Echoes: a Fathoms Deep Podcast

Morgan Alistair Drake | Dark Fantasy Author

Exploring maritime legends, fantasy craft, and the depths between—where historical truths and mythic possibilities converge. fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

  1. 3D AGO

    Echoes: Episode 16 - Part 2

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES Portal Fantasy: The Psychology of Crossing Between Worlds, Part 2 Episode 16.2 | February 13, 2026 | Duration: 28 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION In this conclusion to our two-part exploration, we discover how the narratives explored in part 1 externalize psychological transitions we all navigate—coming of age, grief, migration—and why expanded awareness cannot contract. We examine why returning home proves the cruelest test after transformation, explore how different authors (C.S. Lewis, Lewis Carroll, Philip Pullman, Ursula K. Le Guin) build their doorways to ask distinct philosophical questions, and return to Cape Bojador to understand what Gil Eanes's passage reveals about the nature of irreversible change. This episode reveals why portal fantasy resonates so powerfully across cultures: these stories don't just entertain—they map the actual territory of human transformation with remarkable psychological accuracy. - IN THIS EPISODE Psychology of Transition: How portal narratives externalize liminal states (adolescence, grief, migration) Victor Turner's Liminality: The in-between state where old structures dissolve but new ones haven't solidified Epistemological Shift: Why awareness expands in one direction only The Impossibility of Return: Lucy, Gulliver, Chihiro, and the universal struggle to reintegrate Celtic Selkie Tales: Permanent displacement and divided consciousness Literary Architectures: How different authors use portal structure philosophically Lewis: The wardrobe and aging out of access to wonder Carroll: The rabbit hole as internal passage between consciousness states Pullman: The subtle knife and ethical limitation Le Guin: Death's wall and respecting necessary boundaries Irreversible Consciousness: Understanding Gil Eanes's doubled awareness - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING Psychology & Liminality Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure. Aldine Publishing, 1969. Van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. University of Chicago Press, 1960 (original 1909). Kegan, Robert. The Evolving Self. Harvard University Press, 1982. Philosophy & Perception James, William. The Varieties of Religious Experience. Longmans, Green & Co., 1902. Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. Phenomenology of Perception. Routledge, 1962. Literary Works - Portal Architectures Lewis, C.S. The Chronicles of Narnia. 1950–56. Carroll, Lewis. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. 1865. Pullman, Philip. His Dark Materials trilogy. Scholastic, 1995–2000. Le Guin, Ursula K. A Wizard of Earthsea. Parnassus, 1968. Le Guin, Ursula K. The Farthest Shore. Atheneum, 1972. Folklore & Return Narratives Briggs, Katherine. An Encyclopedia of Fairies. Pantheon Books, 1976. MacCana, Proinsias. Celtic Mythology. Hamlyn, 1970. Additional Literary Examples Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver's Travels. 1726. Barrie, J.M. Peter Pan. 1911. Miyazaki, Hayao, director. Spirited Away. Studio Ghibli, 2001. Historical Maritime Context Diffie, Bailey, and George Winius. Foundations of the Portuguese Empire, 1415–1580. University of Minnesota Press, 1977. - ORIGINAL ESSAY: Portal Fantasy: The Psychology of Crossing Between Worlds - ABOUT THE AUTHOR Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.com Speculative & Paranormal Fiction: flukeprint.com __________________________________________ DISCOVER DIMIDIUM’S FANTASY UNIVERSE: - Fiction: Read the Epic Tales: dimidiumtales.substack.com - Lore: Explore the world’s lore and world building _____________________________________________ Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author’s newsletter - ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores maritime legends, historical mysteries, and comparative folklore through the lens of philosophical inquiry and literary criticism. Each episode examines how humans have understood the ocean—from medieval cosmology to documented disappearances, from shape-shifting selkies to navigational breakthroughs—asking what these stories reveal about fear, transformation, and the boundaries between possible and impossible.An investigation into how maritime history and legend illuminate deeper truths about human nature and the obstacles we inherit, and how these reflects in works of fiction. Written, researched and produced by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. - NEXT EPISODES Next time on Echoes: "Shackleton's Endurance: When Leadership Holds the Line Against Despair" - Exploring how Ernest Shackleton's leadership prevented psychological breakdown during the legendary Antarctic expedition, bringing every man home alive after their ship was crushed by ice and twenty-eight men faced nearly two years stranded in impossible conditions. - As always, thank you for listening and supporting our work. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    27 min
  2. FEB 6

