So are you freaked out about Friday the 13th, do you thrive on superstitions, does bad luck plague you?!? If so, then maybe this story is for you. This article comes from LiveScience.com and lists 13 freaky facts about Friday the 13th. I hope no black cats cross your path, there are no ladders for you to go under and heaven forbid you break a mirror... hahaha! Enjoy your freaky Friday! Much Love, Bridget!
13 Freaky Facts about
Friday the 13th
LiveScience.com
Does Friday the 13th freak you out? If so, hold on to your rabbit's
foot extra tight, because there are three of these supposedly unlucky dates in
2012, though perhaps luckily, this Friday (July 13) is the last of them. Though,
there's always some fear to be had next year, 2013.
1. This year is a special one for Friday the 13ths: There are three of
them: Jan. 13, April 13 and July 13. The freaky thing? The dates fall exactly
13 weeks apart. That hasn't happened since 1984.
2. If that scares you, you may have paraskavedekatriaphobia (also
known as friggatriskaidekaphobia). Those are the scientific terms for fear of
Friday the 13th. Triskaidekaphobia is fear of the number 13.
3. It's not clear when or why Friday the 13th became associated with
bad luck. The association may be biblical, given that the 13th guest at the
Last Supper betrayed Jesus. His crucifixion was the next day, apparently a
Friday. Or maybe 13 suffers from coming after the more-pleasing number 12,
which gets to number the months, the days of Christmas and even the eggs in a
dozen. (There are also 12 signs of the zodiac, 12 gods of Olympus, 12 labors of
Hercules, 12 tribes of Israel and 12 apostles of Jesus.)
4. Whatever the reason, fear of 13 has spread far and wide: Hotels and
hospitals often skip the 13th floor, and even airports quietly omit gate 13
sometimes.
5. The next year in which we'll have three Friday the 13ths is 2015.
They'll fall in February, March and November.
6. If you think your Friday the 13th is
likely to be bad, be glad you aren't a 14th-century Knight Templar. On Oct. 13,
1307, officers of King Philip IV of France raided the homes of thousands of
these Crusades warriors, imprisoning them on charges of illegal activities.
Though the charges weren't proven, more than a hundred died of terrible
torture, according to "Tales of the Knights Templar" (Warner Books,
1995).
7. Fittingly, director of psychological thrillers Alfred Hitchcock was
born on the 13th — Friday, Aug. 13, 1999, would have been his 100th birthday.
Perhaps aptly titled "Number 13," a film that was supposed to be
Hitchcock's directorial debut never made it past the first few scenes and was
shut down due to financial problems. He allegedly said the film wasn't very
interesting. (Meanwhile, Fidel Castro was born on Friday the 13th, in August
1926.)
8. Why does the Friday the 13th superstition stick so firmly in our
minds? According to Thomas Gilovich, who chairs the department of psychology at
Cornell University, our brains are almost too good at making associations.
"If anything bad happens to you on Friday the 13th, the two will
be forever associated in your mind, and all those uneventful days in which the
13th fell on a Friday will be ignored," Gilovich said in a statement. [13 Superstitions & Traditions Explained]
9. For pagans, 13 is actually a lucky number. It corresponds with the
number of full moons in a year.
10. President Franklin D. Roosevelt is said to have avoided travel on
the 13th day of any month, and would never host 13 guests at a meal. Napoleon
and President Herbert Hoover were also triskaidekaphobic, with an abnormal fear
of the number 13.
11. Mark Twain once was the 13th guest at a dinner party. A friend
warned him not to go. "It was bad luck," Twain later told the friend.
"They only had food for 12." Superstitious diners in Paris can hire a
quatorzieme, or professional 14th guest. [13 Odd Occurrences on Friday the 13th]
12. Stock broker and author Thomas W. Lawson, in his 1907 novel
"Friday the Thirteenth," wrote of a stockbroker's attempts to take
down Wall Street on the unluckiest day of the month. Reportedly, stock brokers
after this were as unlikely to buy or sell stocks on this unlucky day as they
were to walk under a ladder, according to accounts of a 1925 New York Times
article.
13.
This fear of Friday the 13th
can be serious business, according to the Stress Management Center and Phobia
Institute in Asheville, N.C., which, among other things, offers therapy to help
people overcome their fear of the freaky friday. Their estimates suggest
hundreds of millions of dollars, up to $900 million are lost due to people's
fear of flying or doing the business as usual that day, though that number
isn't backed up with other estimates
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