5 Retarded Superstitions (With Logical Explanations)
Let's be honest, almost everybody is superstitious about something. Maybe just a "lucky shirt" you wear to job interviews, or maybe you spent all weekend making sure that voodoo doll of your ex looked just right before ramming pins into its crotch.
Where do superstitions come from? And could their origins be more logical than we think? Is it possible that the superstitious old neighbor of yours who runs off black cats and wails over broken mirrors isn't retarded?
Well... sort of.

Recently a whole stadium full of Cub fans held their breath when a cat raced onto the field during the game. They let out a sigh of relief when they realized it wasn't black (and articles the next day were sure to mention its color). After all, every Cub fan knows that a single visit by a black cat cursed the entire 1969 season.
Where the Hell Did This Come From?
So how did something oh-so-cute and fluffy get associated with misfortune, death and witchcraft?
Saints preserve us! It's a basket of Satan!
First of all, cats have always had a few habits that have a tendency freak people right out. They like to seek sources of warmth (sorry, Mister Fluffynuts doesn't like sitting in your lap just because he loves you) and have an odd fascination with examining human faces. Often when a person passed away from fever or a baby died mysteriously in the night, they'd find a cat perched on their chest or in the crib staring into their face, and the logical assumption was made that cats were harbingers of death that could suck the very life from your body.
I can has ur soul plz?
It didn't help that a number of pre-Christian peoples such as the Norse, Celts and Egyptians had cat gods, or at least considered the animal sacred. Once Christianity became the sexy new religion in town, old beliefs were branded witchcraft and cats found themselves guilty by association. Often simply owning a cat was considered proof of witchery. There was even widespread extermination of cats during medieval times, which kind of backfired when they were no longer around to kill plague-infested rats, which in turn wiped out half of Europe. Whoops. But hey, at least they were safe from those goddamn witches.
As for why black cats specifically were feared, well, you don't need us to tell you that black has traditionally been associated with eeeevil. There's a reason Darth Vader didn't spend his time strutting around in a sporty magenta or mint green get-up.


Every year on February 2, people put their faith in the amazing weather predicting abilities of the noble groundhog, hoping he won't see his shadow and doom them to six more weeks of snow, ice and numb testicles. A town in Pennsylvania has become world famous entirely based on this ridiculous ritual. But, hey, why not? Its predictions are probably as likely to be accurate as any weatherman's.
"Now as you see here, my weathercock is just balls deep in Indiana."
Where the Hell Did This Come From?
Folks have always kept their eye out for the reemergence of hibernating animals, logically seeing it as a sign that spring was on the way. February 2 is also the date for Candlemas, a holiday mostly celebrated in Europe--yes, there's another Christian holiday out there that starts with "C" and ends in "mas," please don't tell Hallmark.
Like most Christian holidays, Candlemas is basically an old Pagan tradition with fancy new Jesus decals slapped on. While the holiday is officially devoted to the purification of the Virgin Mary, in practice it's the due date to throw out your Christmas tree and start thinking about Spring while watching furry critters emerge from their holes.

Germans had Candlemas traditions similar to Groundhog Day--except they used hedgehogs--and when they immigrated to America they tossed out all the religious parts of Candlemas, keeping only the fun "waiting around a varmint-hole and drinking" stuff. The groundhog was chosen since it hibernated in the winter, sort of looked like a hedgehog--which aren't native to North America--and presumably because too many people got eaten when they tried it with bears.
But why does the groundhog seeing its shadow and returning to its burrow mean six more weeks of winter? Well there's actually some meteorological truth to it. A winter day sunny enough to allow a rodent to see his shadow is likely to be colder than average since cloud cover actually insulates the earth. In other words, there's nothing mystical going on here, Mr. Groundhog just went back inside because he was freezing his furry little ass off, and if it's still too cold for him there's probably more winter coming.
That, and there's a town in Pennsylvania that really, really needs the tourist dollars.

Break a mirror, get seven years bad luck. It may seem silly, but you probably still take extra care never to drop one, and generally do your best to avoid kung fu battles in the House of Mirrors.

Where the Hell Did This Come From?
Part of this goes back to the stone age, when the first caveman wandered to a lake for a drink and saw his own handsome sloping brow reflected back at him from the water. Having no knowledge of optics--at this point mankind's still struggling with pointed-stick technology--it was a logical leap for him to believe that this reflection was a duplication of himself and shared a part of his soul somehow (though he probably wondered why that lazy fucker in the water never helped out with the fishing).
This way of thinking stubbornly held for millennia, with the belief being that damaging a mirror--and thus your reflection--would damage a part of your soul or cause it to be trapped in the mirror forever, like the supervillain criminals from Superman II.
There's also a more simple explanation. Glass mirrors, as opposed to less breakable ones made of polished metal, weren't really available until the 16th century and were very expensive luxuries reserved for the upper classes. If the servants that cleaned these mirrors were to break one, well, let's just say it was a lot easier to replace a human being back then than a mirror.
Also, if a more middle-class family were to buy one and then break it, it would probably take quite a while to scrounge up the money for a new one--say, around seven years. So the warning to clumsy children wasn't so much about "bad luck" for seven years if they broke the mirror, but rather "continuous beatings."








