Question:
Do you have some thoughts about Friday the 13th?
junior
2007-07-12 23:54:48 UTC
some beliefs, or misbeliefs?
28 answers:
anonymous
2007-07-13 00:08:39 UTC
It's already Friday the 13th here....2:00AM Houston....so far, so good...and yes, I do look forward to waking up to a pleasant morning. Have a good Friday, everyone! Guys, I hope you all get lucky!!! wink - wink
sheesh_kebab
2007-07-13 00:34:04 UTC
i think this superstition is one of those that are deeply rooted in historical beliefs. we all know 13 is considered unlucky for various reasons (Ex: 13 witches in a coven, 13 being the devil's dozen, 13 being the last stage in Egyptian belief (death)). There's even a belief that if 13 people eat at a table at the same time, one will die. This came from the Norse myth wherein the 13th guest is Loki and afterwhich, the god Baldur died because of Loki.



Not to mention the Last Supper -- we all know how many people were eating at that table...



Friday is also considered unlucky, being the sixth day of the week. I read an interesting story about this:



"One hundred years ago, the British government sought to quell once and for all the widespread superstition among seamen that setting sail on Fridays was unlucky. A special ship was commissioned, named "H.M.S. Friday." They laid her keel on a Friday, launched her on a Friday, selected her crew on a Friday and hired a man named Jim Friday to be her captain. To top it off, H.M.S. Friday embarked on her maiden voyage on a Friday, and was never seen or heard from again. "



Christ died on a Friday. In ancient Rome, Friday was excecution day. In pre-Christian cultures, Friday was considered the sabbath, these pagan associations were not lost on the early Church, which went to great lengths to suppress them and Friday became known as the "Witches' Sabbath".





According to history (and Da Vinci Code), the mass arrests of the Knights Templar happened on a Friday the 13th during the 1300s (October 13, 1307).





So you cant really blame people for being extra cautious after all:



Unlucky Friday + Unlucky 13 = Unluckier Friday.





Although I, myself, don't believe that Friday the 13th is unluckier that any other day, it doesn't hurt to be cautious :)
Adi
2007-07-16 23:50:48 UTC
No, i don't. But the myth of Friday the 13th is kinda cool. There's a certain feeling and atmosphere that looms around during this day. I like it when Friday the 13th falls on the rainy season, when its unusually quiet and cold. It's a Gothic fantasy! Imagine the winds billows outside, while you watch your favorite twilight zone episode in a dim lighted room.
4x4
2007-07-13 10:04:39 UTC
People will tend to believe other people's beliefs if they see evidence for it.



But to me, Friday the 13th being unlucky and other similar beliefs thrive and continue because some people create their own unlucky experiences themselves by being foolish and by making foolish choices.



If you believe in God and in the Bible and not just in your religion, then you will start to not believe in this and others like it. In fact if you truly believe in God, you should not even believe in luck or bad luck. But rather in either being blessed by God or cursed by someone else.



Believe it or not.





Additional: If you would rather believe in karma then that is also found in the Bible, it's the principle of sowing and reaping, meaning you reap what you sow. There is hardly anything new that one can come up with nowadays, but there will always be something new to learn each new day.
fillyfloppy
2007-07-13 00:13:35 UTC
A Friday occurring on the 13th day of any month is considered to be a day of bad luck in English, German, Polish and Portuguese-speaking cultures around the globe. Similar superstitions exist in some other traditions. In Greece or Spain, for example, Tuesday the 13th takes the same role. The fear of Friday the 13th is called paraskavedekatriaphobia (a word that is derived from the concatenation of the Greek words Παρασκευή, δεκατρείς, and φοβία, meaning Friday, thirteen, and phobia respectively; alternative spellings include paraskevodekatriaphobia or paraskevidekatriaphobia) or friggatriskaidekaphobia, and is a specialized form of triskaidekaphobia, a phobia (fear) of the number thirteen.