    Echoes: Episode 16 - Part 1

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES Portal Fantasy: The Psychology of Crossing Between Worlds, Part 1 Episode 16.1 | February6, 2026 | Duration: 22 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION For centuries before and after Gil Eanes sailed past Cape Bojador, humans have been drawn to stories of doorways between worlds—wardrobes leading to Narnia, rabbit holes to Wonderland, storm-tossed ships to enchanted islands, mirrors reflecting impossible rooms. In this first part of our two-part exploration, we journey through the maritime tradition that established the foundational template for all portal narratives. From Homer's Odyssey—where each island forces Odysseus to surrender different aspects of his certainty about reality—through Celtic voyage tales, Coleridge's cursed mariner, and modern narratives like Life of Pi and Moana, we discover how water's unique properties create authentic liminality without requiring supernatural machinery. This episode builds the maritime foundation for understanding portal fantasy's psychological power—laying groundwork we'll expand in Part 2, when we widen from sea to mind and explore the universal human experiences these narratives externalize. - IN THIS EPISODE Maritime Foundation: How water's properties (horizon, fog, storm) create natural thresholds The Odyssey as Mythic Atlas: Deep dive into how each island (Aeolus, Circe, Underworld, Calypso) maps different aspects of transformation Voyage Structures: Why gradual sea journeys create more authentic transformation than instant passages Celtic Immrama: Islands that shouldn't exist and impossible seas The Ancient Mariner: Gradual descent into cursed waters where the dead work the ship Modern Maritime Portals: Life of Pi's ambiguous ocean and Moana's reef boundary Pattern Persistence: Tracing the template from ancient Greece to contemporary narratives - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING Homer's Odyssey Homer. The Odyssey. Translated by Robert Fagles, Penguin, 1996. (Also valid: Translated by Emily Wilson, W. W. Norton, 2017) Celtic Voyage Tales (Immrama) O'Rahilly, Thomas F. Early Irish History and Mythology. Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1946. MacCana, Proinsias. Celtic Mythology. Hamlyn, 1970. Samuel Taylor Coleridge Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. 1798. Modern Maritime Narratives Martel, Yann. Life of Pi. Knopf, 2001. Miyazaki, Hayao, director. Spirited Away. Studio Ghibli, 2001. Moana. Directed by Ron Clements and John Musker, Walt Disney Animation Studios, 2016. Historical Maritime Exploration Diffie, Bailey, and George Winius. Foundations of the Portuguese Empire, 1415–1580. University of Minnesota Press, 1977. Fernandez-Armesto, Felipe. Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration. Norton, 2006. Maritime Studies & Water Psychology Corbin, Alain. The Lure of the Sea: The Discovery of the Seaside in the Western World. University of California Press, 1994. Bachelard, Gaston. Water and Dreams: An Essay on the Imagination of Matter. Dallas Institute, 1983. - ORIGINAL ESSAY: Portal Fantasy: The Psychology of Crossing Between Worlds - ABOUT THE AUTHOR Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.com Speculative & Paranormal Fiction: flukeprint.com __________________________________________ DISCOVER DIMIDIUM'S FANTASY UNIVERSE: - Fiction: Read the Epic Tales: dimidiumtales.substack.com - Lore: Explore the world's lore and world building _____________________________________________ Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores maritime legends, historical mysteries, and comparative folklore through the lens of philosophical inquiry and literary criticism. Each episode examines how humans have understood the ocean—from medieval cosmology to documented disappearances, from shape-shifting selkies to navigational breakthroughs—asking what these stories reveal about fear, transformation, and the boundaries between possible and impossible.An investigation into how maritime history and legend illuminate deeper truths about human nature and the obstacles we inherit. Written, researched and produced by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. - NEXT EPISODES Next time on Echoes: "Portal Fantasy: The Psychology of Crossing Between Worlds, Part 2" - We widen our aperture from sea to mind, exploring the psychology behind why these maritime narratives resonate so powerfully, examining why returning home proves the cruelest test after transformation, and discovering how different authors build their doorways to explore distinct philosophical questions about consciousness and limitation. - As always, thank you for listening and supporting our work. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    21 min
  3. JAN 30

