Rix Quinn: Superstitions

Throughout the ages, our forefathers – and foremothers too – have been told that certain things bring bad luck. My uncle got sick one time because he did not listen to the old poem that said, “Leave fresh food out of the refrigerator, and you’re sure to vomit sooner or later.”

You’ve likely heard it’s dangerous to walk under a ladder. This superstition reportedly originates from medieval times,whenladderssometimes led to the hanging gallows.

But there’s also a reported “cure.” You can cancel the bad luck by saying “bread and butter” as you walk under the ladder. Huh?

Here’s my luck with bread and butter. If I drop it on the floor, it almost always lands butter side first.

Another belief claims that hanging a horseshoe on a wall keeps evil spirits away. I don’t know about this, but I’m sure that’s inconvenient for one shoeless horse.

Another tale says that breaking a mirror brings seven years of bad luck. You can supposedly solve that problem by rubbing a piece of the broken mirror against a gravestone.

I will admit that I accidentally broke a girlfriend’s makeup mirror when I was 23, and I had seven years of bad dates. But here’s one superstition that sounds positive. “Find a penny, pick it up. And all day long, you’ll have good luck.”

I wonder if accidentally finding folding money would bringevenmoreluck?Thenthe poem could change to “Find a lost ten-dollar bill…and later you could buy a meal.”