Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.

Unveiling the Unseen: A Journey through the Intriguing World of Superstitions

October 18, 2023 Keny, Louis, Tom Season 2 Episode 35
Unveiling the Unseen: A Journey through the Intriguing World of Superstitions
Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.
More Info
Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.
Unveiling the Unseen: A Journey through the Intriguing World of Superstitions
Oct 18, 2023 Season 2 Episode 35
Keny, Louis, Tom

Ever think about how that pre-game ritual could make or break your day? Believe it or not, we're diving into the intriguing world of superstitions on the Cottman, Crawford and the Jersey Guy podcast, alongside our special guest, Jerry. We're bringing everything from the bizarre practice of freezing a rival team's jersey to the quaint charm of gifting bread and salt to a new homeowner in a conversation that will leave you fascinated and a bit in awe.

We're peeling back the layers of the superstitions that permeate our lives, exploring the beliefs passed down from our families, and even the ones we imbibe from the cultures we're a part of. Jerry steps into the discussion, offering insights on topics such as the superstition around rocking an empty chair, the avoidance of whistling to escape tragedy, and the odd belief of keeping your coat on when entering a house. We're not stopping there, as we delve into the enigma of lucky numbers – why 13 is frowned upon and why a clean pair of underwear could be your lucky charm!

This episode would be incomplete without addressing the rich world of Chinese and Japanese superstitions. Here's a spoiler: never gift anyone a clock! Jerry sets the scene with his lottery and Bingo playing rituals, and we wrap up the episode with an intriguing chat about a peculiar superstition around knitted sweater gifts. So settle in as we take a rollercoaster ride through the quirky and captivating universe of superstitions. Trust us, you don't want to miss this one!

Please Subscribe/Follow the Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy Podcast.

Follow us on Instagram and Facebook.
https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

Email us all your feedback, comments & suggestions at: CCandNJGuy@Gmail.com

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Ever think about how that pre-game ritual could make or break your day? Believe it or not, we're diving into the intriguing world of superstitions on the Cottman, Crawford and the Jersey Guy podcast, alongside our special guest, Jerry. We're bringing everything from the bizarre practice of freezing a rival team's jersey to the quaint charm of gifting bread and salt to a new homeowner in a conversation that will leave you fascinated and a bit in awe.

We're peeling back the layers of the superstitions that permeate our lives, exploring the beliefs passed down from our families, and even the ones we imbibe from the cultures we're a part of. Jerry steps into the discussion, offering insights on topics such as the superstition around rocking an empty chair, the avoidance of whistling to escape tragedy, and the odd belief of keeping your coat on when entering a house. We're not stopping there, as we delve into the enigma of lucky numbers – why 13 is frowned upon and why a clean pair of underwear could be your lucky charm!

This episode would be incomplete without addressing the rich world of Chinese and Japanese superstitions. Here's a spoiler: never gift anyone a clock! Jerry sets the scene with his lottery and Bingo playing rituals, and we wrap up the episode with an intriguing chat about a peculiar superstition around knitted sweater gifts. So settle in as we take a rollercoaster ride through the quirky and captivating universe of superstitions. Trust us, you don't want to miss this one!

Please Subscribe/Follow the Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy Podcast.

Follow us on Instagram and Facebook.
https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

Email us all your feedback, comments & suggestions at: CCandNJGuy@Gmail.com

Speaker 2:

Hey everybody, kenny Cotman.

Speaker 1:

Lewis Crawford and I'm Tom Remmage, the Jersey Guy.

Speaker 3:

Hey, welcome everybody to the Cotman Crawford Jersey Guy podcast. How's everybody doing tonight?

Speaker 1:

All right, all right, all right, we're doing, good, we're doing good.

Speaker 3:

I think everybody's happy, everybody's doing good, yeah, yeah good week.

Speaker 2:

Glad it's Friday, right yeah, Friday the what? Oh yeah, 13th 13th Friday. Yes, yeah, yeah, it's Friday the 13th.

Speaker 3:

We should have paid a lot of tonight. Yeah, so well. First we have to introduce the guest.

Speaker 2:

I'm friend Jerry's with us tonight.

Speaker 4:

Jerry, jerry, jerry, jerry.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Thanks for having me on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, thanks for coming. Yeah, I'm from so far away. Make that crazy trip to be here just for the show yeah yeah, fucking across the street. You go both ways, it's a good song.

Speaker 3:

What the hell you talking about? You go both ways, I go both ways.

Speaker 2:

Oh, oh, oh okay.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, be careful what you say here, yeah, for real.

Speaker 2:

Jesus.

Speaker 3:

We're gonna talk. I think the podcast tonight is going to be on Superstitions, right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, superstitions, friday the 13th. It's a good day for that. Good day for that, you know, superstitions is just they're on high alert.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, hell yeah. They probably said in the corner all day.

Speaker 3:

I think everybody is to some extent, I think everybody is some, yeah, everybody, has something that they you know you know they're superstitious about. I know I have a couple of things, probably one or two things, especially when it comes to me and my brother. Yeah, he's not allowed to call me when the game is on, because every time he's ever called me. It's always fucking sports people are superstitious.

Speaker 1:

Every time he would call me my fucking team will lose.

Speaker 3:

And I would be like just listen, don't call me. We eat until the game's over. Now we both like Yankees, so I'll be like bro, don't call, Wait till the game is over. What do we know?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what's if it's a team that that he, that it's a rival team. I'm gonna call you every time, actually, he doesn't, he doesn't do that we don't.

Speaker 2:

We don't do that to each other, that we don't do.

Speaker 3:

We did that when we were kids, yeah, growing up. But as far as sports go, yeah, that's one of the things because he's got a lot of things, because he did it to me of every time he did and he said something, something would happen, right, right. But now, when he doesn't, nine times out of 10, the game was one. It's now coincidence, possibly, but you know what it works.

Speaker 2:

What do you change your underwear? You know it's not to call me until the fucking game as long as you change your drawers, you know, I guess I don't do that. Have the same question underway.

Speaker 3:

Some people boomer sizing on the fan when hockey's playing and we're in the playoffs. He'll talk about how people put jerseys in the freezer of the opposite team, so the other team of the player. They're a good player and they'll take that jersey and they'll put it in the freezer to give him bad luck, or you know to where his game is it going to be on or whatever it is you know, I shouldn't say bad luck, but more like you know and that's a superstition, right I mean cool.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so go ahead.