    Echoes: Episode 15

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES Beyond the Cape of Fear: Breaking Through the Darkness of the Unknown Episode 15 | January 2026 | Duration: 30 minutes IN THIS EPISODE In 1434, a terrified Portuguese squire named Gil Eanes approached Cape Bojador—a boundary that had defeated fourteen expeditions and represented the edge of the medieval world. According to centuries of accumulated wisdom, the sea there boiled, the sun would turn men's skin black, and monsters waited in waters too hot for any Christian soul to survive. In this episode, we explore how Eanes overcame his own terror to sail past this psychological barrier, the navigation breakthrough (volta do mar) that made success possible, and the pattern this established for impossible barriers throughout history—from the Northwest Passage to our contemporary challenges. Discover what separates those who turn back from those who sail into the unknown darkness, and how individual courage can reshape collective understanding. - ORIGINAL ESSAY: Beyond the Cape of Fear: Breaking Through the Darkness of the Unknown - FEATURED EXPLORATION Historical Breakthrough: Gil Eanes's 1434 voyage past Cape Bojador and the end of medieval geographic limits Medieval Psychology: How inherited wisdom, religious cosmology, and collective fear created an "impossible" barrier Navigation Innovation: The volta do mar technique that circumvented coastal hazards by sailing into the open ocean Historical Pattern: Seemingly insurmountable obstacles (Northwest Passage, Cape Horn, Strait of Messina) that proved to be mental constructs as much as physical realities Contemporary Relevance: What Eanes's breakthrough reveals about obstacles in creative work, personal challenges, and collective action - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - ABOUT THE AUTHOR Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.com Speculative & Paranormal Fiction: flukeprint.com __________________________________________ DIMIDIUM'S FANTASY UNIVERSE: - Fiction: Read the Epic Tales: dimidiumtales.substack.com - Lore: Explore the world's lore and world building _____________________________________________ Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter - ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores maritime legends, historical mysteries, and comparative folklore through the lens of philosophical inquiry and literary criticism. Each episode examines how humans have understood the ocean—from medieval cosmology to documented disappearances, from shape-shifting selkies to navigational breakthroughs—asking what these stories reveal about fear, transformation, and the boundaries between possible and impossible. An investigation into how maritime history and legend illuminate deeper truths about human nature and the obstacles we inherit. Written, researched and produced by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. - NEXT EPISODE Next week: "Portal Fantasy: The Psychology of Crossing Between Worlds" - Exploring why we're drawn to stories of doorways between realms, from wardrobes to Wonderland to storm-tossed ships. As always, thank you for listening and supporting our work. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    30 min
  4. 12/22/2025

    Echoes: Episode 14

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES Isolation in Literature: How Writers Documented Psychological Breakdown Before Psychology Episode 14 | December 22, 2025 | Duration: 25 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION This episode explores how literature has documented isolation's psychological effects with remarkable accuracy—often decades before psychology had clinical terminology. From Edgar Allan Poe's precise depiction of sensory hypersensitivity in 1839 to Stephen King's systematic exploration of paranoid breakdown in 1977, writers have been tracking the predictable stages of mental collapse when minds are severed from social connection. We examine Gothic horror's clinical precision, modern horror's layering of supernatural over authentic breakdown, maritime literature's brutal honesty about isolation's speed and inevitability, and what these accurate portrayals reveal about craft. The episode also tackles "the hermit problem"—why the wise isolated sage contradicts everything we know about how prolonged solitude actually affects human consciousness—and what narrative choices remain available when you understand isolation's true cost. - IN THIS EPISODE The timeline of psychological breakdown: from hypervigilance to reality collapse Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher" and hypersensitivity documentation Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" tracking clinical stages before psychology Stephen King's The Shining as perfect isolation laboratory Herman Melville's Moby-Dick and rapid consciousness shattering Chosen vs. involuntary isolation: why preparation and endpoint matter What separates authentic isolation fiction from superficial "cabin fever" plots How moral reasoning warps under isolation rather than disappearing The hermit problem: wise isolated sages contradicting psychology Craft implications: writing isolation with psychological authenticity - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING Primary Literary Works Analyzed: Poe, Edgar Allan. "The Fall of the House of Usher" (1839) Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. "The Yellow Wallpaper" (1892) Melville, Herman. Moby-Dick (1851) King, Stephen. The Shining (1977) Slocum, Joshua. Sailing Alone Around the World (1900) Lem, Stanisław. Solaris (1961) Kubrick, Stanley. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) Isolation Psychology Research: Grassian, Stuart. "Psychiatric Effects of Solitary Confinement." American Journal of Psychiatry 140, no. 11 (1983) Haney, Craig. "Mental Health Issues in Long-Term Solitary and 'Supermax' Confinement." Crime & Delinquency 49, no. 1 (2003) Haney, Craig. The Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement: A Systematic Critique. Unlock the Box Campaign, 2018 Fernyhough, Charles. The Voices Within: The History and Science of How We Talk to Ourselves. New York: Basic Books, 2016 Alderson-Day, Ben. "Inner Speech: Development, Cognitive Functions, Phenomenology, and Neurobiology." Consciousness and Cognition 35 (2015) Lieberman, Matthew D. Social: Why Our Brains Are Wired to Connect. New York: Crown Publishers, 2013 Geiger, John. The Third Man Factor: Surviving the Impossible. New York: Weinstein Books, 2009 Palinkas, Lawrence A. "The Psychology of Isolated and Confined Environments." Environment and Behavior 35, no. 4 (2003) - ORIGINAL ESSAY: ISOLATION IN LITERATURE - ABOUT THE AUTHOR Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.com Speculative & Paranormal Fiction: flukeprint.com __________________________________________ DISCOVER DIMIDIUM'S FANTASY UNIVERSE: - Fiction: Read the Epic Tales: dimidiumtales.substack.com - Lore: Explore the world's lore and world building _____________________________________________ Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores where maritime legend meets the craft of fantasy. Each episode dives into historical mysteries, cultural traditions, and supernatural phenomena of the sea, revealing how this research can transform your approach to worldbuilding and character creation. Hosted by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. NEXT EPISODES Next time on Echoes, we'll explore: "Beyond the Cape of Fear: Breaking Through the Darkness of the Unknown"—examining how Portuguese captain Gil Eanes overcame the psychological barrier that had turned back fourteen previous expeditions, and what this 1434 breakthrough reveals about confronting seemingly impossible obstacles when the greatest barriers exist in our minds. As always, thank you for listening and supporting our work. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    25 min
  5. 12/08/2025