Contents [hide]

1 History of Friday the 13th

1.1 A Thoroughly Modern Phenomenon

2 Effects in people and cultures

3 Occurrence

4 Planned events on Fridays the 13th

5 Natural events on Fridays the 13th

5.1 Notable births and deaths

6 References

7 External links







[edit] History of Friday the 13th

No historical date has been verifiably identified as the origin of the superstition. Before the 20th century, although there is evidence that the number 13 was considered unlucky, and Friday was considered unlucky, there was no link between them. The first documented mention of a "Friday the 13th" is generally listed as occurring in the early 1900's.[1][2] [3]



However, many popular stories exist about the origin of the concept:



The popular painting of the Last Supper, with stories that Judas numbered among the thirteen guests (Jesus plus his 12 apostles), and that the Crucifixion of Jesus occurred Friday. However, Judas was not actually present for the latter part of the meal.



The Knights Templar:



One theory, recently offered up as historical fact in the novel The Da Vinci Code, holds that it came about not as the result of a convergence, but a catastrophe, a single historical event that happened nearly 700 years ago.



The catastrophe was the decimation of the Knights Templar, the legendary order of "warrior monks" formed during the Christian Crusades to combat Islam. Renowned as a fighting force for 200 years, by the 1300s the order had grown so pervasive and powerful it was perceived as a political threat by kings and popes alike and brought down by a church-state conspiracy, as recounted by Katharine Kurtz in Tales of the Knights Templar (Warner Books: 1995):



"On October 13, 1307, a day so infamous that Friday the 13th would become a synonym for ill fortune, officers of King Philip IV of France carried out mass arrests in a well-coordinated dawn raid that left several thousand Templars — knights, sergeants, priests, and serving brethren — in chains, charged with heresy, blasphemy, various obscenities, and homosexual practices. None of these charges was ever proven, even in France — and the Order was found innocent elsewhere — but in the seven years following the arrests, hundreds of Templars suffered excruciating tortures intended to force 'confessions,' and more than a hundred died under torture or were executed by burning at the stake."





[edit] A Thoroughly Modern Phenomenon

There are drawbacks to the "day so infamous" thesis, not the least of which is that it attributes enormous cultural significance to a relatively obscure historical event. Even more problematic, for this or any other theory positing premodern origins for Friday the 13th superstitions, is the fact that no one has been able to document the existence of such beliefs prior to the 19th century. If people who lived before the late 1800s perceived Friday the 13th as a day of special misfortune, no evidence has been found to prove it. As a result, some scholars are now convinced the stigma is a thoroughly modern phenomenon exacerbated by 20th-century media hype.



Info about templar knights is provided by David Emery.





[edit] Effects in people and cultures

"It's been estimated that [U.S] $800 or $900 million is lost in business on this day because people will not fly or do business they would normally do." [4]

Some people are so paralyzed by fear that they are simply unable to get out of bed when Friday the 13th rolls around. The Stress Management Center and Phobia Institute estimates that more than 17 million people are affected by a fear of this day. [5] Despite that, representatives for both Delta and Continental Airlines say that their airlines don't suffer from any noticeable drop in travel on those Fridays. [6]



A British Medical Journal study has shown that there is a significant increase in traffic-related accidents on Friday the 13ths.[7]
chanice813
2007-07-13 01:57:03 UTC
Actually am torned between to races on which superstition to follow since my descent comes from Chinese and Filipino. In Filipino culture, we have superstitions regarding Friday the 13th. That will give you bad luck when you go out or you should be careful on that day. While in Chinese culture, 13 is a good luck number but they don't have 14th floors since they regard number 14 as bad luck. But for me really, since I am brought to Christian principles, I believe that 13 is a lucky number since in the bible, Cor. 13 speaks about love, my daughter is born on Aug. 13 and that is the greatest miracle that has ever happened to me in my whole life. To be able to bring into this world a wonderful child on the day God declared us to Love Him and our neighbors as well as ourselves.
anonymous
2007-07-13 00:14:34 UTC
I love that day. I was born on Friday The 13th



Most people think that it is an unlucky day. All it is is superstition.



