Joanah Eresechima - Starting and Finishing with Percy Jackson

 For my final blog post, I wanted to end with a topic I wrote about in the beginning of the semester: Percy Jackson. In my first essay, I touched upon his “demigodness” but after reading Somewhere I Have Never Travelled, it made me think about how his experiences compared to Gilgamesh and Achilles. While they are all demigods, I feel like Achilles and Gilgamesh were more in-tune with their godly side while Percy is more connected to his mortal side. After giving it some thought, it’s definitely because of their mothers. As talked about in The Hero with a Thousand Faces, the mother is meant to shield the child away from danger. This is consistent with all these demigods as their mothers try their best to protect them from the world. But, in order for them to grow, they must depart from the comforting arms of their mother and step into a world full of responsibility and opportunities for growth. For Percy in particular, his departure happens when he has to leave to Camp Half-Blood for safety. His mother had been protecting him his whole life by marrying a man with a bad scent as it masked his demigod scent from monster. However, due to his actions earlier that spurred his call to adventure, he could no longer rely on the help his mother provided him, leaving him to fend for himself in his immortal dad’s world.

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