    Echoes: Episode 13

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES The Flannan Isles Lighthouse - When Three Men Vanished from the Edge of the World Episode 13 | December 08, 2025 | Duration: 25 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION In December 1900, three lighthouse keepers vanished from Scotland's Flannan Isles without explanation. They left behind a functioning beacon, made beds, cleaned dishes, and an overturned chair. No bodies. No emergency message. No rational explanation that accounts for all the evidence. This episode explores one of maritime history's most enduring mysteries—examining not just theories about what happened to James Ducat, Thomas Marshall, and Donald McArthur, but what their disappearance reveals about those who maintain lights at the edge of human habitation. When our most reliable guardians can simply vanish, what does that mean for the rest of us navigating uncertain waters? - IN THIS EPISODE The December 1900 Flannan Isles disappearance Victorian lighthouse engineering and safety protocols Investigation theories: freak waves, psychological breakdown, supernatural explanations Parallels with the Mary Celeste mystery The unique psychological burden of lighthouse keepers Liminal spaces and those who occupy them Celtic folklore and "thin places" What disappearances of guardians reveal about trust and guidance - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING Muirhead, Robert. "Superintendent's Report on Flannan Isles Investigation." Northern Lighthouse Board, January 8, 1901 Northern Lighthouse Board Archives and Annual Reports, 1900-1901 Bathurst, Bella. The Lighthouse Stevensons. London: Flamingo, 1999 Campbell, John Gregorson. Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. Glasgow: James MacLehose & Sons, 1900 Encyclopædia Britannica. "Mary Celeste" Royal Museums Greenwich. "The Mystery of the Flannan Isles Lighthouse Keepers" - ORIGINAL ESSAY: THE FLANNAN ISLES' LIGHTHOUSE - ABOUT THE AUTHOR Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.com Speculative & Paranormal Fiction: flukeprint.com __________________________________________ DISCOVER DIMIDIUM'S FANTASY UNIVERSE: - Fiction: Read the Epic Tales: dimidiumtales.substack.com - Lore: Explore the world's lore and world building _____________________________________________ Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores where maritime legend meets the craft of fantasy. Each episode dives into historical mysteries, cultural traditions, and supernatural phenomena of the sea, revealing how this research can transform your approach to worldbuilding and character creation. Hosted by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. NEXT EPISODES Coming Next: "Isolation in Literature: How Stories Capture the Breaking Mind"—examining how Gothic fiction, polar exploration narratives, and maritime tales document the systematic breakdown of consciousness that occurs when humans are cut off from social connection, and what these stories reveal about the fragility of human sanity. As always, thank you for listening and supporting our work. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    19 min
  6. 11/22/2025