You make of that day whatever you want it to be good or bad.
angela k
2007-07-12 23:57:57 UTC
yea i believe that all that all the "misbeliefs" of friday the 13th is a bunch of bullcrap
Gimmer05
2007-07-12 23:59:20 UTC
Personally I've always looked forward to it, and have thought about it as a good day. I recently found out that my great-grandmother felt the same way.



I think there is a lot of silly hype.
anonymous
2007-07-12 23:59:23 UTC
1) It is great day to release a horror movie.

2) If it scares some people from leaving their house...great! The roads are more open for the rest of us.
anonymous
2007-07-13 02:06:10 UTC
Well I don't know about the rest of you but the number 13 has always been a lucky number for me whichever day of the week it falls on.
kahlan nynaeve®
2007-07-13 01:39:46 UTC
today's friday the 13th... they say it is supposed to be a bad luck day but so far, i've been through numerous friday the 13th in this lifetime and i have not encountered anything bad =)
SHEMH
2007-07-13 01:10:23 UTC
I'm not superstitious at all but something really bad happened to me on July 7, 2007. Tsk tsk tsk
A.C.
2007-07-13 00:18:39 UTC
I look forward to seeing Jason walking down the street holding Freddy's head last year we saw Bloody Mary and Carrie walking down the street holding hands!!!!! o.O Weird I know!!!!
?
2007-07-13 00:23:49 UTC
that it is bad luck to travel on the 13th that falls on friday.by sea..youll sink,by air ...youll crash,by land..collision.all will be fatal....and i dont believe it but it pays to be a little cautious on this day..who knows??
sophieb
2007-07-13 00:03:36 UTC
it's just a good a day as Thursday the 12th and Saturday the 14th.
anonymous
2007-07-12 23:59:23 UTC
we are supposed to leave for cagayan de oro today but my co-workers whom i will be travelling with would not want to travel on friday the thirteenth. so we will be leaving very early tomorrow morning.**
jan-na~♥~ and im luvin it
2007-07-13 06:55:46 UTC
i used to get scared with 13 falling on a friday.. but since there's nothing unlucky happened to me (thank god, for that)..



.. no worries...
siopaO
2007-07-13 05:27:51 UTC
my day was GREAT! the Jeep that i was into crashed a tricycle. i think the tricycle driver was injured.



.i know its not the answer for you re question.
anonymous
2007-07-13 02:10:43 UTC
It's the same ordinary day for me and a day after my father dear's birthday. <*-*>
db
2007-07-13 10:33:10 UTC
It is just another day.
anonymous
2007-07-15 19:57:15 UTC
I don't - because I try not to be superstitious.
Well
2007-07-13 07:42:17 UTC
Nothing at all. It's essentially the same old world nonsense, similar to religious rules that prohibit the consumption of pork. These beliefs are invalid simply because it cannot be proven to be conclusively true today in these modern times.



Since we're on the topic of superstition, I am more a believer of karma or its variations--which dictates that you will reap in life the exact amount of good and bad that you put into the world.



If you spend your whole day answering predominantly mindless questions here, then you will expect to get the same inanity in your real life.



If you spend the majority of your day at a job that provides tangible benefit to others or use that time to raise your children, then life will return the favor to you--either all at once or spread out over the remaining span of your short existence in this small world of ours.
anonymous
2007-07-13 01:13:42 UTC
Nope, I don't believe about it.
anonymous
2007-07-16 12:56:57 UTC
i guess it's academic now...it has passed and we're all still here...yehey!!!!!!!!! YAP Mabuhay!!!!!!
anonymous
2007-07-13 00:00:34 UTC
it's payday tomorrow.



how bad can it get?
anonymous
2007-07-13 02:05:16 UTC
christians are not superstitious
Crackerass
2007-07-13 10:54:15 UTC
It's my lucky day!!!


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