұрын
The true horror was us* all along. [Not disabled ppl but humanity (as too much as a rule)]
@RaverHates20 сағат бұрын
I highly recommend Fin Dwyer's Irish History Podcast if you want to learn more on the tragic case of Brigit Cleary. He has an episode on the events and it is heartbreaking. Some of her last words were something like "daddy do you not know me, I'm your little girl, why are you hurting me?"
@onbearfeet16 сағат бұрын
As a neurodivergent adult who was once a neurodivergent little girl bullied for being "too smart", this hits hard. I always identified with strange or alien characters in fiction, and more than a few adults suggested there was something profoundly wrong or inhuman about me just because I read Hamlet when I was nine. And now we're experiencing a huge wave of conservative social backlash against anyone perceived as "different". This should go well...
@healinggrounds1911 сағат бұрын
Me too! I also discovered Shakespeare around age 9! I now have a theatre troupe of likewise people called "The Changelings Company ".
@IAmTheAce520 сағат бұрын
So it's like witch-hunting but for children
@MDuarte-vp7bm16 сағат бұрын
No, because witch-hunting is justification of rejection of a too-independent person. This is the opposite. Rejection of a low-functioning person.
@youremakingprogress14417 сағат бұрын
This all sounds like a convenient explanation for people's children becoming anything other than a sweet, well-behaved, healthy ideal child. It's hard for most parents to accept that their child isn't just a perfected clone of the parents themselves, and I can imagine a lot of parents using their denial and superstition to do away with, or just take their frustrations out on, their unlucky child.
@jackielinde756817 сағат бұрын
My current D&D character is an Oath of Vengeance Paladin who's a Changeling that believes she's a highborn Elf cursed to be a changeling. Her whole reason for becoming an adventurer is so "she can find the person or persons who cursed her, have them break the curse and restore her to her natural form, and then deal retribution so they cannot curse anyone else." Other than basic backstory questions (Her "family" are nobility and have roles tied to their group's church. The family knows because the spell holding her shape broke at a family function, but the family has been successful in keeping this secret from the rest of their people. And anyone who does know believes she to be a changeling and not an elf.), I left the details decided blank for the DM to fill in. She also has a very little patience for anyone who dabbles in curses and will take up the cause or offer protection to someone who's cursed. To be honest, this was supposed to be a throw away character for a one-shot adventure. That day, most of our table bailed, but my brother still wanted to play D&D. While he was creating a character for his son, I rolled randomly for what character I was playing, landed on "Changeling" and "Paladin - Oath of Vengeance". Then I asked myself, "Why is she so angry?" and decided to use the swapped baby/changeling story, but with a twist. She doesn't know she's a changeling. Now I had her critical wounds, I needed a Want and a Need. Her want is for the curse to be broken and the form she thinks she should have be restored. The need is to realize she wasn't an elf and come to terms with it. Only then can she find a way to become an elf. I think we're about two and a half years playing this story, and I have an idea of the who did what and why, but my character is no closer to any of the answers.
@gabeskinner90279 сағат бұрын
Warning for anyone who has trouble with audio of screaming/crying: sounds of a kid screaming around 4:45 until 5:00 ish while she’s speaking about a child’s death by abuse
@kuriosastoryteller19 сағат бұрын
Children, and adults, who have disabilities can still to this day be accused of being a changeling, or whatever creature the people in their surroundings believe in, and suffer horrible abuse because of it.
@grimtheghastly887815 сағат бұрын
There was a very interesting short story i read once on tumblr that used changelings as a metaphor for neurodivergent children. It was about a medieval irish woman struggling with infertility who really wanted to have a baby, so she made a deal with her local fae, which stated that after a certain period of time the fae would swap out the woman's baby with a changling and test the woman to see if she could correctly identify which of the two was her actual child. If she guessed correctly, she would get her baby back. If she guessed incorrectly, she would lose her child forever. The deal is sealed, and the woman is blessed with a daughter, and for about a year, the mother and child live happily in their secluded little hut in the woods. When the time came, the fae snuck into the woman's home when she was sleeping did as it said it would and swapped the little girl out for a girl who was identical in every way, save for the fact that she exhibited behaviors that we would now undersrand as very early signs of autism spectrum disorder. And for a little while, the mother and the changeling lived as if nothing changed. The fae returned as it said it would and took the changeling away too and so began its test. The woman met the fae at the same place where the deal was struck, and with it, she found the two little girls completely identical in every visible way. When insteucted to identify which of the girls was really hers, she looked closely, thought carefully, and after a moment of consideration she said they both were hers, because she loved them both the same and would do anything for them. The fae, a creature of its word, was surprised and impressed at the woman's answer, as not many would have answered the same, and even fewer would have been telling the truth. And so the fae returned both girls back to their mother and left them in peace, and they lived happily ever after. I wish I could remember who had originally posted that story because I think about it a lot, and it gets me teary-eyed eyed every single time.
