13 Superstitions about Death

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Death is an uncomfortable subject for many folks. Perhaps it's the severe emotional reaction people have to death -- especially if it's someone close -- that makes the living act in bizarre ways. Or, maybe it's because death's process is not well understood that causes normally rational individuals to believe in irrational concepts.
Yesterday I was looking over notes from my basic coroner training. One segment was in understanding various cultural practices and traditions about death. This was valuable information as a difficult part of a coroner's job is interacting with the deceased's family and those relations can come from a diverse ethnicity with some pretty peculiar beliefs.
I thought I'd share thirteen strange superstitions about death.
13. Coins On The Eyes
The practice dates back to the ancient Greeks who believed the dead would travel down to Hades and need to cross the river Styx in order to arrive in the afterlife. To cross over, they needed to pay the boat driver, Charon, so coins were placed over the eyes of the dead so they'd be able to pay the fare.
Secondly, and more practically, many people die with their eyes open.
This can be a creepy feeling, having the dead stare at you, and it was thought the dead might be eyeing someone to go with them. Coins were a practical item to weigh down the eyelids until rigor mortis set in -- coins being round and fit in the eye sockets as well as being relatively heavy.
The most famous set of eye coins is the two, silver half-dollars set on Abraham Lincoln, now on display in the Chicago Historical Museum.
12. Birds And Death
Birds were long held to be messengers to the afterlife because of their ability to soar through the air to the homes of the gods. It's not surprising that a number of myths materialized such as hearing an owl hoot your name, ravens and crows circling your house, striking your window, entering your house, or sitting on your sill looking in.
Birds, in general, became harbingers of death but somehow the only birds I personally associate with death are vultures.
11. Burying The Dead Facing East
You probably never noticed, but most cemeteries are laid out on an east-west grid with the headstones on the west and the feet pointing east. This comes from the belief that the dead should be able to see the new world rising in the east, as with the sun.
It's also the primary reason that people are buried on their backs and not bundled in the fetal position like before they were born.
10. Remove A Corpse Feet First
This was Body Removal 101 that we learned in coroner school. We always removed a body from a house with the feet first. The practice dates from Victorian times when it was thought if the corpse went out head first, it'd be able to "look back" and beckon those standing behind to follow.
It's still considered a sign of respect, but coroners secretly know it's way easier to handle a body in rigor mortis by bending it at the knees to get around corners, rather than forcing the large muscles at the waist or wrenching the neck.
9. Cover The Mirrors
It's been held that all mirrors within the vicinity of a dead body must be covered to prevent the soul from being reflected back during its attempt to pass out of the body and on to the afterlife.
This practice is apparently strong in Jewish mourning tradition and may have a practical purpose -- to prevent vanity in the mourners so they can't reflect their own appearance, rather forcing them to focus on remembering and respecting the departed.
8. Stop The Clock
Apparently this was a sign that time was over for the dead and that the clock must not be restarted until the deceased was buried. If it were the head of the household who died, then that clock would never be started again.
It makes me think of the song:
My grandfather's clock was too large for the shelf
So it stood ninety years on the floor
It was taller by half than the old man himself
Though it weighed not a pennyweight more
It was bought on the morn of the day that he was born
And was always his treasure and pride
But it stopped, short, never to go again
When the old man died
(Cont)