I think there's another subtle reason why cats are associated with bad luck. They're an animal that was domesticated very early on in human history, but unlike other early domesticates, don't really have a practical function. Dogs hunt, herd, and guard, sheep provide wool, cows give milk, oxen pull plows, etc., but cats don't really do much besides sit around and be cute. In modern times, we've domesticated a lot of pet animals, but in the Stone Age, it had to be unusual. So you end up with these animals that hang around with humans everywhere, but don't really do anything. So it's easier to see these particular animals as some sort of mystical menace, since you don't depend on them.
Reply Hide All See All 4 RepliesPlus, they're cute-looking, graceful, have unusually big and colorful eyes, and don't seem to give a s**t about humans. Just like those douchey pretty boys that treat women like s**t, that aloofness and emotional unavailability just makes them seem all the more alluring.
Mice! They kill mice!
They dont know that cats kills mice back then
^ yeah they did
Yes,they do they kill vermin.
The people who thought rabbits were lucky for having lots of kids were seriously messed-up in the head. It's that kind of thinking which has left Earth overpopulated today.
ReplyOn the contrary, I sliced, broke and shattered many panes of mirror in stained glass in high school.
ReplyAnd now I'M talking to you! Look at your worthless life now! Hahahahaaa!
Infidel! How dare you suggest that Christianity borrowed from pagan religions? Everyone knows that Jesus has been around forever and all those rituals and beliefs originated with him. It's just that people were drunk and stupid so they got it mixed up with hallucinations induced by sin overdoses or some shit. (Hey, it's in the Bible. Yes it is, Shut up.) Anyway when Jesus and God and the Holy Spirit saw how messed up all the holidays were, they knew that someone had to come down here and fix it. When Jesus looked around God and the Holy Spirit already were touching their noses, so Jesus was like "Well, shit" and down he went while the other two snickered.
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesI really hope you're parodying the fundamentalists with this post, for it will be extremely depressing if you're not and it turns out you actually believe that nonsense.
Even if they are parodying fundamentalists, it's done in a very annoying fashion.
Man, why do you trolls kept on appearing?
Someone ought to hire me to find four-leaf clovers, if they're so rare and coveted. I find those suckers all the damn time!
ReplyDamn that cereal box is terrifying D:
ReplyI think my grandparents watch the news channel from #4...
ReplyAlthough I liked the article, I truly hate when people use "retarded" the way Nathan did.
ReplyWhy didn't the story mention walking under a ladder? There's a superstition with some actual merit to it. Forgetting the whole idea that the ladder's triangular imprint represents the Holy Trinity, there's always the chance something could fall off the ladder onto you.
ReplyI would say that the cat one is less of a logical explination, and more an example that, it's not the superstition that's stupid, but rather, the entire institution that gave rise it it.
ReplyBelief.
Not belief, but faith, the retarded little brother of belief.
"Sorry, Mister Fluffynuts doesn't like sitting in your lap just because he loves you"
ReplyBooo lol!! My cat nuzzles me and drapes her arms around me neck when we're on the couch. That b***h really wants my soul!!!
I found and kept a four leaf clover in my wallet; which was stolen. So much for that.
Reply Hide All See All 4 RepliesThey never said it was lucky for YOU. I bet the thief was happy.
I had a four leaf clover that brought me luck, but when I went on a trip, my brother stole it. He had incredible luck when he had it and I never forgave him. Never saw him or talked to him again. Sadly, after he died, I found out how much he had missed me and had even named his son after me. True story.
@TedMoon: I just logged in to say "LOL"!
Thanks, morris, it was the very first thing that came to my mind.
I am generally a big fan of Cracked, but your use of the word "retarded" is an ignorant attempt at humor. This word is akin to the words "nigger" and "faggot" which you would not use in an article. Get with the times and stop propagating hate.
Reply Hide All See All 8 Replies"Retard" means to slow. As in, "You add linseed oil to oil paints to retard the drying". So, mentally retarded means mentally slow and is NOT in the same category as "faggot", etc.
OBXMAR
that's fine. Faggot also means a bushel of sticks and a n****r is also a type of bird seed sold in Portugal. Does that make it okay to use? In the context here retarded is not being use as a euphemism for slow it is being used in the context of mentally impaired and you know that.
I would be enjoying this debate if my internet connection wasn't so retarded.
(There...I used it correctly.)
Handi-capable just doesn't have the same ring
You know retarded people dont read cracked right?
Dude, don't be retarded. (Used in the form of "slow")
Good post, Breaker. Reminds me of a couple years ago, when a college basketball coach described his exhausted players as "fagged out". Many gay people were in an uproar and calling for his job.
My favorite has to be a college president (Fucking COLLEGE!) who used the word "niggardly" (miserly) in a speech here a few years back. He lost his job over it... 4 years of education, and the twits still didn't know what a word meant, and were apparently too stupid to look it up. "It sounds like nigger!! Off with his head!!" They paid thousands of dollars to be that smart.
Thanks to the plethora of kitty, groundhog, and bunny pictures in this article, my daily quota for adorableness has been sufficiently met. You always come through, Cracked!
ReplyIs it just me or is the kid ordering the four-leaf clover in the picture in section 2 actually a young Gladstone?
Replyso your saying I should go eat the clovers in my backyard planter? :D
ReplyWhen I was a baby my family had a cat that would get in the crib with me. It freaked my mom out because she believed that superstition about cats stealing a baby's breath.
ReplyReally? Like she actually believed that? She didn't just think it would scratch or bite you?
I'm going to start saying "goddanmed" from now on.
ReplyLosing a foot is worse then losing a scrotum. Losing your scrotum doesn't disable you at all! Scrotum-less people can't even park in a handicapped spot!
Replyf**k that. I'd rather be footless--and get the benefits of being physically disabled, than be unable to procreate.
Rayvn7, I have to ask...how do you know this???
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ReplyI wonder if a cougar's foot is lucky?
DEAEAEAARAEASTH.