Speaker 1:

Tom, do you remember when Yankee Stadium was being built? The new stadium? Someone, someone that's right. They poured in the in the concrete, they put like a red socks jersey and they had to cut it out.

Speaker 3:

They had to cut it out.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like cause they're superstitious yeah.

Speaker 3:

Somebody put a Boston, a Boston's red socks jersey in the concrete and they and they you could see them chopping it out and they took the jersey out. Geez, because people are superstitious, they're like. So think of it from the red socks point of view. Oh, if I put this jersey in right, and I don't even remember what the jersey was. But we should look it up because I'm not sure what player it was or who it was that they put in there.

Speaker 2:

But yeah thinking.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to throw the game off kind of like us.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

What, though, when Boomer talks about it with the jersey in the freezer?

Speaker 1:

it was one of the construction workers Right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah Well, so the superstition, I guess then in Santeria Spanish thing Okay, that if you're trying to keep somebody who's pissing you the fuck off or knowing you, you put their name on a brown paper bag and then put it in the ice tray of water and put it in the freezer, and they won't bother you.

Speaker 3:

Really.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, no shit, that's okay, so is that kind of yeah, yeah, yeah, no, no, no, no, no, no chickens and nothing.

Speaker 2:

No, this is just straight water, lead and paper. Yeah, but again, superstition. Jerry, you're older than all of us, so you were around. Which when?

Speaker 4:

they when you made which Superstar?

Speaker 2:

What superstition did you come up with?

Speaker 4:

I'm sure I have some type of superstitions. I do kind of weird things sometimes but I'm not sure if it's superstition or not. But I do weird things like hey, turn, turn to something on twice or right. Yeah, check to check the stuff, do weird things.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Check the door, that I do this, that's more of a paranoia.

Speaker 2:

No, I can say that's either paranoia, super, no, not superstition. Like OCD, not OCD.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, ocd, ocd would be like the limiting Right, right. I mean it's like superstition. Ocd would be like you're like fucking it fucking ruined your life.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've seen it.

Speaker 1:

You ever see that there was a. There was a YouTube video of this mailman. They called the OCD mailman the guy he kept opening and closed the mailbox to check for him, walked back and closed another fucking W5.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, repetitive stuff, yeah, like that. That's the guy's life, that's the superstition.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

That's, that's the step on crack. You break your mom's back.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, jerry, do you ever? Have you ever heard this? I remember my mother saying this crazy thing. Yeah, she would say. I say you ever get the chills once a while. You want to call them like oh yeah. Yeah, someone walked on your grave. Somebody walked on your grave. Yeah, that doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 1:

So what does that mean? That means that I died already.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Like where am I now if I'm no longer that?

Speaker 2:

I'm feeling that chill from that one. Never said that one.

Speaker 3:

That's not a chill from that grave. Jerry, can you fill us in?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I can, I'm not sure.

Speaker 4:

On a serious note we just purchased this house. It's 1905 that was built. So, several times and like.

Speaker 4:

I said I'm not really that superstitious but I do believe in some weird stuff that happens. So I friended this cat that comes through. A feral wildcat took me about six, seven months food power. Next thing you know he's on my lounge chair hanging out. The wife says, hey, he's moving in. So before this I would sit at the bottom of the stairs facing the TV and I looked up and it looked like somebody was standing there looking at me and I quickly look and I was like what the frick?

Speaker 2:

was that.

Speaker 4:

And it looked like a person standing on top of the stairs. Split second, no big deal happened again. Another time I'm sitting there to wife this was last week that's sitting on my lounge chair on the bottom and all of a sudden, corner of my eye, I just take a quick look. I look up, I'm looking, I look back down. The cat is just right right up staring at the top of the stairs. Oh, I had fucking chills. Go up the back.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, yeah, oh shit, yeah, that's weird yeah.

Speaker 4:

I played it off.

Speaker 1:

Now superstition.

Speaker 4:

This is what me minute think about it. I there's a weed my son gave me. It's a raptus like hemp or something and it looks like a giant cigar. And I was telling them what was going on. This was last weekend.

Speaker 2:

And he says to me hey, wait, right there he goes.

Speaker 4:

I had some weird shit in my house. I went to other kid's rooms because they were seeing things. And I did it Bored off the ghost or something. So he gave it to me. It's in a bowl still in the port.

Speaker 2:

I haven't done it yet but I honestly was planning on going through lightning when the wife was home yeah it was part of. It's probably sage, sage, yeah, exactly Sage.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it was sage. And if you burn it and you walk around the house, yeah, right, yeah, so that's a superstition, right?

Speaker 4:

I mean?

Speaker 2:

yeah, yeah, I think that. Yeah, that's a superstition. Yeah, you gotta go Absolutely.

Speaker 4:

I've been seeing this. It's like pretty crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

For a split second. I'm not freaked out about it yet.

Speaker 2:

Because it hasn't been like tugging on me and shit. Yeah, when it starts to tug on you. Yeah, yeah, you're in the shower. You feel that tug of tug?

Speaker 1:

game. People pay good money for that, you know yeah, people pay good money for a tug.

Speaker 2:

Tug, bro, you get it for free from a ghost, really yeah.

Speaker 3:

That's the. That's the next podcast Preverted ghost.

Speaker 4:

We need to save that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but just a little tug, that's creepy, because my dogs do the same.

Speaker 3:

My dogs do the same thing, man. Well, I'll be sitting down and then all of a sudden, they're just yeah, and then they'll, they turn their head and they're kind of looking at a second. What's going on, man?

Speaker 4:

What are you doing over?

Speaker 2:

there, it's like crazy that is how it is Freaky, yeah, so tell us what is your one? Well, you just did you talk about your brother.

Speaker 3:

It was David Ortiz.

Speaker 2:

This was very. Yeah, it was his jersey Me?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I think. I think I am, to a certain extent, like I have certain numbers that I, when things happen I don't know if it's a superstition or more of a thing that I don't know like we have numbers that are closed to us. So you probably have certain numbers that you play, or if you see some numbers, right it's, you're like what the hell, why am I seeing that number? Like I was seeing seeing eight, five, one all the time, and then I will look it up, you know, and then we tell you this is what it is, it's your, it's your guardian angel or somebody's looking over you and, like you know all this information. So I would think that kind of, too, is a superstition in its own way, even though that you believe that that's what it is.

