The Mind of James Donahue A Bad Day? |
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That Strange Friday The
Thirteenth Myth By James Donahue Jan. 13, 2006 There is a peculiar myth
in American culture, and I believe it carries in cultures around the world, that every thirteenth day of the month that falls
on a Friday is a very unlucky day. In fact, there is mythology
that marks the Number 13 as unlucky, and other tales claim Friday is the unluckiest day of the week. Ships used to delay departures on Fridays and lie over an extra day because sailors thought any vessel
that left port on a Friday was doomed to a bad voyage or possibly a wreck. The reasons for these
strange superstitions appear to be varied. The Thirteenth Tarot
card is the Death card. People who interpret these cards say that the card rarely reflects upon death, however, but rather
a time of endings of old things and perhaps the start of something new. It points more to the conclusion of a way of life.
Christian mythology points
to Judas as being the 13th man at the Last Supper. It is said that witches gather in groups of 12 with the Devil
as the 13th guest. The Apollo Flight 13 to the Moon was a near disaster with the crew barely returning home alive.
Donald Dossey, founder
of a stress management center in The logic behind marking
Friday as an unlucky day is just as strange. The old stories say that Jesus was crucified on a Friday. At one time sea captains
never set sail on a Friday because they believed that such a voyage would be cursed with bad luck. (As a shipwreck buff,
this writer once counted the number of known wrecks on the Of course, among the
superstitious natives, mixing both Friday and the Number 13 on the same day, is just flirting with disaster. What most people don’t
realize is that the Georgian Calendar that everybody uses is a faulted and archaic way of recording dates created by the Other than pure superstition,
there is no reason for this day to be any less lucky than any other. In fact, for Luciferians,
there is no such thing as luck or even coincidence. We believe that all things occur for a reason and sometimes synchronicities
happen. These are neither bad nor good events, but merely occurrences designed by the universe for instruction and sometimes
reward. The sailors that believed
setting sail on a Friday brought bad luck may unknowingly created their own misfortunes. With enough members of a crew believing
that a vessel was doomed to failure because of departure on a Friday, the vessel had a greater chance of running into trouble.
This is because of the mere power of collective mental thought. The sailors brought trouble on themselves simply because they
believed it was going to happen. The same kind of collective
thought can make a Friday the 13th a truly unlucky day for many people. The believe that 13 is
an unlucky number is so deeply entrenched in our culture that we sometimes go out of our way to avoid using this number. High-rise buildings often lack a 13th floor, for example. Airports skip
the 13th gate, and hospitals and hotels frequently lack rooms numbered 13. As for us, we relish
in the number. Fridays the 13th are sometimes celebrated because of our contempt for such an unfounded superstition.
Laughing at such things is often the best route to a cure. We also enjoy running
into the number 666, which is a different story altogether. |
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