I was thinking about superstitions yesterday, and how nonsensical and random they seem. I figured that they must all have origin stories behind them. Someone just doesn't wake up one morning and decide that opening umbrellas in the house is bad luck. There has to be a historical event that set the precedent for these things. One bad umbrella experience, and everyone from then on is forewarned that it's a bad idea. So I thought it might be interesting, and might provide material for a post, if I looked up some of these stories. Unfortunately, I found that most of these stories are actually pretty dull. So I decided the hell with it; I would just make up some stories of my own. I'm not sure what the point is, and anyone looking for actual information and enlightenment, should probably look somewhere else.
WALKING UNDER A LADDER
In 1935 a shopkeeper named Henry Ferguson was on a ladder working on repairing a broken letter in his shop's sign. As he was pounding in a nail, his hammer slipped and he smashed his thumb with it. Preoccupied with the sudden pain, he dropped the hammer. At that exact moment, Walter Montgomery, the manager of the local bank, was passing under the ladder. Walter was late for an appointment, and he was in too much of a hurry to navigate around the ladder. Just as he was checking his watch, the falling hammer hit him in the head. He collapsed against the brick wall of the shop. Seeing what had happened, Henry quickly climbed down from the ladder. He stood panicking over the crumpled bank manager. He was sure he had killed the man. He looked about nervously. It was early morning, and the street was deserted at that hour. He had to act quickly. He hoisted Mr. Montgomery's body up, and dragged it into the back of his shop. He then locked up, and flipped the "open" sign to "closed". He loaded Mr. Montgomery's body into the trunk of his car and drove far out into the countryside of a neighboring town, where he dropped the body deep in the woods.
As it turns out, Walter Montgomery had only been knocked out by the hammer, not killed. Henry had just been in too much of a panic to confirm the man's vitality. Walter regained consciousness hours later, long after it had grown dark out. The nuzzling of a large grizzly bear brought him around. His groggy eyes fluttered, but when he became aware of the bear standing over him, he shot up, wide awake. Naturally this startled the bear, who began to viciously attack Mr. Montgomery. It's a genuine miracle that he was able to escape with his life, but also a fairly fruitless one, as he died a few hours later. He was spotted by a local farmer crawling out of the woods and taken to a nearby hospital. In his dying delirium, he kept rambling on about how he had walked under a ladder and he had been transported across time and space to another dark land of ravaging monsters. Although these were the lunatic ravings of a dying man, the legend grew from there. The space beneath ladders came to be considered inter-dimensional portals to unthinkable fates, and people avoided them with dread.
A BLACK CAT CROSSING YOUR PATH
Martha Price loved her black cat Midnight. She was an elderly spinster and the cat was the sole companion of her twilight years. One night she needed to fetch a jar of tomatoes from her cellar to prepare her dinner. Pulling the chain for the light at the top of the stairs, she was dismayed to discover that the bulb had burned out. She was forced to navigate the stairs in the dark. Unfortunately, Midnight had made himself quite comfortable on the cellar stairs, three steps down from the landing. Not being able to see the dark cat in the darkness of the cellar Miss Price's foot caught on the cat's flank and she tripped and tumbled down the remaining stairs. She broke her neck and she lay dead on the cellar floor. Midnight, momentarily perturbed by Miss Price tripping over him, simply settled back into a comfortable position and retained his post on the third step of the cellar stairs.
Three days later, Miss Price's neighbor Hiram Muller grew concerned that he hadn't seen the old woman leave her house at all, and he came by to check on her. He searched the house, calling her name, but of course, no one answered. Passing through the kitchen, he heard a soft meowing coming from behind the cellar door. He opened the door and called for out for Miss Price into the darkness. He tried the light chain, and he too found the bulb burned out. He crept cautiously down the stairs, but his foot also caught on Midnight, who was still perched on the third step, evidently his favorite spot. Hiram lay dead beside Miss Price with his neck broken as well.