    Echoes: Episode 12

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES Cursed Waters: The Psychology of Maritime Fear and Forbidden Seas Episode 12 | November 22, 2025 | Duration: 25 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION Charts spread across the captain's table reveal boundaries no merchant vessel crosses—waters marked in stark red where ships enter but don't return, where compasses spin wildly and time moves differently. These are not mere navigational hazards but psychological territories where the ocean transforms from pathway to predator. In this episode, we explore cursed waters across global maritime cultures, examining how certain regions inspire dread that transcends rational explanation. From the Bermuda Triangle to Japan's Devil's Sea, from the doldrums to forbidden taboo waters, we investigate how maritime fear operates differently from terrestrial anxiety, and why these psychological landmarks where human understanding meets its limits continue to serve essential cultural functions. - FFEATURED EXPLORATION Geography of Fear: How maritime anxiety differs from terrestrial threats through oceanic opacity The Perfect Mystery: The Bermuda Triangle as psychological case study for maritime anxiety Cultural Variations: Japan's Devil's Sea and spiritual interpretations of maritime anomalies Psychological Stagnation: The doldrums and unique forms of maritime claustrophobia Taboo Seas: Waters forbidden by cultural decree and enforced through collective belief Uncanny Beauty: The Sargasso Sea where natural wonder intensifies psychological unease - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING ORIGINAL ESSAY: CURSED WATERS Jung, Carl G. The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (1968) Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure (1969) Geertz, Clifford. The Interpretation of Cultures (1973) Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" (1798) Cook, James. Pacific Voyage Journals (1768-1779) Yanagita Kunio. Japanese Folk Studies collections Orikuchi Shinobu. Marebito concept documentation - CONNECT Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com DISCOVER DIMIDIUM: - Fiction:Read the Epic Tales: dimidiumtales.substack.com - Lore: Explore the world's lore and world building Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores where maritime legend meets the craft of fantasy. Each episode dives into historical mysteries, cultural traditions, and supernatural phenomena of the sea, revealing how this research can transform your approach to worldbuilding and character creation. Hosted by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. NEXT EPISODES Coming Next: "The Flannan Isles Mystery: When Three Men Vanished from the Edge of the World" - Examining one of maritime history's most enduring puzzles: the 1900 disappearance of three lighthouse keepers from Scotland's remote Flannan Isles without explanation or trace. As always, thank you for listening and supporting our work. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    20 min
  7. 11/08/2025

    Echoes: Episode 11

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES The Bermuda Triangle: Facts vs. Fiction Episode 11 | October 8, 2025 | Duration: 24 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION The compass needle swings wildly, radio communications dissolve into static, and electronic navigation systems display impossible coordinates or simply go dark. Above, the sky shifts from Caribbean blue to an unnatural haze where aircraft vanish in mid-flight and ships sail beyond the horizon into oblivion. In this episode, we navigate the Bermuda Triangle—that roughly triangular region where documented disappearances have transformed navigational hazard into supernatural enigma. Through careful analysis of canonical cases, scientific explanations, and cultural impact, we explore where history ends and mythology begins, and why this particular patch of ocean maintains such a powerful grip on our fears despite rational explanations. - FFEATURED EXPLORATION The Cartography of Fear: How the Triangle exists as psychological space rather than official geographical designation Canonical Cases: USS Cyclops, Flight 19, and SS Marine Sulphur Queen as foundation mysteries Scientific Explanations: Meteorological, geological, and oceanic factors behind Triangle phenomena Human Psychology: Confirmation bias, spatial disorientation, and the construction of maritime mystery Cultural Legacy: Literary and cinematic impact from Shakespeare to Spielberg Philosophical Implications: The Triangle as space for wonder in an over-mapped world - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING ORIGINAL ESSAY: The Bermuda triangle Kusche, Larry. The Bermuda Triangle Mystery—Solved (1975) Parrott, Daniel G. Tall Ships Down (2003) Gaddis, Vincent. "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle," Argosy magazine (1964) Berlitz, Charles. The Bermuda Triangle (1974) U.S. Navy Historical Center official statements and investigations National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration current and weather data - CONNECT Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com Dimidium World's Fiction:Visit the Dimidium world at dimidiumtales.substack.com Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores where maritime legend meets the craft of fantasy. Each episode dives into historical mysteries, cultural traditions, and supernatural phenomena of the sea, revealing how this research can transform your approach to worldbuilding and character creation. Hosted by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. NEXT EPISODES Coming Next: "Cursed Waters: The Psychology of Maritime Fear and Forbidden Seas" - Examining how certain waters inspire dread that transcends rational explanation, transforming ocean pathways into psychological predators. As always, thank you for listening. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    21 min
  8. 10/22/2025

