
Indy bought passage to India, the ancient lands of the curry, as a favor from his half-brother Solo. Eventually Indiana decided to leave his drunk father and smuggler brother behind to find the temple which apparently held the key to his fate. In 1935, Jones suffered from nightmares of being lost in an ancient North Indian temple while fighting all kinds of animals (specifically snakes, barracudas, monkeys, parrots, and iguanas) of all kinds of colors (specifically silver, blue, green, purple, and orange) many of his most snake-influenced poems were written about the temple. Notice how the stock is shoved under his armpit. Indy's friend Short Round guards Indy's camp. Indiana Jones and the Typical University-level Dig Solo, who did not realize this hurt his brother, stated "Even I get boarded sometimes." Indiana's other strained relation, that being with his brother Solo, began at the age of 12, when a shipment of Indy's precious fedora hats and leather coats being shipped by Walter Donovan the Hutt were suddenly dumped at the first sight of a British Imperial ship. Jones spent his time crying, writing poetry, and developing a sadomasochistic fetish in which he used a brown leather whip to pleasure himself.

This led to Jones being a fragile and depressed young one, and not to mention caused a rift in his relationship with his father many biographers attribute his early signs of ophidiophobia to his mother's murder. O'Connor had bedded Indy's mother Heather, allowed her to have his baby, and then fed her to snakes. Henry Jr.'s nickname "Indiana" was derived from his father's routine Indian killings. His father, Henry O'Connor Jones, Sr., was a usually docile man who occasionally rode out on his steed and killed an Indian or two, selling their hides to townspeople for a quarter.

Jones was born in 1899 in Princeton, New Jersey to a normal Scottish Jewish immigrant family.

2 Indiana Jones and the Typical University-level Dig.
