Read The Book of the Bizarre: Freaky Facts and Strange Stories Online
Authors: Varla Ventura
Long ago, people looked at their reflections in water and were amazed because they thought they were glimpsing their soul. When the reflected image was altered by waves or ripples, they thought that their soul was in danger. Over time, this belief morphed into the belief that if someone broke a mirror, it would take seven years for their soul to return to them. The term of seven years was established by the Romans, who believed it took a body seven years to repair itself. These beliefs eventually became the superstition that breaking a mirror means seven years of bad luck.
Another superstition says that should a mirror fall and break on its own, a death in the home is soon to be
expected. Even the house where the mirror breaks is thought to be cursed for seven years. Looking at your reflection in a mirror by candlelight is also said to bring bad luck.
“SUPERSTITION BRINGS THE GODS INTO EVEN THE SMALLEST MATTERS.”
—TITUS LIVY
For thousands of years, superstitions about salt have been incorporated into religious, domestic, and business practices. Because salt could preserve food, people thought it had the power to protect them as well. Salt was poured into wells to purify water against evil and placed on the chest of a corpse before burial. Mothers even salted their babies, believing salt would lengthen their lives.
In biblical times, people ate salt to ensure that business agreements would remain true. But salt was not always considered good luck—it was forbidden to speak the word “salt” while at sea for fear of the consequences.
In supernatural workings, salt is also relied upon. It is often placed in the corners of a room before a spell is cast, and people often take ritual salt baths to break harmful spells put upon them. It is also understood that when we spill salt, friendly spirits to our right are warning us that evil approaches on the left; tossing a pinch of salt over the left shoulder staves off danger.
Hundreds of years ago, people traveled very little. Communities were fearful of the world that existed
beyond the boundaries of their villages. Witches and ominous gods were thought to live among the surrounding mountains, valleys, and seas. People believed that the stranger knocking on their door could be a spirit in disguise. If not treated hospitably, the spirit could cast an evil spell on a home. So families welcomed strangers and treated them well, providing them with food and comfort, so that the spirit-stranger would leave their homes in peace when he or she moved on.
Historical explanations seem to justify the superstition that walking under a ladder brings bad luck. To the ancient Egyptians, the triangular shape of pyramids was sacred, and to walk under a ladder would be to break the triangle it formed with the wall. This act, they believed, would have deadly consequences.
The Christians believed that the triangle formed by a ladder leaning against a wall represented the Holy Trinity (the Father, Son [Jesus Christ], and Holy Ghost). If you were to walk under the ladder, you would be violating the Holy Trinity. It was also feared that when you walked through the ladder-based triangle, you walked with the devil.
In more recent times, tall ladders were used to take down the corpse from the noose after someone had been hanged. It was believed that if you walked under that ladder, the dead person, swinging from the gallows above, would watch you pass, and then you, too, would meet your death. It was also feared that the body would fall onto those who crossed below the ladder.