My mother’s parents came from very different backgrounds, but one thing they shared is they believed in luck – both good and bad.
When they relocated from India to move into the family home in the UK, my mother redecorated a bedroom for them. When they arrived, my grandmother was absolutely horrified. Not because she’d wanted to choose the decor herself, but because my mother had chosen the colour green. My grandmother was half Irish and believed the old folklore that green was the colour of mischievous fairies, so wearing (or sleeping in) it could attract their dangerous attention. But as my grandmother was also an alcoholic, I’m afraid no notice was taken of her fear, and that room wasn’t re-decorated until my mother co-opted it for her own use many years later.
While my grandmother’s beliefs and practises focused more on the avoidance of bad luck, my grandfather’s were more aligned to good luck. He believed 7 was his lucky number, and it was hard to argue with him when all his great-grandchildren were born on the 7th. But he also faithfully read his horoscope in the daily paper every single day, even insisting on having it read for him when his eyesight faded, so it was hard to take his beliefs any more seriously than those of my grandmother.
Indeed, I grew up rejecting superstitions. I’d walk under ladders on purpose just to prove it was all nonsense and have a long-held preference for black cats. I don’t throw spilt salt over my shoulder or worry if I break a mirror.
And yet, when I came across Feng Shui in my late twenties, I was drawn to it. When looking at its roots, I could see some of it was based on good sense. Selecting appropriate geographical locations upon which to build – things like having a clear view over all approaches when considering defenses, near a bend in the river which isn’t fast flowing so it is safe to bathe and wash, and having a hill behind you to protect you from inclement weather. Certain aspects of interior feng shui also make sense – things like not having a porch as two consecutive doors close together can cause a blockage when entering the home, ensuring furniture placement allows an easy flow of through movement, location of and brightness of lights, sound – flowing water or wind chimes, pleasing images and colours – all intended to allow for the unimpeded flow of chi. But I like cozy and tend to be a clutter bug, so the stripped back minimalist nature of it was hard work for me to maintain. That, plus the proliferation of so many good luck activators (as well as reams of things to protect you from bad luck) meant I fell out of love with it rapidly.
When life gets shitty, I won’t pretend that I wonder if I should pay more attention to things like this, but I come back to the fact that applying good common sense has nothing to do with superstition, and good luck tends to be more the result of hard work and application than purchasing some form of activator while sitting on your backside.
And so I come back to what Stevie Wonder sang: superstition ain’t the way…
Are you superstitious – in little ways, or big? Do you have any rituals or habits to ensure the flow of good luck, or to remove the bad?
© Debs Carey, 2026
Common sense is where it’s at.
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I have memories of kids superstitious and school yard chants like “step on a crack, break your mother’s back” which made me very wary of walking on the pavements for a short time 😉
I outgrew those, and culturally I don’t have anything in my background that I know of or that has hung with me. I do remember the Feng shui craze but I never really understood it and extreme minimalism isn’t me. I don’t want tons of stuff but typically my spaces (which are small) dictate what I can put in them.
The answer is no, no rituals or habits connected with the hope to bring good luck.
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I am a little superstitious. My mom was Irish and I have to confess that sometimes I do pay close attention to little details. Crows will kind of alert me to something dead in the area, usually an animal but I also keep my eye out for other things. I do believe in intuition and common sense.
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My Dad was Scotch-Irish. He wasn’t superstitious, but he said when asked about his favorite color, “I like every color, as long as it’s green.”
I don’t know about feng shui in detail, but I think some of the basics really make sense. You don’t want the north wind blowing in your front door. A pleasant flow of air and sight through your house. Maximize natural light. The commanding position: I like to look out the window when I wash dishes, and I like a window at my side when I sit at my desk. They’re all kind of basic ideas for harmonious living spaces. But then, people take the principles to extremes and turn them into superstitions.
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Deb, I’ve never heard of that chant, but I can imagine it must’ve freaked you out.
I suspect my brief flirtation with feng shui was about attempting to be more tidy and less of a clutter-bug. It didn’t work!
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Absolutely believe in intuition and common sense. I never thought that about crows in particular, it was more vultures where I grew up in India.
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How funny about your Dad Nicki! 😀
That’s it exactly about feng shui. The practical aspects of it make total sense, the problem is when it becomes a marketing opportunity or slavishly followed. Thanks Nicki, you’ve reminded me of some stuff I’d left behind about feng shui which will be helpful in getting our little apartment to work better (which is my current focus atm).