    Echoes: Episode 10

    ECHOES: A FATHOMS DEEP PODCAST - SHOW NOTES Shapeshifters and Boundary Crossers: The Appeal of Fluid Identity Episode 10 | September 22, 2025 | Duration: 24 minutes EPISODE DESCRIPTION A mysterious woman appears at a harbor inn, paying in coins that taste of brine and speaking with an accent that shifts like tide pools in moonlight. By dawn she has vanished, leaving behind silver fish and whispered stories of those who dwell between worlds. This scene captures the essence of maritime shapeshifter traditions: beings who remind us that identity itself might be as fluid as the sea. In this episode, we explore why shapeshifters and boundary crossers have captured human imagination across cultures, examining how these ancient maritime archetypes offer profound insights for our contemporary understanding of fluid identity, transformation psychology, and the courage required to exist authentically between established categories. - FEATURED EXPLORATION The Tidal Nature of Identity: How the sea's constant motion mirrors the fluidity of human consciousness Threshold Psychology: Victor Turner's liminal spaces and the geography of transformation Cultural Mediation: How shapeshifters serve as diplomatic tools and messengers between worlds Transformation Psychology: Jung's individuation, Turkle's identity cycling, and the vulnerability of change Maritime Advantages: Why ocean settings provide ideal territory for exploring consciousness and identity Contemporary Applications: How ancient wisdom speaks to modern concepts of gender fluidity, multicultural identity, and climate adaptation - SOUND CREDITS Wave bell attributedPirate Ship at Bay.wav by CGEffex -- https://freesound.org/s/93678/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 SHIP SOUND REQUEST!.wav by hello_flowers -- https://freesound.org/s/31006/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 - RESEARCH FOUNDATIONS Primary Article: "Shapeshifters and Boundary Crossers: The Appeal of Fluid Identity" - Read the complete fantasy philosophy exploration at fathoms deep beyond dot substack dot com Anthropological Framework: Victor Turner's liminal space theory, Gloria Anzaldúa's nepantla concept Psychological Sources: Carl Jung's individuation, Sherry Turkle's identity research, transformation psychology Literary Analysis: China Miéville, Becky Chambers, Martha Wells, N.K. Jemisin, Kim Stanley Robinson Cultural Traditions: Celtic selkies, Japanese ningyo, Pacific Northwest salmon people, Global shapeshifter variations - REFERENCES & FURTHER READING Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure (1969) Jung, Carl G. The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (1968) Turkle, Sherry. Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (1995) Anzaldúa, Gloria. Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987) Miéville, China. The Scar (2002) Chambers, Becky. A Closed and Common Orbit (2017) Wells, Martha. All Systems Red (2017) Jemisin, N.K. The Fifth Season (2015) - RELATED READINGS Related Content: Complete Article: Read the full "Shapeshifters and Boundary Crossers" exploration with psychological research and cultural analysis HERE Building Believable Magical Systems - essay Cartographers of the Impossible -essay - CONNECT WITH FATHOMS DEEP Articles & Research: fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com Dimidium World Dark Fantasy Fiction: Visit the Dimidium world at dimidiumtales.substack.com Rebel Fiction: Explore genre-crossing stories at fluke-print dot sub-stack dot com Author Website: www.morganadrake.com Newsletter Signup: subscribe to the Author's newsletter - ABOUT ECHOES Echoes: A Fathoms Deep Podcast explores where maritime legend meets the craft of fantasy. Each episode dives into historical mysteries, cultural traditions, and supernatural phenomena of the sea, revealing how this research can transform your approach to worldbuilding and character creation. Hosted by Morgan A. Drake, author of dark maritime fantasy and architect of the Dimidium world. - NEXT EPISODE Coming next: "The Bermuda Triangle: Facts vs. Fiction" - Shifting from transformation to mystery as we explore how enigmatic maritime phenomena capture our imagination and shape our understanding of the unknown. As always, thank you for listening. Share this episode to support FATHOMS DEEP. Morgan A. Drake This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com

    20 min

About

Exploring maritime legends, fantasy craft, and the depths between—where historical truths and mythic possibilities converge. fathomsdeepbeyond.substack.com