In the end six bodies with broken necks lay in a heap at the bottom of Miss Price's cellar stairs before the feline impediment was finally removed. Midnight let out an irritated meow at being disturbed from his spot, but he was soon pacified with a warm saucer of milk. and a can of tuna fish From that day forward it was considered bad luck to have a black cat cross your path, especially on a dark set of stairs. Midnight, of course, returned to his favorite spot on the third step as soon as he was done eating.
BREAKING A MIRROR
There was a golden-framed mirror which had been a priceless heirloom in the Romanov family for eight generations. Although the Romanov fortune had dwindled to a meager subsistence, they had still managed to hold onto the mirror. In 1867, the current Romanov family lived in a simple hovel, but the mirror was still hanging on the wall in the main hallway. The elegant mirror seemed grossly out of place in the modest home, but Elliot Romanov paused before it every day with pride as he considered his reflection and straightened his hair. In the most darkest and humble times of his life, the mirror served to remind him of his elevated heritage. It was the one thing that kept him from feeling like a mere commoner.
One night Elliot's boss, Mr. Sterns, came by for dinner. The man had actually insinuated his own invitation and insisted on coming. He was a large, obnoxious, and imposing man who treated Elliot like a worm. Elliot hated the man and he suffered his company all through dinner. Mr. Sterns got uproariously drunk and he behaved worse that usual. He grabbed Mrs. Romanov inappropriately and he hollered at the Romanov children. But the worst affront came as he was leaving for the evening. He stumbled as he was putting on his coat and smashed head first into the Romanov's priceless mirror, shattering it into a million pieces. He grumbled irritably as though the Romanovs had done him a disservice in the placement of their mirror, and then he left without offering an apology. Elliot stared at the shattered mirror, mortified.
He vowed revenge on Mr. Sterns, but it had to be a covert and secret revenge, as he couldn't risk losing the job that provided for his family. He proceeded to conduct a campaign of small annoyances and inconveniences in Mr. Sterns' life. He placed a nail in Mr. Sterns' shoe when he wasn't wearing them. He loosened the wheel of his carriage so that it came off on a muddy road. He broke his fountain pen, causing Mr. Sterns to get an ink stain on his shirt. Mr. Sterns never suspected that Elliot was the source of these minor grievances. Elliot just smiled placidly at his boss's suffering. This went on for seven years until one night when Elliot was trying to procure a wasp's nest to leave in Mr. Sterns' desk. As Elliot dislodged the nest, a couple of the bees stung him. Elliot didn't know until that moment that he was highly allergic to bees. He was found dead the next morning. Soon after, Mr. Sterns was greatly relieved when he found that his string of bad luck had finally broken.
So there it is. You learn something new every day.
In 1935 a shopkeeper named Henry Ferguson was on a ladder working on repairing a broken letter in his shop's sign. As he was pounding in a nail, his hammer slipped and he smashed his thumb with it. Preoccupied with the sudden pain, he dropped the hammer. At that exact moment, Walter Montgomery, the manager of the local bank, was passing under the ladder. Walter was late for an appointment, and he was in too much of a hurry to navigate around the ladder. Just as he was checking his watch, the falling hammer hit him in the head. He collapsed against the brick wall of the shop. Seeing what had happened, Henry quickly climbed down from the ladder. He stood panicking over the crumpled bank manager. He was sure he had killed the man. He looked about nervously. It was early morning, and the street was deserted at that hour. He had to act quickly. He hoisted Mr. Montgomery's body up, and dragged it into the back of his shop. He then locked up, and flipped the "open" sign to "closed". He loaded Mr. Montgomery's body into the trunk of his car and drove far out into the countryside of a neighboring town, where he dropped the body deep in the woods.
As it turns out, Walter Montgomery had only been knocked out by the hammer, not killed. Henry had just been in too much of a panic to confirm the man's vitality. Walter regained consciousness hours later, long after it had grown dark out. The nuzzling of a large grizzly bear brought him around. His groggy eyes fluttered, but when he became aware of the bear standing over him, he shot up, wide awake. Naturally this startled the bear, who began to viciously attack Mr. Montgomery. It's a genuine miracle that he was able to escape with his life, but also a fairly fruitless one, as he died a few hours later. He was spotted by a local farmer crawling out of the woods and taken to a nearby hospital. In his dying delirium, he kept rambling on about how he had walked under a ladder and he had been transported across time and space to another dark land of ravaging monsters. Although these were the lunatic ravings of a dying man, the legend grew from there. The space beneath ladders came to be considered inter-dimensional portals to unthinkable fates, and people avoided them with dread.