@AnnikaCoyucoCutecats14 сағат бұрын
That’s a beautiful fairytale.
@rileylittleraven13 сағат бұрын
I mentally clung to this (edit: that tale, I mean) while the horrific neglect, abuse, and murders were being described - besides being awful by definition, I absolutely would've been labeled as such (ASD and a boatload of other things) and am also a twin. Scary and truly heartbreaking - it takes harboring deep cruelty to do any of those things, regardless of what you think your kid is or isn't.
@catbake13 сағат бұрын
The fantasy novel UNSEELIE by Iveliise Housman explores the "changelings were a way to explain Autism" angle from the perspective of an Autistic author!!! Highly recommend :)
@CrystalRaye14 сағат бұрын
Proving once again that humans are the world's true monsters
@historybuff749116 сағат бұрын
I grew-up with a few stories that showed new born babies were the most vulnerable to being switched for a changeling. I made my husband follow the baby to the nursery after the birth of each child. I knew they were just stories, but I just didn't want to risk it. I don't know why I thought my baby was safe in the nursery, but I did.
@Mike-kw5xv10 сағат бұрын
And stories where the family's actions force the fey to return the real child could easily be seen as the child learning to mask themselves to avoid further beatings.
@lilbasenji119 сағат бұрын
Wow I never realized how much disabilities and mental disabilities were associated with changelings in Europe. That is so interesting!!! It just shows how scary differences can be to the uneducated and how important it is to accept everyone’s differences. Now I am curious to find out if there are any other creatures that has a connection with people with disabilities. Also I didn’t expect autism to be relevant to changeling lore.
@Horrorbabe418 сағат бұрын
Difference isn't scary. Humanity's inability to accept difference is scary. Bruh
@lilbasenji117 сағат бұрын
@@Horrorbabe4Very true. I meant difference is scary to people who don’t know better.
@Horrorbabe414 сағат бұрын
Complex topic that i cant come to the same conclusion about. I wonder if confusion or misunderstanding is the actual reason. Or whether a lack of empathy and compassion was not the actual reason. I think there had to be people who were alive back then who knew that they were doing the wrong thing by killing a baby. @lilbasenji1
@vginsprdsobepr969810 сағат бұрын
I always believed that the fairies kidnapped Peter Pan as a baby and replaced him with a changing which was the “baby” his mother was cradling when he returned in the ending of “The Little White Bird”.
@equesdeventusoccasus17 сағат бұрын
The Irish also believed in doppelgangers (which are sort of a changeling) that would replace degenerate people and be a much better person. One of my ancestors was accused of being replaced with a doppelganger.
@Myself-yf5do10 сағат бұрын
Tony Robinson's Gods and Monsters series talked about changelings, among other things.
@mariocarreiro73397 сағат бұрын
Star Trek also has a whole species called Changelings. Odo from DS9 is one of them.
@misspinkpunkykat18 сағат бұрын
After hearing about pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections, I wonder if maybe that had a role in "changelings". Parents of children who get it say it's like the child changed overnight. It's a strep infection that goes to the brain. Very poorly understood even today but imagine back then before modern medicine.
@wimvanderstraeten65216 сағат бұрын
There's also a 1980 movie with George C. Scott called The Changeling.
@PokhrajRoy.20 сағат бұрын
0:16 In a few Indian media pieces, there are shapeshifting snakes. Maybe that’s our changeling.
@nikkiewhite47618 сағат бұрын
The number of children abused to death because of nerodivergent changes, nutritionally caused cognitive disorders and other illnesses is chilling.
@tremorsfan11 сағат бұрын
Another possible explanation for Changelings is a phenomenon known as Capgras Syndrome, in which a person believes that a loved one has been replaced by an imposter.
@saranshgautam655120 сағат бұрын
Very well researched video again!! Mad respect to Dr. Zarka and Team ❤
@twell19844 сағат бұрын
Is there a list of sources, please? I cannot find anything about the anecdote about Martin Luther except on Wikipedia.