Speaker 3:

Right, if you do believe right, you know, you know because they do, but you kind of do in your own way. You go oh, that's interesting, I don't mind that so much right, you're like right, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you don't really go out as bullshit. Right, you don't do that Right, but yeah you, that's me.

Speaker 1:

So like I'm like I have the weird even numbers thing, like I have to do things in even numbers, Like, like, if I'm, right man upstairs? I know upstairs, I mean the pretzels like I make sure I take, like four or two or six, like you know, do you like, you say which is cut and perfect in the middle.

Speaker 3:

If I go on an angle, lose your mind. Oh, fucking lose my really, If I go from corner to corner.

Speaker 1:

No, not from, I think, mean like if you cut it offset like we're one size oh like a 3070.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's fucking time You're so new.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, time you told me, time told me a story about going to say what?

Speaker 2:

it said what a sandwich he could have run.

Speaker 3:

No, she would cut it. She cut it in an angle, oh yeah, triangles, he would.

Speaker 2:

I don't freak out.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. I have to think, but um yeah, I don't care what, but if it was upset that would fuck. So even numbers. You do that with everything really Almost yeah and like like um made a lot look if like like like snacking or food or whatever. But like like if I were to, if I were to grab a handful of pretzels and there was seven there I would the next handful of pretzels. I'd have to make sure we're also an odd number, so the total number would be even numbers, yeah.

Speaker 3:

So yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

This is our friend Tom. Yeah, that's banana. Yeah.

Speaker 4:

I worked with a guy who was so like that his calendar was was uh like. I got called, so he was working uh, not the commissary, but next to it. So he said yeah, I walked in I got a phone call out the radio I go when I sit down. Boom, I grabbed.

Speaker 2:

and I'm right, I wrote on his calendar real quick the number that, that, that, don Hodges name was bad, he come around the corner.

Speaker 4:

He's seen what I was done. He instantly started cutting this little piece of paper on and he glued it. He pulled that little stick and glued and covered up the writing on his calendar. If you move the pencil and he, he would straighten it.

Speaker 2:

He, he was seriously, oh, if you move this calendar or move anything.

Speaker 4:

He was bang bang boom like you know what we used to have a guy that like that.

Speaker 1:

It was like that at my last job and my, of course, my my boss was of course, talking about me now that I left my last job.

Speaker 3:

I worked at the hospital.

Speaker 1:

We had a guy who was he was like the lead carpenter and he had like an office in the carpenter shop and like my boss would just like fuck with stuff on purpose Like he'd go into his office and he'd like turn something around and he would, and you'd come the next day we'd look and see it was fixed. Like I'm so fucking subtle that no one else would notice it's crazy.

Speaker 3:

He would know yeah, right, it's crazy. Well what? Would try you know what makes us tick or whatever. We're going to Tanya's that way would, if I moved something or I had to go to the top of a cabinet and I moved her display right.

Speaker 3:

I was looking at it and how it was set up. Then I'm like, oh shit, how do I put this back? So I kind of put it back the way I think it looks good and she's like, who moved it? Did you touch that on the top of the cabinet? I'm like, yeah, I did. She's like, oh no, no, we gotta just fix that.

Speaker 2:

That's funny, but I think those are more, more OCDs, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Because, like what you had listed superstitions, what's listed you have, like the superstition, is, like you said, the step on a step on a crack and breaking mother's back.

Speaker 3:

Don't go in there. Don't go in between the ladder Seven years. Don't walk with a. You know inside, open an umbrella.

Speaker 1:

If you spill salt, you're supposed to throw it over your right shoulder, or your right shoulder or left shoulder, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know it's double over your shoulder.

Speaker 3:

I don't know I don't know if it's a superstition. It's. I guess it's a tradition. There could be a superstition, a European thing, where when someone moves into a house, they give you salt bread and something else. I can't remember my father. It's a European thing because a lot of Jewish families do that. It's like a. It's something that came from when they came from Europe. They brought it over with them and that's kind of like something. It means something.

Speaker 3:

So I'll have to look it up, but I remember my father then always saying oh, we gotta make sure we give you salt and this, that and bring it into house before you move in and all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 1:

Right, you know there's a lot of, I think, good luck. Things are superstitions too, right.

Speaker 4:

Absolutely.

Speaker 1:

You know it's bad when other people push their superstitions on you, like my mother-in-law, she. Every time we get a car she's like I got this angel thing, put it in your car, I'm like I don't want it.

Speaker 2:

She's like just put it in the car.

Speaker 1:

I'm like, oh, all right, yes, yeah, I did that, I had that.

Speaker 2:

So when I just got into my, I had this. It was.

Speaker 1:

It looks like the statue of the Jesus Christ in Brazil that they had that big one, so it's a little one. Oh yeah, the.

Speaker 2:

Rio de Nero one Right. I got one as a gift and I had it on the front of my car, stayed there all winters or everything, and it just registered now. So I guess that would be one of my superstitions for me like religious belief, like that that I had it in out to where I was going, right, and he fell the week before I got into the accident.

Speaker 3:

Really, yeah, no shit. See, see now how you connected Like you're like well, yeah, it's just kind of the same thing, you know.

Speaker 2:

I'm like motherfucker, I didn't even think about that. Had I known I would have. I'm glad I was in the car because I'd have been crossing the street walking and shit. Yeah, I know it's shit. No kidding man. Another super, yet another.

Speaker 1:

But like is another one. Like, speaking of cars, like when you know people, will you get a new car? Like, are you putting money at the bottom.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, isn't that superstition?

Speaker 1:

That is a superstition I'm thinking like that it's not like I'm worried about bad luck. It's like I'm giving you good luck, but that's a superstition. There's no talking and giving you good luck.

Speaker 2:

So, because it's Friday the 13th, you know what I used to do when I?

Speaker 1:

this is before Easy Pass Like fucking yeah, pick up the pain and talk no shit.

Speaker 2:

No, that's funny bro. So we have quarters down. Yeah, yeah, it always bound down there underneath the fucking the mat and shit. Yo, that's funny bro. That is funny. That's for the people who don't know what the kids back in the day.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

You have to actually pay.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there was a bin at the toll and you had to throw a quarter in the bin.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, we can hold that. It's definitely resemblance of a urinal.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, it looked like a urinal with holes in it.

Speaker 1:

A urinal, if a urinal had sex with a basketball. Who was that shit?

Speaker 2:

Wow See, so we focused on the show. Everybody was a little perverted over here and this guy just capping over, geez.

