SAMANTHA GENTRY
It’s Friday the 13th
Does that make you a little wary of what the day will bring?
Triskaidekaphobia: Fear of the number thirteen.
Paraskevidekatriaphobia: Fear of Friday the 13th.
An obviously irrational concept that a mere number can bring bad luck to someone. Or that a specific day of the week can be unlucky. But that doesn’t stop us from dwelling on the possibility.
The tradition of Friday being a day of bad luck dates back centuries with some of the more common theories linking it to significant events in Christian tradition believed to have taken place on Friday. The Crucifixion. Eve offering Adam the apple in the Garden of Eden. The beginning of the great flood.
Many sources for the superstition surrounding the number thirteen and its association with bad luck also derive from Christianity with the Last Supper being cited as the origin. Judas was the thirteenth person to be seated at the table.
And when you put the two bad luck symbols together you get Friday the 13th”¦the day associated with misfortune.
Superstition is a belief or notion based on neither reason nor knowledge. An irrational belief. Lots of superstitions have their origins in the Dark Ages, a time when living conditions were so severe that people reached out to anything that might bring them help and solace with the results being explanations for what seemed unexplainable at the time. Religious beliefs and lack of scientific knowledge helped to spawn many superstitions.
Superstitions differ from culture to culture, but we all have them even if it’s only paying surface homage to the concept. We don’t believe in the good luck vs. bad luck of chain letters, yet it often comes down to saying what’s the harm, then sending out the letters.
We often follow the tradition of the superstition without really knowing why it’s the traditional thing to do. If we blow out all the candles on our birthday cake with one breath while making a silent wish, then the wish will come true. When expressing a desire for good luck (we’ll be able to go on the picnic if it doesn’t rain), we grin, then we knock on wood as we emit an embarrassed chuckle.
In Western folklore, many superstitions are associated with bad luck. In addition to Friday the 13th, there’s walking under a ladder, having a black cat cross your path, spilling salt, stepping on a crack, and breaking a mirror among others.
In addition to cultural superstitions, there’s also certain occupations that evoke various rituals to bring on good luck. It seems to me that gamblers and sports figures have the most superstitions and rituals to insure good luck.
Do you have any superstitions that you hold dear? Are they more of a traditional situation handed down through your family or are they superstitions that have come down through the ages?
I’d like to hear about them.
This is the last of my scheduled blog days at Coffee Thoughts. I’ve really enjoyed being here and hope to return to blog at another time (knock on wood ).
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