Monday, February 23, 2009

"Weirdness and Bizarrerie"

In “The law of the transformation of the irrational,” Lefebvre states, “The mysterious, the sacred and diabolical, magic, ritual, the mystical – at first all of these were lived with intensity. They were part of the real lives of human beings – thoroughly authentic, affective and passionate forces. Then, with the appearance and development of rationality, they were doubly modified, along with their relationship to everyday life” (117). This made me think of the superstitions that my grandmother inflicted on the everyday life of my mother. There were the traditional superstitions such as black cats and broken mirrors. Then, there were others more peculiar, like if you start a project on Friday for someone and don’t finish that day, the person will die within the year. My mom still can’t start projects for someone on Fridays because she’s afraid she will cause their death. But my grandma added methods to get rid of illnesses to these beliefs. When my mom started elementary school, her mother made her wear an asphidity bag clipped to her undershirt. This small, obsidian-like, garlic-smelling object wrapped in cheesecloth was supposed to ward off evil germs and illnesses. It was pungent and probably warded off friends along with sicknesses. My mom wore it until junior high. She was so obedient. She attributes the asphidity bag to why she didn’t get the measles until she was sixteen. When my mom first told me of this, I wasn’t surprised. My grandma had a lot of weird ways and superstitions, and this was just one of them. After we talked about it, I decided to do some research on the internet and see if anyone else had heard of this. I was surprised to find it to be a folk remedy that people didn’t really use in the 20th century, especially in central California in the mid-1950s, but I wasn’t surprised to think that this folk remedy was passed onto my grandmother by her mother and so on. It was something she believed in because her mother probably clipped it to her undershirt when she was a child to ward off sickness.

-Colleen Murphy

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