Speaker 3:

Fuck it. So check it out. I just looked this thing up. It says irrational as it may seem, we all have superstitions or two, whether it is a lucky pair of pants or a version to Friday the 13. Superstitions are more important to us because they give meaning to other random nature of luck, I'm sorry, nature Random. They give meaning to oh man, I'm fucking this a lot. Glasses, bro, glasses, I don't have money, random nature of luck, and puts us in the driving seat of our destiny.

Speaker 2:

You want your glasses.

Speaker 3:

So hang on, hang on, hang on. So the first one that they have is knocking on wood here.

Speaker 2:

I probably should use them. Yeah, knocking on wood, knock on wood is maybe Do you know where that comes from.

Speaker 1:

Is this gonna explain where that comes from?

Speaker 3:

It does. Is that that's it?

Speaker 1:

I don't think you want me reading it again? I didn't do good the first time. So like the superstition is is like that they believe that souls were in trees, Like so if you knocked on wood.

Speaker 2:

Okay, that's pretty cool Saying hello.

Speaker 1:

It was good luck.

Speaker 2:

Oh, okay, cool. I don't want them to say, come in, I would have shit a drink had I heard a fucking go you know, but knock on wood right.

Speaker 1:

Yes, that's funny, but even something like saying bless you when someone sneezes. That's actually superstition, but it should be like a social thing, cause it was believed that your soul was like trying to leave your body when you sneezed. So if you said God bless you. You're still staying in the body, so there you go.

Speaker 2:

So people still say it yeah, yeah, I know what. You have Black cat walking in a bush path.

Speaker 3:

Yes, I've heard that happen to me a few times when we're driving, or I think we all have probably at some extent we have black cats crossed out of half.

Speaker 1:

I'm sure. Yeah, you know about it, it's like kind of like the ladder, walking under a ladder.

Speaker 2:

Right, yeah, if you grab the kid and you choke it, you would just go where, and then you just don't you make it go where It'll go the other way and you just be fine.

Speaker 1:

I have a theory with the cat off the top. You see I wasn't saying that shit. I have a theory with the walking under ladder came from. It was probably someone who was working on a ladder and like people kept fucking walking under it and making the guy nervous that they're gonna knock it over, and he's like you know you're gonna get bad luck if you go under that ladder. It's like a time yeah, I was gonna say that he just threw something back.

Speaker 2:

Something just fell on their heads and shit, Sorry.

Speaker 1:

Tell the people that when the hats came from. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's great yeah.

Speaker 3:

Walking under a ladder, walking under a ladder.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I was saying don't place two mirrors facing each other.

Speaker 3:

Broken mirror is also bad luck. No, yeah, so don't Two facing each other, don't face it.

Speaker 2:

So keeping with the theme of mirror related superstitions, there's another creepy tale about the placement of two mirrors, a placing of mirrors in your home so, like you know, wall to them, they're facing each other. According to the Mexican legend, putting two mirrors opposite each other creates a portal for the devil to enter your house. Yeah, but I mean, that's a lot of you know, but a lot of I mean a bunch of superstitions came from some kind of religion thing you know, Right, or some kind of witch practice, Right Fucking feng shui.

Speaker 1:

The whole idea of feng shui is a superstition. Like you have to put things, facing that way and things facing that way, yeah, the way.

Speaker 2:

That's right, that's what it is.

Speaker 1:

But what made me think of the feng shui is when you said mirrors, someone told me one of my friends he was doing. You know he worked construction. He was telling me like they were building this house and the people were like really into feng shui, they were involved in the construction. Like they were drywalling and they put like a mirror in the drywall.

Speaker 2:

Like in the fucking wall. So we know that weird shit. That's insane.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That is insane.

Speaker 1:

That's superstitious.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all right. Well, what do you do when you drive? Walk past the cemetery.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I don't do any of that. I know I had a friend that used to do that I don't do any of that. Wait, do what Hold your breath?

Speaker 2:

No, you don't do anything.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying. I just look at it.

Speaker 2:

You. I run by him Really. I never run by him. You don't want to pull you in Even start here so people would do the sign of the cross yeah as they're going by, or pick the feet up off like in the car. Pick your feet up off the floor of the car until you get past it.

Speaker 3:

No, you know, my brother does that, but he does that. What happens if you have to?

Speaker 1:

break Right, exactly.

Speaker 3:

Right, my brother does that when he goes into another state, when he's crossing over the state line, he picks his feet up Because he thinks he's jumping. No, just going into Maryland.

Speaker 2:

I'm hopping in Maryland.

Speaker 3:

So he picks his feet up we used to get to New York and then he drops them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've never heard that. Yeah, he does that. That's funny, that's crazy.

Speaker 3:

Broken mirror is bad luck.

Speaker 1:

Seven years or, so, seven years bad luck yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

I broke a few of them, yes, but again I think someone said that just because it was not for that Make people not break mirrors.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, oh.

Speaker 1:

Reflections on us.

Speaker 3:

What do we got?

Speaker 2:

Reflections I'm going to say never rock an empty chair. You ever hear that? I've never heard that.

Speaker 1:

You mean like hold it and just rock it. I don't understand.

Speaker 2:

You may be tempted to rock that empty rocking chair just for the heck of it. Oh why?

Speaker 3:

are you?

Speaker 2:

standing there. If you do rock an empty chair, however, you may as well hop right in, hop right on and to rock your heart's content with the evil spirit you just invited to your life. Oh snap, yeah, you're not going to come up too late. Well, I only do it at the store. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I've never. The store is flooded with evil spirit Sure. I've done it but I'm not around rocking chairs usually at all.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I mean, I don't know who that is. That's crazy yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, couples with babies and things like that. Yeah, yeah, the gliders and the rocking chairs.

Speaker 3:

Yeah yeah, step on a crack, we had, we had them. The one that Chase was born, break, your mouth is back.

Speaker 2:

Whistling attracts tragedy. You ever hear that shit, no I never heard that. No, no no, that's crazy, never heard that that's a weird one. But that's from Turkey. So yeah, yeah, Jive Turkey, you know what you're talking about.

Speaker 3:

Why are you? Doing this Lucky pennies is considered superstition. What Lucky pennies.

Speaker 2:

What is a lucky penny? Because see.

Speaker 3:

I thought you meant the idea of finding a penny Heads up.

Speaker 2:

Bring this Heads up.

Speaker 4:

Right Heads up, right Heads up is good Heads up is not.

