Summary

  • Humans in Avatar: The Last Airbender learned to bend elements by observing animals and their chi flow.
  • Aang is the first Avatar to master Energybending, the fifth form of bending in the franchise.
  • Elemental benders in the franchise, like Firebenders, learned from original masters like dragons.

In Avatar: The Last Airbender, humans first learned the ability to bend or manipulate the four elements of Fire, Earth, Air, and Water by observing their natural environment and mimicking how certain animals interacted with the world. Avatar: The Last Airbender follows Aang, a young boy who emerges from a century of being frozen in the ice to find the world at war and in need of balance. The franchise features a range of elemental benders, but it's the Avatar who is responsible for maintaining the world's balance.

While only the Avatar can learn to master all four elements, with Aang being the first Avatar to utilize the fifth form known as Energybending, certain humans can develop the ability to bend one of the four elements through their own flow of chi or energy within the body. Throughout Avatar: The Last Airbender, animals serve an integral role as companions, transportation, and spiritual beings. Many animals within the Avatar: The Last Airbender franchise are fictional hybrids of two separate animals, which includes some of the original benders.

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Dragons

Dragons Are The Original Firebenders

Firebending is one of the first bending abilities actually given to humans. Wan, the man who becomes the first Avatar, gains access to Firebending to help humans survive. His circumstance, getting the ability from a lion turtle, however, is not how the first Firebending humans learn the art. In the Avatar franchise, humans learn from one of the bending animals.

The Ancient Sun Warriors were the first civilization to learn Firebending from the original masters: the dragons. While it was originally believed within Avatar: The Last Airbender that dragons were extinct because dragon hunting became prevalent during Fire Lord Sozin’s time, the season 3 episode “Firebending Masters” shows that there are two remaining dragon masters, Ran and Shao. While it was rumored that Zuko's Uncle Iroh slew the last dragon, earning him the nickname "The Dragon of the West," Iroh only pretended to kill the last dragon in order to protect the species from extinction.

By watching how Ran and Shao rely on the flow of their own chi to breathe fire and mimic their movements through the Firebending from the Dancing Dragon originally created by Avatar Wan, Zuko and Aang learn the true meaning of Firebending: that it is life and energy, not destruction.

Badgermoles

Badgermoles Are The Original Earthbenders

Earthbenders learned to master the art of Earthbending from the blind hybrid animals known as Badgermoles, who are native to the Earth Kingdom. In Avatar: The Last Airbender's season 2 episode “The Cave of Two Lovers,” it is revealed that Oma and Shu, two lovers who lived in feuding villages, learned to Earthbend from the badgermoles to build tunnels within the mountains between their villages, so they could meet in secret. When Shu was killed during a battle between the two villages, Oma was grief-stricken and threatened to use her Earthbending to gain vengeance against the two villages.

However, Oma instead announced that the fighting was over, and both villages banded together to build a new peaceful city, which eventually became the first Earthbending city of Omashu. When Toph shares how she learned to Earthbend from the badgermoles during the episode “Firebending Masters," it’s explained more thoroughly how the animals use Earthbending as an extension of their senses to “see” by feeling the vibrations in the ground.

In Netflix's live-action adaptation of The Last Airbender, "The Cave of Two Lovers" is adapted in season 1 with Sokka and Katara encountering badgermoles.

Sky Bison

Sky Bison Are The Original Airbenders

The Air Nomads first learned to Airbend in Avatar by watching the bending animals, the sky bison, fly through the air using their tails to navigate through the wind. In celebration of their teachings, the Air Nomads made sky bison part of their culture, giving young Air Nomads their own sky bison companion and using them for transport to and from their Air Temples. Air Nomads paid tribute to the original Airbenders by giving themselves an arrow tattoo that resembled the arrow markings on the sky bison's head once their Airbending training was complete, and they were considered Airbending Masters.

Throughout Avatar: The Last Airbender, Aang’s own sky bison Appa often Airbends by transporting Team Avatar across the four nations through flight, as well as using his tail and mouth to create defensive Airbending attacks. After the Fire Nation committed genocide against the Air Nomad civilization, sky bison were believed to be endangered as well, until Aang discovered remaining herds of bison located at each of the Air Temples.

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The Moon

The Moon Is The First Waterbender

Our ancestors saw how [the moon] pushed and pulled the tides and learned how to do it themselves.

