The Little Red Riding Hood

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  • ** عبورة عتيبه **
    عضو متألق
    • Aug 2008
    • 326
    • سبحآن الله وبحمده .. سبحآن الله العظيم

    The Little Red Riding Hood

    Little Red Riding Hood - A Politically Correct Fairy Tale
    by Jim Garner
    copied by Andy Tiarks April 24, 1993
    originally appeared in "Comic Relief" April, 1993



    There once was a young person named Red Riding Hood who
    lived with her mother on the edge of a large wood. One day her
    mother asked her to take a basket of fresh fruit and mineral water
    to her grandmother's house -- not because this was womyn's work,
    mind you, but because the deed was generous and helped engender a
    feeling of community. Furthermore, her grandmother was not sick,
    but rather was in full physical and mental health and was fully
    capable of taking care of herself as a mature adult.

    So Red Riding Hood set off with her basket of food
    through the woods. Many people she knew believed that the forest
    was a foreboding and dangerous place and never set foot in it. Red
    Riding Hood, however, was confident...

    On her way to Grandma's house, Red Riding Hood was
    accosted by a Wolf, who asked her what was in her basket. She
    replied, "Some healthful snacks for my grandmother, who is
    certainly capable of taking care of herself as a mature adult."

    The Wolf said, "You know, my dear, it isn't safe for a
    little girl to walk through these woods alone."

    Red Riding Hood said, "I find your sexist remark
    offensive in the extreme, but I will ignore it because of your
    traditional status as an outcast from society, the stress of which
    has caused you to develop your own, entirely valid worldview. Now,
    if you'll excuse me, I must be on my way."

    Red Riding Hood walked on along the main path. But,
    because his status outside society had freed him from slavish
    adherence to linear, Western-style thought, the Wolf knew of a
    quicker route to Grandma's house. He burst into the house and ate
    Grandma, an entirely valid course of action for a carnivore such as
    himself. Then, unhampered by rigid, traditionalist notions of what
    was masculine or feminine, he put on grandma's nightclothes and
    crawled into bed.

    Red Riding Hood entered the cottage and said, "Grandma,
    I have brought you some fat-free, sodium-free snacks to salute you
    in your role of a wise and nurturing matriarch."

    From the bed, the Wolf said softly, "Come closer, child,
    so that I might see you."

    Red Riding Hood said, "Oh, I forgot you are as optically
    challenged as a bat. Grandma, what big eyes you have!"

    "They have seen much, and forgiven much, my dear."

    "Grandma, what a big nose you have -- only relatively, of
    course, and certainly attractive in its own way."

    "It has smelled much, and forgiven much, my dear."

    "Grandma, what big teeth you have!"

    The Wolf said, "I am happy with and what I am,"
    and leaped out of bed. He grabbed Red Riding Hood in his claws,
    intent on devouring her. Red Riding Hood screamed, not out of
    alarm at the Wolf's apparent tendency toward cross-dressing, but
    because of his willful invasion of her personal space.

    Her screams were heard by a passing woodchopper-person
    (or log-fuel technician, as he preferred to be called). When he
    burst into the cottage, he saw the melee and tried to intervene.
    But as he raised his ax, Red Riding and the Wolf both stopped.

    "And what do you think you're doing?" asked Red Riding
    Hood.
    The woodchopper-person blinked and tried to answer, but
    no words came to him.

    "Bursting in here like a Neanderthal, trusting your
    weapon to do your thinking for you!" she said. "Sexist!
    Speciesist! How dare you assume that womyn and wolves can't solve
    their own problems without a man's help!"

    When she heard Red Riding Hood's speech, Grandma jumped
    out of the mouth, took the woodchopper-person's axe, and cut
    his head off. After this ordeal, Red Riding Hood, Grandma, and the
    Wolf felt a certain commonality of purpose. They decided to set up
    an alternative household based on mutual respect and cooperation,
    and they lived together in the woods happily ever after.
  • حوراء العبدالله
    عضو فضي
    • Sep 2008
    • 630
    • سأصوم عن التفكير بك في نهار رمضان , هذا وعد ,
      ولكني أظن أني سأفطر فيك فإني أجوع ..
      ,

    #2
    I liKe thiS tOpiC ;) ... I'm enJoyiNg .. VeRy beaUtifUl

    soOo I'd like 2 enCourage U 2 cOntinUe


    wait yOu neW .. and glad tO be the firSt tO write

    abOUt thiS tOpiC


    taKe Care

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    • ** عبورة عتيبه **
      عضو متألق
      • Aug 2008
      • 326
      • سبحآن الله وبحمده .. سبحآن الله العظيم

      #3
      soo ,, Wellcome sister ..

      Iam happy 2 saw u again ..

      Regards ..

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