A BLACK CAT CROSSING YOUR PATH
Martha Price loved her black cat Midnight. She was an elderly spinster and the cat was the sole companion of her twilight years. One night she needed to fetch a jar of tomatoes from her cellar to prepare her dinner. Pulling the chain for the light at the top of the stairs, she was dismayed to discover that the bulb had burned out. She was forced to navigate the stairs in the dark. Unfortunately, Midnight had made himself quite comfortable on the cellar stairs, three steps down from the landing. Not being able to see the dark cat in the darkness of the cellar Miss Price's foot caught on the cat's flank and she tripped and tumbled down the remaining stairs. She broke her neck and she lay dead on the cellar floor. Midnight, momentarily perturbed by Miss Price tripping over him, simply settled back into a comfortable position and retained his post on the third step of the cellar stairs.
Three days later, Miss Price's neighbor Hiram Muller grew concerned that he hadn't seen the old woman leave her house at all, and he came by to check on her. He searched the house, calling her name, but of course, no one answered. Passing through the kitchen, he heard a soft meowing coming from behind the cellar door. He opened the door and called for out for Miss Price into the darkness. He tried the light chain, and he too found the bulb burned out. He crept cautiously down the stairs, but his foot also caught on Midnight, who was still perched on the third step, evidently his favorite spot. Hiram lay dead beside Miss Price with his neck broken as well.
In the end six bodies with broken necks lay in a heap at the bottom of Miss Price's cellar stairs before the feline impediment was finally removed. Midnight let out an irritated meow at being disturbed from his spot, but he was soon pacified with a warm saucer of milk. and a can of tuna fish From that day forward it was considered bad luck to have a black cat cross your path, especially on a dark set of stairs. Midnight, of course, returned to his favorite spot on the third step as soon as he was done eating.
BREAKING A MIRROR
There was a golden-framed mirror which had been a priceless heirloom in the Romanov family for eight generations. Although the Romanov fortune had dwindled to a meager subsistence, they had still managed to hold onto the mirror. In 1867, the current Romanov family lived in a simple hovel, but the mirror was still hanging on the wall in the main hallway. The elegant mirror seemed grossly out of place in the modest home, but Elliot Romanov paused before it every day with pride as he considered his reflection and straightened his hair. In the most darkest and humble times of his life, the mirror served to remind him of his elevated heritage. It was the one thing that kept him from feeling like a mere commoner.
One night Elliot's boss, Mr. Sterns, came by for dinner. The man had actually insinuated his own invitation and insisted on coming. He was a large, obnoxious, and imposing man who treated Elliot like a worm. Elliot hated the man and he suffered his company all through dinner. Mr. Sterns got uproariously drunk and he behaved worse that usual. He grabbed Mrs. Romanov inappropriately and he hollered at the Romanov children. But the worst affront came as he was leaving for the evening. He stumbled as he was putting on his coat and smashed head first into the Romanov's priceless mirror, shattering it into a million pieces. He grumbled irritably as though the Romanovs had done him a disservice in the placement of their mirror, and then he left without offering an apology. Elliot stared at the shattered mirror, mortified.
He vowed revenge on Mr. Sterns, but it had to be a covert and secret revenge, as he couldn't risk losing the job that provided for his family. He proceeded to conduct a campaign of small annoyances and inconveniences in Mr. Sterns' life. He placed a nail in Mr. Sterns' shoe when he wasn't wearing them. He loosened the wheel of his carriage so that it came off on a muddy road. He broke his fountain pen, causing Mr. Sterns to get an ink stain on his shirt. Mr. Sterns never suspected that Elliot was the source of these minor grievances. Elliot just smiled placidly at his boss's suffering. This went on for seven years until one night when Elliot was trying to procure a wasp's nest to leave in Mr. Sterns' desk. As Elliot dislodged the nest, a couple of the bees stung him. Elliot didn't know until that moment that he was highly allergic to bees. He was found dead the next morning. Soon after, Mr. Sterns was greatly relieved when he found that his string of bad luck had finally broken.
