Tag Archives: Mirrors

Blanket over Mirror (Noah Hensley)

General Information About Item

  • Superstitions
  • English retrieval
  • Country: Puerto Rico
  • Informant: JJ
  • Collected: Nov 12, 2021

Informant Data:

JJ is a current Dartmouth senior who was born in 1999. His mother is from Puerto Rico, and raised him as the primary parent in the household. JJ was raised in Queens, NY and identifies strongly with the city. 

Contextual Data:

Cultural Context: 

Puerto Rican culture is a unique blend of pre-Christian animistic and spiritual beliefs, and beliefs associated with Catholicism. Queens, NY has a considerable population that identifies with PR culture, and subsequently adorns their house in a manner traditionally found on the island. 

Social Context: 

Various pre-Christian beliefs in Puerto Rican households still remain today. Much like the East Asian concept of ‘Feng Shui’, households are set up to provide good flow of energy between rooms and spaces. JJ recalls hearing this superstition from his mother. 

Item

In JJ’s household, mirrors below a certain size were always covered by some sort of cloth or blanket that covers up their reflectivity. This is to ward off any spirits or negative energy that may infiltrate a house after the reflection brings them in. Large mirrors are often left uncovered, however, because they serve a very practical purpose in hygiene and such. Yet, small mirrors such as those on bathroom vanity, are frequently covered after use to prevent such spirits from entering the house. 

Informant’s Comments:

JJ does not believe in this superstition, and thinks it is annoying that most mirrors in the house are covered.

Collector’s Comments:

I did not know this existed, and had never been in a house that followed this superstition/ritual.

Tags

Superstiton

Latin American

Elderly

Puerto Rico

Mirrors

Mirror on the Door (Noah Hensley)

Title: Mirror on the Door

General information about the item:

  • Superstition, House Superstition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: Vietnam
  • Informant: KL
  • Date Collected: Oct 21, 2021

Informant Data:

KL was born into a family of Vietnamese immigrants. He initially lived in New York City, but eventually relocated to Burlington, NC to attend high school. He is a junior at Dartmouth College, studying economics

Contextual Data:

Cultural Context: 

The Vietnamese are typically firm believers in ‘Feng Shui’i; arrangement of furniture and items in the house that promote good flow of energy throughout the house. Viet households are typically meticulously planned and laid out by the matriarch of the family. Mirrors are particularly important in planning various aspects of ‘Feng Shui’.

Social Context: 

As the mother typically is well versed in traditional superstitions related to Feng Shui, KL received knowledge of this practice through his mother. It is disrespectful to alter the Feng Shui of a room that has already been set up, so children in Viet families are often informed of various traditions through their parental units. 

Item:

Mirrors are often forbidden to be placed in certain areas of the house: at the foot of the bed, for example, a mirror is thought to bring bad spirits as energy is reflected back into ones-self from nightmares. Mirrors can also have the opposite effect, however. To protect positive Feng Shui, mirrors are placed on the front of the front door to ward off bad spirits and energies from entering the house. An evil spirit, before entering the house, would be afraid of its own reflection, and therefore not enter the abode. 

Informants Comments:

Very common in Vietnam, less common in US.

Collectors Comments:

It might strike some as unusual to put a mirror on the front door in the US given cultural contexts.

Collectors Name: Noah Hensley

Tags/Keywords:

Superstition

Vietnamese

Parents

Vietnam

Feng Shui, Mirrors

Superstition #21: Don’t Break Any Mirrors

Title: Don’t Break Any Mirrors

General Information about Item:

  • Genre and Sub Genre
  • Verbal Folklore: Superstition
  • Language: English
  • Country where Item is from: United States

Informant Data:

  • Matt Vance is a student of the class of 2018 and has roots in the Irish, English, and Dutch. He was born in London and raised in New York. He is agnostic, he is fiscally conservative and socially democratic. His hobby is reading and running. He hopes to help people and be a good father.

Contextual Data:

  • Social Context: The informant learned this superstition when he was 10 at a camp and learned it when he started hearing other kids warning him about breaking mirrors.
  • Cultural Context: Centuries ago, mirrors were not cheap and not taken for granted as they are today. Mirrors were expensive and almost like a luxury item, so therefore breaking one would deliver bad luck.

Item:

  • Bad Luck Superstition: Breaking mirrors brings bad luck.

Associated file (a video, audio, or image file):

Transcript of Associated File:

Matt_Transcript

Informant’s Comments:

  • Matt said he believes in karma, or the notion that if you mess with the universe, it messes with you back. Moreover, Matt doesn’t take these superstitions for face value and chooses to follow them loosely. Not breaking any mirrors, however, is one superstition he chooses to follow.

Collector’s Comments:

  • It’s interesting to see that Matt avoids breaking windows considering he follows all the other superstitions loosely. Even though mirrors are not as expensive as they were in the past, breaking them today is still generally avoided because mirrors provide utility and replacing one is a hassle.

Collector’s Name: Gaurav Varma

Tags/Keywords:

  • American/Bad Luck/Superstition/Breaking/Mirrors