Speaker 3:

But, I pick it up anyway, so it doesn't matter oh.

Speaker 2:

I see so many jokes with that. Now, bro, I collect coins still.

Speaker 1:

So if I say what, I pick it up so I can see the date of it.

Speaker 2:

I do yeah, no, no no, I know that it's not a Jewish thing. No, you don't know. What do you mean? I don't know what you're talking about.

Speaker 3:

Yes, jaime, over here picking up a penny, that's what he's thinking to himself.

Speaker 1:

Well, thank you for everybody for joining our show. That'll be the end of the night.

Speaker 2:

Yo, that was great. Yeah, I don't even talk about Lou. That was a good joke though, bro, I know.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, okay.

Speaker 2:

Oh man, Singing at the dinner table summons evil spirits.

Speaker 4:

Um or slapping the mouth by dad.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

There you go. That's the evil spirit.

Speaker 3:

My father didn't like whistling in the house.

Speaker 2:

Evil spirits are your problems, but then that's what I just said. Oh, that's just for current.

Speaker 3:

Whistling attracts tragedy, that's why he probably, you know, no, he just didn't like it. Don't whistle in the house.

Speaker 1:

Whatever reason.

Speaker 3:

He just did not like that shit.

Speaker 2:

Maybe cause you had a tongue. No, he doesn't like it.

Speaker 3:

I think it truly annoyed him, or whatever his reason was no shit. Yeah, he was not happy with that. That's crazy. Yeah, that's funny. Oh, and another thing If you're going to stay, like if my friends came over, they would have their coat on and they would leave it on. My father's good, so are you staying? You need to take your coat off. You know if you're hanging out, take your coat off. You're staying to leave it. Thank you.

Speaker 2:

You're gonna be up like putting your hat on the table.

Speaker 3:

Right, oh, no, yeah, that's a bad one Are your shoes on the table.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, why the fuck would people put shoes on the table, bro, like that? Just that's a weird one, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, my wife's Asian Bad enough walking in the house when she's on.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, put them on the table.

Speaker 3:

That's right. Oh yeah, that's superstition, right, right there.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I think it's culture.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I think yeah, I'm not sure I know. I think you're right. I think it is culture things you know in her country. I'm sure there's certain things in other Asian countries and all over the world. Think about it European countries. So we're descendants, most of us, from Europeans, right.

Speaker 1:

We're here. Well, I know shoes isn't a superstition, that's just I know wearing shoes in the house isn't a superstition, no, no, putting them on the table or something like that you know, or putting a hat on the table or something like that.

Speaker 3:

Right, you know? I think it is he's right. I think it is culture, because it comes like those things that you hear about when you were a kid or from people who came from the old country.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know what I mean, yeah.

Speaker 3:

And then it kind of carried on and took your life of its own or just stop in, but you don't hear it anymore. And then you tell people like what they were doing right now.

Speaker 1:

You're right, I haven't heard of that before. Yeah, yeah, wearing a hat in a way indoors isn't superstition. That's like a manners thing, right. Yeah, that matters, but you know what? Asians live on a floor basically.

Speaker 4:

Right, no disrespect but you know they, they because the weather he used to go through and that's how it was back in the day and a lot of them still are. They have heat through the floor to floor, heated, so they're close to the floor, they're on the floor. They have mats so you don't never wear your shoes.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and because you're basically on the floor. You carry yeah, because you're carrying dirt in the course. That's the main reason. Yeah, because shoes carry dirt. Yeah, superstition, right, right.

Speaker 2:

So a lot of people have shoes off, perhaps the rule, yeah, Well, but see, for me, I wasn't like really raised like that, so I get pissed off and I got to take them off now because the message is like take your shoes off. I'm like why you are outside, so were you, but I don't make you fucking like yeah, is she taking her shoes off though? Oh yeah, no, no, no, they take their shoes off. I just picture about it.

Speaker 3:

I can't, can't argue with if she's doing. If she's not doing it, she's telling you to do it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, oh, yeah, no, no, no, definitely. Yeah, I know a lot of some of the Asian, like Japanese. I know they have like house sandals Right Right.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you got house sandals yeah, yeah, not as much now but I wear, I have, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I know, and it was when you walk through the door, just like a lawyer and right there there's a rack of shoes or slippers, sandals, doesn't matter.

Speaker 1:

All right.

Speaker 4:

As soon as you walk through that first door and you make that step.

Speaker 1:

Take your shoes off.

Speaker 2:

You better not have shoes on yeah, a pair of sandals. Yeah, they don't even want.

Speaker 1:

Or slippers mostly yeah yeah, for their own house, yeah, yeah, like their house. Sandals, house slippers yeah.

Speaker 4:

Restaurants. I've walked in there when I was in Korea, saying oh, you use there yeah. You know getting towards changing, but most of it's still there, so we walked in. The first thing we did was you had to take your shoes off and put them in a rack. Yeah, ah, okay.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, that's funny.

Speaker 1:

It's like what are we bowling?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, new shoes, new shoes, right, right, you got another superstition.

Speaker 3:

Horseshoe, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Lucky over the door. Yeah, I could get a put him over the ball.

Speaker 3:

Had one over his door. Kids he had one over store in the shop and we had in the building we lived in. You, superintendent, he had one over right or remember that. So yeah, that's that's something that that's probably another thing that was carried over right think about.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I'm sure you're related.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's somewhere, from somewhere I you know, people migrate and they move to different places and now they take in themselves, but they're taking everything that they learned.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, wherever they came from.

Speaker 3:

Yep, so it's interesting if you try to really look at. I bet you if we dove into this, Like seriously, I'm really like yeah, and find out where the oranges origins and everything you know. You're right, fascinating.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, definitely so, anyway, definitely, it's probably stuff my grandparents or great parents right, I believe. Yeah, you know, like some right. Yeah, I got a funny one garlic from the window. Yeah, yeah, oh, vampires, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Pregnant women shouldn't eat asymmetrical foods. What?

Speaker 3:

what do you mean?

Speaker 1:

Oh, they have to be symmetrical so they can't be like some like, like my the sandwich that's not cut right, yeah, like.

Speaker 2:

Tommy's the sandwich that's cut exactly in the middle. Yeah, so this is a Korean superstition that eating unshapely food While pregnant means your child would be born ugly.

Speaker 3:

Wow, Well it's good thing.