So there it is. You learn something new every day.
I enjoyed your version of all these superstitious beliefs. I say if you allow your self to be sucked into such beliefs you may as well through in the towel now.
ReplyDeleteHere's a big one for people. When I looked it up I had to do a double take as 13 in many spiritual beliefs is actually good luck. crazy what people believe;
FRIDAY THE 13TH - how is fear of the number thirteen demonstrated?
More than 80 percent of high-rises lack a 13th floor.
Many airports skip the 13th gate.
Airplanes have no 13th aisle.
Hospitals and hotels regularly have no room number 13.
Italians omit the number 13 from their national lottery.
On streets in Florence, Italy, the house between number 12 and 14 is addressed as 12 and a half.
Many cities do not have a 13th Street or a 13th Avenue
In France, socialites known as the quatorziens (fourteeners) once made themselves available as 14th guests to keep a dinner party from an unlucky fate.
Many triskaidekaphobes, as those who fear the unlucky integer are known, point to the ill-fated mission to the moon, Apollo 13.
If you have 13 letters in your name, you will have the devil's luck . Jack the Ripper, Charles Manson, Jeffrey Dahmer, Theodore Bundy and Albert De Salvo all have 13 letters in their names.
UGH!!!! BTW...I counted, you only have 11 letters from your profile info so your good! : )
I think I like the cat one best.
ReplyDeleteBut why would Henry try to hide the body of the man he dropped the hammer on? It was an accident. They don't prosecute for accidents.
ROFLMAO! Too damn funny! How horrible though that all these "seriously" adhered to superstitions have nothing truly ghastly to substantiate them. I'm both amused and depressed now. I guess throwing salt at my daughter won't protect me either.....oh well.
ReplyDeleteAnd they're not radioactive damnit, they're pretty! You're such a....a.....a....MAN! :)
@Deanne: I've heard that Friday the 13th is connected to a massively coordinated effort to execute all of the Knights Templar on Friday the 13th in the middle ages. I don't know if that holds for all instances of the number 13 though. (This one's actually true)
ReplyDelete@Chanel: Henry had been arguing in public with Mr. Montgomery over a line of credit for his store just a week earlier. He wasn't sure anyone would believe it was an accident.
@Donna: I'm pretty sure reindeer aren't supposed to glow like that. They're radioactive. There might be a contamination in the ground water or something.
By the way, here are the real stories:
ReplyDelete"It's bad luck to walk under a ladder: Again, a bit of reality. Something can fall on you, even the ladder itself. "
"Black cats bring bad luck: For centuries cats were associated with the dark side of magic and possessed of nine lives and serving as mediums for witches. Modern cat owners will tell you that few cats are completely black, the color of witchcraft. Having one cross your path was a sign of evil spirits."
"Break a mirror, bring seven-years' bad luck: For centuries glass in any form was handmade, expensive and precious. Coating the back of a glass with silver to create a reflection increased the cost. A poor family might save for years to own a mirror."
http://www.catalogs.com/info/history/common-superstitions.html
See, yawn...right.
Being a sign painter for years, I came to realize how many people don't care if they walk under a ladder or not. Even if I blocked off the route, they would still push their way through. And then bitch if I dropped or dripped something on them. I seriously considered bringing up a load of bricks and just dropping one on every jerk to walk under my ladder. Maybe I should have dropped a black cat holding a mirror on them instead.
ReplyDeleteYeah, you'd kinda think not walking under a ladder would just be simple common sense, and we wouldn't need a superstition to back it up. It's like saying it's bad luck to light a match next to an open gas leak. Really? You don't say.
ReplyDeleteI like your versions - they are neat. I think the ladder one is my favorite.
ReplyDeleteI personally think that stories 1 & 3 are true, and that you only thought you made them up. Actually you channelled them from the Akashic Records.
ReplyDeleteStory 2 may also be true but there must be another story to account for the contrary belief here in England: that a black cat crossing your path portends good luck.