I personally like the Irish myths, not only because my family is part Irish but because of my idea of the Irish and myths. I look at things in a very romantic idealists way, and I imagine the shores of Ireland are covered with white knights and damsels in distress looking for their rescuer. Someone that is going to save them from the clutches of a terrible and evil step mother, you get the idea of what I am trying to say I am sure. Below are just a few that I identify with and that is only in the telling of these myths we take as lessons in life.
Many lessons are taught with myths. There was a myth about a lady who was playing in the stream with her child. When she plucked a flower from a tree branch, it turned out that the "tree" was actually a nymph in disguise - and in its anger, it turned the mother into a tree herself. This proves that Greeks treasure nature, and detest anyone who kills or disfigures plant life. The myth teaches us not to hurt nature, but to appreciate it how it is instead.
Another reason myths are passed on is to explain the unexplainable. Creation, for example, no matter what anyone says, there is no proof of how Earth was created. So, people made up ways to explain it. As one African myth said, there were always animals, water, sun, the moon, and etc in the world. One day, a chameleon heard a strange sound inside the trunk, so he cut it open - and out walked the very first two humans. That's just one of the very many myths that show how the Earth, or certain things in it, came to be.
Everyone loves to be entertained. One way to have fun is to read myths - and that's exactly why some fables and myths were created.