@pandoraeeris786014 сағат бұрын
Surprised there wasn't a single mention of the World of Darkness game Changeling.
@KWENTakutanPH11 сағат бұрын
Interestingly, there’s a belief in the Philippines that during a loved one’s wake, there should always be one family member present because there’s a fear that an aswang (a Filipino shape-shifting ghoul that eats corpses) would replace the corpse in the coffin with a look-alike. As soon as a witch doctor throws salt at the corpse in the coffin, it was believed that the true form of the imposter in the coffin would be revealed - a banana tree trunk.
@Wiking-Inwestuje19 сағат бұрын
I was hoping to hear something about Mamuna from Slavic folklore. Mamuna could replace the child with her changling. To protect the child, parents can put something red to the craddle - red color can keep away the Mamuna.
@LilliBlackmore19 сағат бұрын
This has got to be the most horrific episode you've ever made.
@whimsicalhamster8814 сағат бұрын
Did not expect this to be the most horrifying and depressing episode of Monstrum yet. Thinking of all of the mostly women and children straight up tortured and killed is very hard. Humans are the worst.
@Queen1001N12 сағат бұрын
I wonder if progeria, a genetic disorder characterized by rapid aging, was also an influence.
@kevprange14 сағат бұрын
Kinda seems that the monsters were the parents and adults. I’m looking at you Martin Luther.
@chrisjarvis228719 сағат бұрын
Japan and parts of Asia have a history with changelings going as far back as Europe if not longer.
@LindaC61618 сағат бұрын
I wouldn't be surprised if you told me that certain nomadic Amazonian tribes do, as well
@TheHornedKing17 сағат бұрын
Fear and ignorance is a dangerous combo.
@eaglewolffox627520 сағат бұрын
Changelings are also seen in MLP. First appearing in Season Two finale: A Canterlot Wedding part 2
@Dcfan38-q6v20 сағат бұрын
and troll hunters
@eaglewolffox627518 сағат бұрын
Yes that too @Dcfan38-q6v
@lukedurett731315 сағат бұрын
Please don't use AI imagery in this show! I very much enjoy it and it was a bummer to see (such as at 3:05)
@Sarah-hm2pe12 сағат бұрын
I found this image elsewhere, titled "Livre du roi Modus et de la reine Ratio, 14th century." Not sure if that's AI or not.
@Auryce12 сағат бұрын
The only monsters in most of these stories seem be the adults not understanding why their children are different and abusing them for it, which seems like a relatable experience for many with disabilities or neurodivergent brains. Side note: I’m curious if traumatic brain injuries that cause shifts in people’s demeanor or personality are behind some of these recountings.
@empryme16 сағат бұрын
A book I read not too long ago hat involved changelings was Eloise McGraw's The Moorchild. I enjoyed it and recommend it.
@theysisossenthime14 сағат бұрын
I love changeling lore. This video was well done. That said, I really could do without the horrible eating noises. I suffer from severe Misophonia, and those scenes caused me no small amount of suffering. I find it hard to believe that those sounds are why anyone gave the video a thumbs up. But for me, they do give the video a thumbs down. In situations where eating noises to come are telegraphed enough in advance, it gives me time to switch over to closed captions. When that is well enough done, even though I dislike it, I may be willing to give content thumbs up still. But when there is not enough warning, I am forced to suffer. Millions are in the same situation. In case you didn't know, now you do.
@spoopatroopa800520 сағат бұрын
rockin the purple XD
@TylerRakstis12 сағат бұрын
It's funny how you now look at an expansion of your previous episodes on the Tuatha De Danann, where fairies originated. But it's also a cautionary tale on when people take what's meant to be a made-up story too literally to the point where they potentially committed abelist murder and infantcide. Though I wished you mentioned the My Little Pony versions of those creatures, since that's how some of us got introduced to them.
@Tygertyger800819 сағат бұрын
So, anyone -- especially a child -- who was too different was supposedly a changeling. My lack of faith in humanity is restored. That insatiable appetite could've been inspired by Prader Willi syndrome.
@t.vinters312818 сағат бұрын
It could also be caused by things like celiac and similar conditions, where the child won't actually absorb much of what they eat, hence be constantly hungry. Which would also explain the emaciated appearance.
