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I broke a closet mirror measuring at least four feet by eight feet and someone put the fear of God in me!

2006-09-22 07:14:56 · 17 answers · asked by kuku 2 in Society & Culture Mythology & Folklore

17 answers

No, or most of us would be doomed to a lifetime of bad luck. We all break mirrors occasionally. It's a folktale, not reality. Believe you will be lucky and you will.

2006-09-22 08:12:28 · answer #1 · answered by swarr2001 5 · 0 0

Superstitions about Mirrors:
Mirrors are thought to have two supernatural abilities:
They bring bad luck
The help tell the future
Before mirrors came along, any reflective surface was considered to be magical and credited with the ability to look into the future. In ancient mythology we can often find the gods and goddesses, as well as mere mortals, looking into the still water to catch a glimpse of their fate. The power of reflective surfaces to captivate and deceive are also featured strongly in such myths as Narcissus and Snow White. Reflective surfaces like shiny metals and mirrors were also used to receive messages from the gods.

The superstition about breaking mirrors began with the ancient Romans, who supposedly saw their souls while looking at themselves in gazing pools. If someone threw a stone into a pool, breaking up a gazer's image, it meant seven years of bad luck for the gazer. Since we don't have gazing pools nowadays, breaking a mirror is thought to have the same consequence.

Egyptians once believed that breaking a mirror caused seven years of bad luck. You might wonder, why only seven years? Egyptians held that in seven years time, one had gradually become a completely different person. In effect, the bad luck was still around, but after seven years, the person who broke the mirror no longer existed.

2006-09-22 07:23:26 · answer #2 · answered by Orditz 3 · 1 0

"What Is Behind Superstitions?
Many superstitions basically stem from a fear of spirits of the dead or of spirits of any sort. Events are interpreted as attempts by these spirits to contact the living with a threat, a warning, or a blessing.
Superstitions are also closely associated with healing and medicine. For most people in the developing world, modern medicine is very expensive and often simply unobtainable. Hence, many seek cures or try to take preventive measures by turning to ancestral customs, spiritism, and superstitions. They also feel more comfortable dealing with a witch doctor who knows their customs and speaks their dialect than with a medical doctor. Superstitious beliefs are thus kept alive.

Superstitious traditions hold that illness and accidents are, not simply chance happenings, but events instigated by forces in the spirit world. Witch doctors may claim that a dead ancestor is unhappy about something. Or spirit mediums may suggest that someone has placed a curse on the victim by means of a rival witch doctor, and that is why the sickness or the accident took place.

Superstitions vary immensely throughout the world, and their propagation depends on local folklore, legends, and circumstances. But the common denominator is the belief that someone, or something, from the invisible spirit world needs to be appeased.

Innocuous or Dangerous?
To most families, the birth of twins is an exceptional and thrilling event. To the superstitious, however, it may be interpreted as a sign. In some regions of West Africa, many view it as the birth of deities, and the twins are worshiped. If one or both of the twins should die, small statues of the twins are made, and the family must offer food to these idols. Elsewhere, people view the birth of twins as a curse, to the point that some parents will kill at least one of them. Why? They believe that if both twins survive, they will one day murder their parents.

Examples like these show that although some superstitions may seem quaint and inoffensive, others can be dangerous—even deadly. With a sinister interpretation, a harmless event can be transformed into a dangerous affair.

Yes, in reality, superstition is a belief, a form of religion. Given the dangerous aspects of superstition, it is relevant to ask: Who is actually being served by superstitious beliefs and practices?"

The article continues... If you want, you could read it in the web site:

2006-09-22 09:22:29 · answer #3 · answered by Ana 2 · 0 0

The superstition that breaking a mirror brings seven years of bad luck started with the Romans, who had lots of silly ideas, quite frankly. They also thought the bad luck could be avoided by grinding the pieces of the mirror into dust, but who has time for that these days? Better to avoid any chance of bad luck in the first place.

2006-09-22 10:35:35 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I do not believe in luck. With regards to the mirror, you will have as much bad luck as you wan to have. Someone told me to break another mirror to get rid of the bad luck but as i said before, it is as bad as you amke it. Mirrors do indeed hold the answers to many unknown. For example people use mirrors to summon spirits. It is also said that if a spirirt passes in front of a mirror, he will have to go back to the other side, but that is far as it goes.

2006-09-22 08:36:04 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you are superstitious there is something you can do to break the bad luck.You have to leave the broken mirror in the place it broke and do not touch it, I believe for seven hours.I'm not sure about the amount of time.But I know you can't clean it up right away.

2006-09-23 08:51:43 · answer #6 · answered by Swan 3 · 1 0

no. years ago, it was expensive to make mirrors .they cost a lot of money to buy.,and a bar owner who had mirrors in his place, did nt like it when people got in fights and broke his mirror so he made that up, so people would be carefull in a fight, not to break his mirror,and and it caught on,people repeating that what he said till people actually beleaved it, like so many other myths. repeat something long enough and no matter how rediculous it is , there will be people who will beleave it,

2006-09-22 09:35:04 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

No. Not at all. I sat on a full-length mirror that was sitting on my bed, and it broke when the bed moved. My luck didn't change.

2006-09-22 12:23:04 · answer #8 · answered by Esma 6 · 0 0

No. That & all other superstitions are not true. I had a black cat & he was the best cat I ever had. I walked under ladders all the time, opened up umbrellas in the house. Don't buy into that nonsense.

2006-09-22 07:18:08 · answer #9 · answered by shermynewstart 7 · 0 0

sure... Oh guy i purely broke a mirror, ahh amy abode fell down on my head ahhhh i grew to become into struck by making use of lightning... so sure, from journey ahhhh no longer back, yas you do... this extra effective lead to 7 years

2016-10-01 06:16:41 · answer #10 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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