Speaker 1:

Oh, that was a culture. I used to be a girl who was Lithuanian or Russian, I guess. Well, I you know. So, the way you know former, so you know right. She told me that she's like don't sit in the corner. I was like you know, it was her family. I was like you know, we're all around the table. She's like don't sit in the corner, because that's a bad luck, because that means you'll be single For the rest of your life. Oh, wonderful.

Speaker 2:

Oh, and then you looked at her again. He said in the corner.

Speaker 1:

And I said that doesn't make sense. That I guess because if you sit in the corner then you're not sitting next to anybody. You'll never be with anybody sitting in the corner.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I guess I don't know that makes sense, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, how did it work out for you?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, well, no, he's had, he just said. He said in the corner that night, yeah, he made a difference. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah. Yeah well, the corner of the table.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, going to go to the table, okay, okay.

Speaker 3:

We're in a house.

Speaker 2:

Right. So what was that? It was bad, I wasn't on there, my fault.

Speaker 3:

I always made me do that too. So when you come in the house, take your hat off. Yeah, and I don't know, I think it was probably more of a military thing. Oh, that's also respect that that might be more military, though, but nobody you know where that that originates from the being disrespectful about wearing a hat in the house.

Speaker 1:

So before cars, people, you know it was all dirt roads and people would have the horse and buggies and he said, carry a lot, it's people, everyone would wear hats back in the day. Everybody always wore hats right, so it would be to, so you didn't have dust on your head.

Speaker 2:

Oh, so now.

Speaker 1:

So if you were in the house you were considered. That's like kind of wearing shoes in the house.

Speaker 2:

I guess dirty, like what? Don't wear your hat.

Speaker 1:

You're gonna get dust all over the place. I thought that it just carried over to like a Manor's thing.

Speaker 2:

So I thought that it was because of so back in the day, when they didn't have toilets, that they would have. They would yeah, it would be a shitty hat because they would throw their basins out the window and the hat was to keep the shit maybe that too.

Speaker 3:

It could have been all the above, because women your protector for right.

Speaker 1:

Yes, well, because then.

Speaker 2:

But now the superstition was that women walk on the inside because when they do the Bodyly fluids out the window it would go out a little bit further. The guy with the hat, so they then right, you know it wouldn't go on his person yeah, like that right on his skin, and then the women on the inside, so that this way she didn't get splattered with everything. So you were doing the gentlemanly thing and keeping around the inside walking down a sidewalk and have her walk on the outside.

Speaker 3:

All right, you're always right, yeah, never let it walk near the street.

Speaker 2:

No, you keep us. No, no, you keep a closer to the wall.

Speaker 4:

No, we could, then somebody could take her away. Oh yeah, no he's being funny oh.

Speaker 2:

Got it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's funny.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. So the yeah cuz I, you know, I always thought that was like it cuz in case someone you know is Drives in into the sidewalk, you're you're gonna get hit before.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, that's right, I thought it was.

Speaker 3:

No, it was. I was always thought it was a sign of respect for yeah if you like the girl and you were walking with her, Right you walk.

Speaker 2:

That's the other one that he's to the street, right you walked inside the curb you know where she was safe, you know yeah, it was like a protection right, yeah, respect thing, yeah, yeah. So then you have those chicks feel like fuck, we should let her just get some of them we probably should have let walk near the street, yeah. No, no, a little further out, a little further out. Yeah, don't walk backwards.

Speaker 2:

Walk backwards in Portugal, walking backwards is a huge superstition. It's especially a way to tell the devil About your location and where you're headed.

Speaker 1:

I think, it's backwards.

Speaker 2:

Get it is backwards. Yeah it's backwards, oh wow. Yeah, we've seen where you've been right, yeah, there you go, it's yeah.

Speaker 4:

And in today's times, walking backward is very, very good for you, because right, I was just gonna say that right it's good for your equilibrium, and everything else Must be very healthy for you and good for your mind, okay, yeah, and it also helps you exercise your legs muscles.

Speaker 3:

Yeah we use differently than you would when you're always walking.

Speaker 1:

He was nervous.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

You're training him. Yeah, so I was just it's funny he brought that up. I was gonna say the same thing, it's cool, that's hilarious.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's funny as hell. Never even thought about that. Going backwards, get another one fingers crossed.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, fingers crossed. Fingers crossed and there's different, there's different crossing once fingers bringing the lucky finger cross.

Speaker 3:

Good luck, but also pre-Christian pagan and Western Europe say when the practice of making a cross with your own yep, but your own than now fingers of another person was thoughts, it was crazy man.

Speaker 1:

But also, apparently, if you have your fingers crossed and you tell a lie, then it's okay. I don't know what the fuck that means, did you?

Speaker 3:

have fingers crossed, or what about? I don't know what that means. Make sure you're wearing clean underwear because in case you get into an accident. Yeah, yeah, yeah, but mom, why did you? I remember.

Speaker 4:

Just remember that that's just the way to get you to change your drawer.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like mom only got one pair.

Speaker 3:

I already pulled another pair out of the hamper, yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm fine, I turned them inside out, yeah right. Yeah, memories like the chorus.

Speaker 2:

Oh my God, that's crazy.

Speaker 3:

That's crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the number 13 is unlucky.

Speaker 1:

Yes, hence Friday the 13th, not for us today.

Speaker 2:

Not for.

Speaker 3:

Taylor Swift. Everything she says has to do with the number 13, that I think her birthday is on the 13th. A couple of different things regarding her career. Well, I think that happened. I think that's a good luck for us. Well, 13.

Speaker 1:

13,. It's funny, Some cultures 13 is considered lucky Right, but people were so superstitious that when you go in buildings there's no 13th floor.

Speaker 3:

There's no 13th floor. It goes from 13,. It goes from 12 to 14. The 14 actually is 13.

Speaker 4:

So if you're in a 20-story building.

Speaker 1:

If you're in a building that's actually 20 stories, it goes to 21.

Speaker 2:

Right, yeah, 13 is the empty floor. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1:

I love that ride. The Tower of Terror in MGM.

Speaker 3:

I love that ride. It's the 13th floor. I love that ride. It's one of the biggest rides ever.

Speaker 1:

I think it's Chinese that 13 is considered lucky, I believe it.

Speaker 3:

I don't think I don't look at.

Speaker 1:

13 is a bad number and they're big into good luck stuff, the reason why you go to a Chinese restaurant. It's always gold and red.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, because those colors are considered good. But see, very cool, it's awesome. And look how old their culture is. Yeah, I mean that's. Yeah, it's the oldest on the planet. Yeah, it's crazy.