@dcbandit14 сағат бұрын
There are some positive interpretations of such things like autism, such as the behavior of wizards, as shown through how they have become interpreted over time. They are singularly interested in just magic, speak oddly, dress in colorful outfits and seemingly do things others can't explain. Wizards are autistic, just that. Being autistic, it's a comfort.😊
@philgood808911 сағат бұрын
just chiming in to say i love the outro outtakes lol.
@Jiddy1234519 сағат бұрын
Outside Over There by Maurice Sendak as well
@tomsenior740519 сағат бұрын
Not that long ago there was a case of two children being mistakenly swapped at birth in a small county hospital in Eire. Both sets of families reported any uneasy feeling that their infants did not belong. It took years for the hospital to notice their mistake. Finally, once reunited with their now teenage child, Mr & Mrs O'Reilly said that it was as if a tremendous weight had been lifted from their shoulders. Mr & Mrs Khan were unavailable for comment.
@mgold750320 сағат бұрын
As an autistic person, I find changeling lore as an explanation of our existence.
@musicgirl1235717 сағат бұрын
And further proof that it's not caused by vaccines. After all many of the tales go back when vaccines were either a not readily available or b before they were even invented. Seriously people stop using a D-list celebrity with no knowledge in medicine as your reference.
@windlessoriginals115019 сағат бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Z.
@littlecr3atur318 сағат бұрын
it breaks my heart to think of how many disabled children were killed because their families believed they were changelings
@MDuarte-vp7bm16 сағат бұрын
They weren't killed because they thought they were changelings. They were killed for being malformed. The changeling story was incidental.
@TheRhuen9 сағат бұрын
Yeah, these are tragic cases. Doesn't stop here either, these cases were in countries that claimed a low witch hunt execution yet did this, along with persecution of anyone who said they saw a fairy, or heck talked about seeing them in a dream. One man was sentenced to death for claiming he had sex with a Scogsra (the church/government didn't recognize Scogsra as real...but did recognize succubi as real and proclaimed he had bedded one of those. And unlike a modern pop culture story where they would be trying to protect them from the demon and banish its hold on him...he was charged and sentenced to death.
@GLSnifit15 сағат бұрын
Not gonna lie, the purple hair is actually a pretty good look on Dr. Z
@pigsquatch65mya8015 сағат бұрын
This is one of those rare monsters where its scarier when they don't exist. It makes me realize that if I was born in the 1800s, my parents wouldn't let me live past the age of four.
@summercucumber496417 сағат бұрын
The amount of sick and disabled children maimed and killed by these notions is heartbreaking.
@majinsole855412 сағат бұрын
Yeah- this is definitely the saddest Monstrum to me. ~_~
@williamcooper802420 сағат бұрын
Humans. are. the. WORST..!!! UGH!!!
@markuslanggeng15 сағат бұрын
This to me is the scariest episode so far :(
@jimmycrackkorn159619 сағат бұрын
What, No mention (not even in this comment section) of one the best creepy-est haunted house movies "The Changeling" Staring George C Scott...!???
@Myself-yf5do10 сағат бұрын
When are you going to do Fate and Fabled again?
@y_fam_goeglyd14 сағат бұрын
Religion has done far more harm than good. It's heartbreaking 😥
@sparkcrushervcm18 сағат бұрын
Ha! I started the video, turned away for a second, turned back, and was totally confused.
@jamesclark744817 сағат бұрын
Merry Christmas Dr. Monster.
@RendallRen6 сағат бұрын
The cheerful narration contrasts with the topic.
@christabelle__6 сағат бұрын
With ADHD, and potentially Autism as well? Yeah. It's been hard to find and keep friends when you're also just...an outspoken woman who can't stop herself from calling people out on lies and subtle condescension, etc - being 'too much' for people feels like my life story, and I realized one day that in my creative writing...I kept writing characters with inner monsters. Sometimes literal inner monsters...sometimes figurative - and I realized that I hadn't even meant to, but I'd been writing what it's like to live with a neurodivergence. It's no wonder people in the past believed so hard in a monster, or a fairy replacing their child...sad as it is. I fight with what feels like an inner monster constantly, so I can be more palatable to people. ADHD is like having a volume dial turned all the way up...and broken off. You feel EVERYTHING 1000%, so it's nice when you're happy...and horrible when you're sad or mad, and...if I've been internalizing this "I have a monster inside me I have to keep back" myself? What must parents have thought in times where the internet wasn't around, and a quack doctor tells you its fairies? It breaks my heart.
