A Woman’s Quest for Knowledge: Boan’s Tears by Ali Isaac | S6 Ep9

A Woman’s Quest for Knowledge: Boan’s Tears by Ali Isaac | S6 Ep9

43:00 Mar 26, 2025
About this episode
Please Support Our Show: Join us on SubstackLove KnotWork Storytelling? Your financial contribution (via Substack) helps me pay the amazing team that puts this show together.With your paid subscription, you'll be invited to our next members only Myth Workers' Salon.Subscribe to our newsletter Myth Is Medicine.OUR STORYThe Irish goddess Boan has a sacred thirst for knowledge, and she is ready to claim her share. This classic story includes the sacred well with its salmon and hazelnuts, the good god Dadga and Aengus, the god of love, as well as the creation of the River Boyne and the Milky Way.OUR GUESTAli Isaac lives in Ireland with her husband, two sons, and daughter, Carys. She graduated from Maynooth University as a (very) mature student in 2019 with a degree in English and History, with a Special Interest in Irish Cultural Heritage and followed this with a Master of Arts degree in English Literatures of Engagement. BC (before children) Ali worked in retail management, with a short spell in the military. AD (after degrees) she worked as an education officer in her local county museum. But at heart, Ali is a writer. She has been blogging about Irish mythology since 2012, and now is the founder of H A G on Substack, a newsletter that braids female senescence with landscape - natural, archaeological, and mythical.Her writing has been published in Irish literary journals, The Stinging Fly, Sonder, Paper Lanterns, and Catatonic Daughters. In 2020, she was awarded a mentorship with author Sara Baume by Words Ireland in conjunction with The Arts Council of Ireland. In 2021, she was the recipient of a Literature Bursary Award from The Arts Council of Ireland.Her first book, Imperfect Bodies, will be published by Héloïse Press in March 2026.Fing Ali: H A G on Substack and on InstagramOUR CONVERSATIONAli has long been concerned with the way society seeks to control women, and she has a sense that “it’s all happening again,” particularly regarding the controversy over the removal of information about women’s contribution to STEM from the NASA website. At the same time, women are rising up and coming together, which is clear in the emergence of Brigid energy.The ravages of toxic masculinity and the craving for the beautiful care that is also part of the masculine. The power of Dagda’s love, and the way in which he was protective of women, holder of the cauldron Our past Bóinn stories by Laura Murphy Bóinn Re:membered and
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