Speaker 2:

Well, the unlucky number 13. From the 1890s, a number of English language related this unlucky number to a biblical reference, when Judas, who was among the 13 people present at the Last Supper, was the disciple who betrayed Jesus and also the 13th person to sit at the table.

Speaker 1:

It's always religious related. It's like I'm saying One way or another.

Speaker 2:

it's always got something to do with it right. It's very easy.

Speaker 3:

It's insane. It is In the memory. Do me Insane.

Speaker 1:

Insane in the brain, but isn't 13 a good number if you're playing. If you're on a slot machine, 13 is supposed to be a good number right, I don't know, I don't get it If it comes up with my numbers and.

Speaker 3:

I win.

Speaker 2:

It's a lucky number for me, listen, yeah, I'm just saying.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we should play Lotto tonight, yeah, we should.

Speaker 1:

Someone hit the big one already.

Speaker 3:

What long with everybody else, we should play Lotto tonight. Yeah, because everybody else had the same idea.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, probably Right, but we see what numbers. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

That's what people are real superstitious when it comes to lottery.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my last job, my last job that I was at when I was working at the hospital, we had one manager, because we had four managers when I was there in three years, what'd you do to them? I don't even know, jeez, but anyway, remember Bob. Yeah, he's like all right. So we were playing, it was one of the big lotteries and we were doing a lot of polls. All right, we're going to do it differently. I want you to buy a ticket in your town.

Speaker 1:

We're going to buy a ticket in your town and we all pull them together. And then I was like I'm fucking buying a ticket for myself.

Speaker 3:

What the fuck are we going to buy together? Yeah, it's funny.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Mine, mine all mine, mine, yeah, yeah, you know what I mean. Yeah, no, you're right, it's like you're going to hit.

Speaker 1:

It's just if you're, if you're doing a quick pick, it's going to be the number. Just random numbers is not going to make a difference. If you get from, you're not going to increase the odds. They say that yeah.

Speaker 3:

They ask you also, like I say, I usually play a quick pick, yeah, yeah. And then they'll say do you want them all in one ticket?

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm, Separate tickets. Yeah, that's another superstitious thing.

Speaker 3:

So you know you can get $10 worth Right Quick picks on separate tickets or you can get it all on one ticket.

Speaker 1:

Right or sometimes sometimes.

Speaker 3:

I do. If they ask me I'll go. Yeah, all right, put them on separate tickets, like I don't have any preference, but usually I just get. I just get a straight up.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, there's a lot of gambling superstitions too, yeah, but like one of them I know is like I got to go to this place. This is I always go to this store. I even go to this store.

Speaker 3:

I've done that before. I've done that.

Speaker 1:

Like people will drive like. Oh, the neighborhood I grew up in I drive a half hour just to get the lottery tickets.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the tickets are good over there.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, the other one with the tickets says you they screw the numbers up and they oh man, I screwed the lottery number.

Speaker 1:

No, no, give it to me.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, no, no, no, no, I'll take that ticket, yeah, yeah exactly.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, take the mess up. But Bingo when they all go play Bingo they have all the little dolls and shit the troll and stuff or little other figurines and shit.

Speaker 3:

They get crazy in those guys. Yeah, they do yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've seen it. They lose them once. Yeah, I went to go play Bingo once when I lived in Florida. You just bring Chuck.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they have to have shit done for Chuck. It was a nightmare, wasn't it? Yeah, it's probably a nightmare.

Speaker 2:

I just went out and just watched all these crazy ass motherfuckers, young and old alike. It wasn't like the super old people and then it was serious about it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, what are you winning? A pond. I mean, what's going on? I'm like get the fuck out of here. I said, what do you?

Speaker 2:

mean, I'm like this is where I'm at. On a fucking Friday night I went to go hang out with one of my cousins and they're like come on, we're going to go over there and play Bingo. So I'm thinking it's like a disco bingo kind of shit. Not literally disco, but music and the number pops up on the thing and crazy cool lights and alcohol. That's what I'm thinking was going to be, that kind of bingo B4. Yeah, yeah, exactly what I got. I'm like you motherfuckers.

Speaker 4:

I'm like this is what you got me to Yo.

Speaker 2:

Y'all find a way home. I'm leaving, Fucking left.

Speaker 4:

You want a knitted sweater?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, hey, okay, bob, fuck yeah. Never buy a clock as a gift. In Chinese culture, the expression giving a clock has the same pronunciation as attending the funeral. Thus is a tradition never to give a clock to someone.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I heard of a couple. I heard a couple other ones, japanese ones, that were crazy and they involved chopsticks. Yes is for a man and woman not to share a plate using chopsticks. Okay, because the only, because the only time husband and wife, that husband and wife use chopsticks is after their child gets cremated and they can what? It's so fucking morbid, right.

Speaker 3:

What is that all about? That's so morbid?

Speaker 1:

That's because after you're going to pick the bones out of the ashes.

Speaker 2:

Why it was culture. Why the fuck would you pick the boat? What?

Speaker 1:

Well, because I guess that's maybe they did. You know, this is probably from ancient Japan, like culture, where they like burned them and the other. The other one, that's another weird superstition is no, that's not superstition, that's more like just a man or a thing, and you're not supposed to leave the chopsticks in the rice. Oh, I see, I don't know, did they? Do they do that with your wife, with the? Do they have any weird superstitions involving like food, like chopsticks, or if they've ever heard anything like that?

Speaker 4:

My wife use those things for everything.

Speaker 1:

But I mean like, is there any superstitions with them? Like you're not supposed to share chopsticks or something, or no, no not that I know of. Yeah, she's a bad teacher. Oh yeah, yeah, it really is.

Speaker 4:

You know, I've asked her. The only words I know are things that she's like a Pabu ya.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Dumbass. Oh yeah, dung money, yeah, yeah yeah, kind of like dung, like shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, dung Dung, I don't know that God thinks she's talking sexy, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

She's like calling me a dumbass and shit.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, she calls everybody dumbass.

Speaker 1:

That's right. I used to. At that job that I worked at, we actually had a long term care building. That was all Korean. So I onion, I say ho, that's I think that's how you say hi, yeah.

Speaker 4:

I say, you know, asshole yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think it sounds cool, right, yeah, I'm the person you were at at the same time. Right, yeah, onion.