@calladricosplays2 сағат бұрын
Tale Foundry narrated an original short story about a changeling, in which his horns were cut off by his well-meaning adoptive parents in the hopes that he would fit in better. When he meets another fae, the fae says that he never saw anything so cruel in all his years of existence
@davidpumpkinsjr.510812 сағат бұрын
I'd be concerned if the people in my family started acting normal.
@NewMessage16 сағат бұрын
Kinda always felt like one myself... would explain a LOT.
@kimberlyterasaki484314 сағат бұрын
I'm so used to hearing Martin Luther be the cool guy who called out Catholic Church's corruption, never knew this side to him!
@twell19844 сағат бұрын
I studied Lutheran theology, Luther wrote outright evil things about Jews and was completely out of his depths when the farmers revolted and asked for more social justice because of his teachings. This story about him and the changeling sounds very made up, however, and I cannot find any reliable sources for it.
@els1f20 сағат бұрын
Now these same people blame vaccines
@AdamYJ47 минут бұрын
Well, lots of commenters have commented on the more tragic side of the whole changeling concept. So, how about an odd pop culture note? The word “Changeling” often outpaces the actual legend. At least two shapeshifting comic book superheroes have had the name “Changeling”. One was an X-Men character who was later renamed Morph. The other was Garfield Logan aka Beast Boy from the Doom Patrol and Teen Titans. He was given the name in the 80s to appear more “grown-up”. Even though Beast Boy’s ability to take animal form is actually more like that of a different fairy creature. That’s right, during New Teen Titans, Beast Boy’s new name should have really been “The Pooka”. 😂
@AnimeShinigami134 сағат бұрын
You mentioned star trek, but you forgot star trek deep space nine! The villains were literally called changelings and operated in a very similar manner to their mythical counterparts. But besides that, who could forget the grumpy, surly Odo, the changeling chief of security on Deep Space Nine and his desperate struggle to come to terms with who he is versus who his people are. Odo's gruff exterior hid a sensitive nature, anguished and angered by his people's cruelty to the "solids" as they called everyone else. Many times his heart broke because his people desperately wanted him back, but he couldn't condone the horrific things they'd done.
@rocketRobScott18 сағат бұрын
I bet there will be an alarming rise in the number of divorce reasons being listed as “became a changeling” as a result of this episode. Also, Stephen King’s The Outsider is a type of changeling.
@samuelaccorso212915 сағат бұрын
I’m autistic, so now I know there is a mythological explanation before its official medical explanation.
@sierrajohnson717Сағат бұрын
I love when the supernatural ends up in court.
@alexwelts255314 сағат бұрын
Everyone i know seems to be like this. My mom who grew up in the Italian grocery store that my grandparents owned, suddenly doesn't make her own spaghetti sauce, and asked me to identify what pineapple was ripe. Things like this happen all the time with these people in my family, plus i keep catching them manipulating metaphysical forces that are predatory in nature. . But sometimes i see links to traumas (accidents) that happeed when i was a baby they are harvesting from now,.. so maybe they were just always pretending, and are "farmers". The type that extinct hunter gatherers like me.
@willemvandebeek37 минут бұрын
Happy holidays and healthy new year, Emily & entourage! o_O
@TheBlindDyslexic11 сағат бұрын
I know it's not about the Changling, but I did come up with an interesting theory about those whose bodies were Sensitive to sunlight. What if that element was thought of as one way of discovering whether someone was a Vampire or a Witch. Look at Mathusala, what if back in the era of the Bible, Methuselah Suffered from Progeria?
@whackadoo15 сағат бұрын
Sounds like people from back then didn't know what autism is because that sounds like what a changeling is supposed to represent.
@zekelerossignol759017 сағат бұрын
Also, you should do a video on teratology some time!
@josephyoung25937 сағат бұрын
Ever thought of a series/miniseries about pseudohistorical wizards - Hermes Trismegistus, Alice Nutter, Shennong, Johann Faust, Fulcanelli et al? Could be great fun.
@rodramirez520811 сағат бұрын
A little appalled John Ajvide Lindqvist wasn’t mentioned…. The film he cowrote after his short story, let the old dreams die/border was unsettling in the most frightening of ways but still holds merit for using the folklore of changelings and trolls as it main inspiration.
@phthalojohan13 сағат бұрын
The fact that a purely theoretical construct becomes taken as fact is both tragic in hilarious. Imagine if somebody said his wife died because Schrödinger’s cat jumped out of the box and killed her.
@cococamo19119 сағат бұрын
Changing appeared in an episode supernatural season 3.