According to Princess Yue, the moon was the first Waterbender that taught the ancestors of the Northern Water Tribe to Waterbend. “Our ancestors saw how it pushed and pulled the tides and learned how to do it themselves,” says Yue in the season 1 episode “The Siege of the North: Part 1.”

While the original Waterbending master may not have been an animal per se, Tui the moon spirit manifested in the mortal realm under the guise of a white koi fish. The koi fish lives within the most spiritual region of the Northern Water Tribe’s city, Agna Qel’a, allowing for the possibility that some Waterbenders garnered certain techniques by observing the spirit in person as well.

Part of the balance that makes Waterbending possible is Tui's counterpart La, the ocean spirit that appears as a black koi fish that is permanently interlocked with Tui in a cycle of push and pull that allows for the tides to exist. Since the moon is their original teacher, Waterbenders' abilities are much stronger at nighttime.

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Lion Turtles

Lion Turtles Grant Humans Their Very First Bending Abilities

The Lion Turtle meeting Aang on The Last Airbender

The Avatar sequel series The Legend of Korra reveals that the ability to bend was initially bestowed upon humans by lion turtles, ancient spiritual beings who had a connection to one specific element and were so large that they could carry an entire city on the back of their shells. It's the lion turtles who granted Wan, the first Avatar, his abilities. Before humans learned to bend by observing animals in the Avatar world, lion turtles gave humans the ability to bend the four elements by bending the energy within a person’s body: the art of Energybending.

If a human wished to travel through the Spirit Wilds, regions of the mortal world inhabited by spirits, humans would approach the lion turtles to be granted the ability of bending to protect themselves against the spirits. When the spirits returned to the Spirit World and Avatar Wan closed the portals to their realm, the lion turtles refused to grant the power of bending to humans now that the spirits were gone and retreated to uninhabited regions on Earth.

In the season 3 episode “Sozin's Comet: Part 2: The Old Masters,” Aang comes in contact with a lion turtle who gives him the knowledge of Energybending, so that he can essentially give and take away someone’s ability to bend the elements. Aang is the first human to learn this form of bending, and he uses it for the first time to take away Fire Lord Ozai’s own Firebending, thus ending the Hundred Year War.

When considering that humans originally learned to bend by observing different bending animals, it begs the question of whether or not humans have an affinity for a certain element based on genetics or their own aptitude to learn. Throughout Avatar: The Last Airbender, not everyone in the population can bend an element, and while there appears to be some sort of genetic component since many people adopt the bending style associated with their parent’s nation, each case varies drastically per person.

Katara and Toph’s own experiences support the argument that bending can be learned, since none of their parents could bend themselves. In addition, one of Katara and Aang’s future children, Bumi, who is introduced within The Legend of Korra, isn’t born with the ability to bend even though he comes from a family with a strong history of bending. While genetics and aptitude appear to play a part, a person's spirituality seems to be the main component that determines whether someone will become a bender in the Avatar: The Last Airbender franchise.

  • Avatar The Last Airbender Show Poster
    Avatar: The Last Airbender
    Where to Watch

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    Avatar: The Last Airbender is an Animated Fantasy and Adventure series that appeared on Nickelodeon and was created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko. The series featured voices from Zach Tyler Eisen, Jack DeSena, Dante Basco, and Mae Whitman. The premise follows a young boy named Aang, an Air Bender who is set to be the next Avatar, master of all elements, in a bit to unite the nations together and bring peace.

    Cast
    Mako , Dee Bradley Baker , Jack De Sena , Michaela Jill Murphy , Zach Tyler , Dante Basco , Mae Whitman
    Release Date
    February 21, 2005
    Seasons
    3
    Writers
    michael dante dimartino
    Directors
    Dave Filoni
    Showrunner
    michael dante dimartino
  • The Legend of Korra
    Where to Watch

    *Availability in US

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    This spinoff of Avatar: The Last Airbender follows the titular Korra, the new generation's Avatar and reincarnation of Aang. As an Avatar, Korra can bend all four elements, and the show follows her adventure through the difficulties in a rapidly growing world.

    Cast
    Janet Varney , P.J. Byrne , David Faustino , J.K. Simmons , Jeff Bennett , Dee Bradley Baker , Seychelle Gabriel , Mindy Sterling
    Release Date
    April 14, 2012
    Seasons
    4
    Writers
    michael dante dimartino , bryan konietzko
    Directors
    Joaquim Dos Santos
    Showrunner
    bryan konietzko