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Yup, it sure is. Nicki has reminded me of some of the basic principles which drew me to feng shui and I might re-visit them in an attempt to make our bijoux apartment flow better.
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The chant is American, dating to early 1900’s with sketchy superstitious connections to ‘underground portals’. Also very likely holding racist undertones unfortunately, which I just learned of in writing that earlier comment. Overall it was meant to scare children in one way or another.
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If something is going well I do hesitate mentioning it because I do think something will be jinxed…
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My ex-wife used her devotion to Feng Shui as a way to lecture me on the wickedness of not putting the toilet seat back down. She complained “men” (i.e. me) seemed to do this with abandon. So it’s nice to read about Feng Shui in a broader, more useful context.
I don’t think I’m superstitious either. The one thing I’m precious about though, which I suppose borders on superstition, is never to read ahead or fast-forward. That’s probably more about being linear. 🤦♂️😆
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It must be terrifying for children – how horrible. And, as you say it seems likely there were also racist undertones too – just vile.
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Oh I know that feeling far too well too LA…
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😉
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Oh that’s horrid Marty. Funny thing is when I laughingly told my ex about that part he took it to heart – not as an attack by me, but because he decided he agreed with it wholeheartedly and not only put the toilet seat back down, but put the lid down too. The number of times I staggered into the bathroom at night and ended up shocked to find myself sitting on the lid… but I clearly couldn’t complain otherwise I’d be wanting our money luck flushed down the toilet. There were times I wished I’d kept quiet 😀
I don’t read ahead either. Can’t understand why anyone would.
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Glad to hear I’m not the only one who intentionally courts bad luck by walking beneath ladders! I’m only superstitious when it comes to football. If I fail to wear at least one article of team-related clothing, they are destined to lose. It never fails.
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Amazingly, Andy’s parents were okay with the Feng shui in our house–no clear path from front door to back, slightly up on a hill, etc. Some other folks I know weren’t so lucky–one Asian father actually CUT THE LEGS off of his adult son’s four poster bed because it was “too high” and the son bought it anyway. I don’t believe in superstition, except for my own personal superstition that March is a cursed month.
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This was such an interesting read. I grew up around superstition too, so a lot of this felt familiar even though I have moved away from it over time. It made me think about how superstition might have been an early language for spirituality, before we had better words for psychology or probability.
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It must be the bull in us Mark 😀 Many years ago, I went to the toilet just as the half was ending of a big rugby match (World Cup final) and my team scored a try. It was the only one of the match, so now my family always tries to persuade me to pay a visit during game time if our team is losing… Fortunately it didn’t work the last time, so now they leave me alone. Good to hear you wear your team colours proudly. Himself is faintly horrified by my team’s colours (magenta, pale blue, brown & green in quarters) but I feel if you’re going to do it, do it properly.
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Autumn, glad to hear that your in-laws were reasonable (or maybe just not fans of feng shui?) I cannot believe they cut the legs off the four poster bed!
Of course your belief (not superstition) about March is perfectly valid.
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Good point Kari. I mean, women were burned as witches not that long ago for the like, so definitely a good call. I never used to admit to anyone about having intuition. But I trust it now.
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LMAO! Good thing they didn’t score that last time, otherwise you might be confined to the bathroom all season long.
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I see you use a black cat as your image. We have currently adopted 2 black rescue cats. I understand that animal charities find black cats more difficult to place than other colours.
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There were many games when that did happen!
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Rosemary, I was so upset when I discovered that fact. I’ve always had a preference for a black cat – the common British shorthair version in particular. Unfortunately we’re not allowed pets where we currently live, but I plan to enjoy a long old age in the future with lots of cats – most of them black.
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Interesting… what’s the difference between being drawn to something as opposed to it striking a chord or just liking it? And I have to ask – how many great grandchildren did he have? But I am a massive fan of black cats
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Hmm, good question, thanks Caroline. It felt like an unexpected pull. Not being superstitious, the good/bad luck nature of it wasn’t anything I’d typically like or be interested in, and being naturally messy, the need for orderliness and precise placement went against my natural nature, and yet I was fascinated by it.
My grandfather only had 3 great grandchildren, but all were born on the 7th of the month of their birth. In fact 2 were born on the 7th of the same month (the seventh month), if separated by 1 year.
Delighted to hear you’re a member of the black cats fan club – all the best people are 🙂
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Thanks Debs – three grandchildren on the 7th is certainly adequate to claim it’s lucky!
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Yes, we really couldn’t argue with him. My daughter was the first and she loves being a member of (as she calls them) the lucky sevens!
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