Speaker 3:

I say ho, yeah, you know, I read something the other day that said don't make fun of people who come from other countries because they speak two languages. Yeah, that's true. I never yeah, because you know what I only speak, fucking English. So I speak two languages and they came here and I learned my language People in Europe.

Speaker 1:

They speak because you know, the countries are all so close to each other, right? So, people speak like three or four.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, so yeah, don't be. Yeah, people, just you know.

Speaker 2:

Don't look at me, I'm bilingual.

Speaker 3:

No, no, I'm just saying what you are, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly, that's great you know, I'm a child, I can speak, you know, hood.

Speaker 2:

Okay, what about something? What's going to do? I got something like that. Can we talk about this? Huh, no, no, I got you popping. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, come here, come here, I got you.

Speaker 1:

This one. I never heard of that's great.

Speaker 2:

Right, tuck your thumbs in at the cemetery. Straight from Japan, the superstition belief is meant to keep a person's parents from dying. Because the Japanese word for thumb translates to parent finger, people hide their thumb when they pass by a graveyard or a hearse. But thumb is not a finger, is it? It's an opposable Right Right, something that so I don't know if that would be.

Speaker 3:

I don't know, I it is okay. I mean, yeah, I don't, I think it, I think it is.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've never heard that's, that's, that's crazy is the pinky not a finger. I don't know which one was.

Speaker 3:

It was one that's not a finger, I just you're supposed to know these things? Time I mean.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's because the thumb is going the opposite direction. Got you.

Speaker 4:

Finger because it's going out. I mean got you universal.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yeah, there you go, the universe. Oh yeah, that's right. They say if you're, if you have an itchy palm, that means you're going to get money.

Speaker 3:

No, it depends on which hand. But oh oh right money receiving and the left is going out right.

Speaker 1:

I was told was the other way around was it. I heard if you have a she palm you're getting money, but if you hit the back of your hand, that means you're giving her it's.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I always heard that it was you're receiving. Yeah, yeah, if the back of your hand is itchy.

Speaker 1:

That means you're going to lose money because you're giving money right.

Speaker 4:

Re-meddle is down Chinese Cracker cookie. Open up, it says.

Speaker 2:

Confucius says she palm means you have to believe them. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Confucius say if you go to bed with itchy but you wake up with stinky finger.

Speaker 2:

I wonder if that is superstition, though, cuz generally that's the truth, right, because then you put on your just you know your significant others knows, just so you know they can tell you if it stinks.

Speaker 3:

Okay. So, um, it says character. What the which one you left palm means you will owe money soon. Yeah, I'm a left palm. Yeah, I said before you. Yeah, I left is to the right is receive.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, see I. So I heard a different one. I heard, like I said, the, the, if you're, if your palm is itchy, you're going to get money right, but if the back of your hand. I was told.

Speaker 3:

I was told if it's the back, your hand, you're giving now that I've never your hand is going down, yeah, give, and you probably have some kind like which is stuff?

Speaker 2:

And yeah, I'm gonna say that's probably like more of your hand is going down and then back up and then down.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, as if you're giving money, because if you're giving someone money, your palm is down right.

Speaker 2:

That makes sense and but see then. But if you're receiving the money, you scratch your palm, close your hand, put your hand in your pocket closed. Then open your hand in your pocket and pull it out. This way, the money that you're gonna receive stays in your pocket.

Speaker 4:

You just make that up. No, no, no.

Speaker 2:

So the hand you said the right hand was to receive money. So if your palm is itching on your right hand, you scratch your palm, right, I do close your hand make. Make a fist, okay. Then you put your hand in your pocket, fist closed, and then open your hand in your pocket. As if you're placing this when you put in the money in your pocket.

Speaker 1:

You have not yet received right, because it's the wishful.

Speaker 3:

Okay, it's the addition to that I got you, yeah, so and that, you believed in all these superstitions?

Speaker 1:

You would. You would be afraid to believe the house. So you know.

Speaker 3:

So a hand so it says here that the left hand is passive energy right and the right is positive.

Speaker 2:

Oh, so it's positive, when you smack somebody in the mouth for being a wise ass, that they learned their lesson you do with the left hand. It's a maybe, which tried to talk to See. Jamie agrees.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, jamie agrees no, no, no, no.

Speaker 4:

Receiving or not receiving anything good.

Speaker 3:

So yeah, did you receive. It's funny how you you've heard it one way and we've all.

Speaker 2:

That's yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's been a funny.

Speaker 2:

Yeah dude, that was the quickest 45 fucking. I think in our whole shit, yeah, that was.

Speaker 3:

This is the funny one that's too serious to slay back. We do.

Speaker 4:

Coming brothers about time he came.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know, yeah, but you need sneakers now for that fucking long walk across.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Actually I got we have to pay me and Lou have a bear each.

Speaker 1:

Is this one year show? No no, no.

Speaker 3:

Next one be the Next, that 27th.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, that's what okay?

Speaker 3:

27th yeah that Friday that we will be doing our One year anniversary.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so we're gonna pay homage to all of our listeners.

Speaker 3:

Thank you very much. Talk about where we started. We had how we got to where we are now and yeah, yeah, I can give a couple of shots.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I just thought of.

Speaker 4:

Back in the day, as a kid, one of the Other family members were like when people came for holiday and came into the side door when they left, they opened the front door like no, no, no, no, we leave the way we came in.

Speaker 2:

We'd never go through right.

Speaker 4:

Hmm.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah, I've heard of that one too, Actually.

Speaker 4:

I'm not sure of the meeting, but Right to leave through it, the wrong door, you came in right, oh, so that works, then so on that note, our guests gave the last superstition.

Speaker 2:

So with that I appreciate everybody for coming in tonight.

Speaker 4:

Thank you, guys always great being here hanging out.

Speaker 2:

Yep. Thank you for all our listeners for listening like follow. Hey, what's the?

Speaker 1:

yeah, like, like, like.

Speaker 2:

Share, subscribe or what I do yeah.

Speaker 1:

Facebook. Like I said, I haven't really uploaded. I only left a couple videos on to onto YouTube.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, okay, just so.

Speaker 1:

YouTube short, so we're on there.

Speaker 2:

We're good. So yeah, so thank you very much. Yeah, I appreciate everybody. Thank you so love peace and hair grease.

Speaker 1:

Let's long a prosper and go vegan Hello.

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Superstitions and Beliefs
Superstitions and Cultural Beliefs
Superstitions and Lucky Numbers
Superstitions and Language Learning