Abstract The fountain of youth was believed to be a myth to modern society, but some explorers had actually ventured out to find it. Explorers such as Juan Ponce de Leon had explored Florida, but other leaders claimed that they had fountain. According to different religions, the fountain of youth has had many different forms of blessing people with youthfulness. But, in popular culture, this myth can be found in various mediums illustrating its version of what can be restored when using this fountain, compared to how different religious cultures share their folktales. In the medical society, this myth could’ve been one of the further causes for the beginning …show more content…
The fountain had many versions of how it worked, but the most popular was a well that you drank from that would give you immortality or bestow rejuvenation in people. The location of this well would be unknown, but in history, a famous explorer, Juan Ponce De Leon had ventured out to find its actual location. One of the rumored ways Ponce de Leon had explored for the fountain of youth was to visit the islands of Bimini, the supposed location of where the fountain of youth could be found. Juan Ponce de Leon had communicated with the Native Americans and they had told tales of the mystical waters that would make you younger. After his voyage, he had not found the fountain, but only the islands of Bimini. This venture would later on would lead to the new discovery of Florida. According to an article, “Any records that Ponce de León kept of his two voyages have been long since lost to history. The best information concerning his journeys comes to us from the writings of Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas, who was appointed Chief Historian of the Indies in 1596, decades after Ponce de Leon 's journeys. Herrera 's information was likely third-hand at best. He mentions the Fountain of Youth in reference to Ponce 's first …show more content…
The most recent that display this scenario are movies like Pirates of the Caribbean 's: On Stranger Tides, where one of the characters had lifted cups that had read water of life. Two people had drank the waters of the fountain and one person had taken all the years the other person had left. In other literature, the book Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt, the book entails a family that had discovered waters that would give them immortality. Other movies such as Cocoon, The Fountain, and The Dark Crystal show different forms of the fountain. Some include a swimming pool to restore health, but some could be in forms of elixirs to make someone gain their youth back of become immortal. In most forms of entertainment, movies have shown different variations of restoring age, restoring health, becoming immortal, or other forms of staying some way of young. The use of this repetitive image of youth could of exposed people now to the obsession of staying young over time. The overwhelming amount of ideas about immortality could be putting a negative impact on the current youth and what they have to live up to. Being young looking/immortal had become the new fad over the past several years of the new decade. Movies such as Twilight have disturbingly become one of the most popular occurring films to showcase