New Year's Superstitions & Folklore: Dark Traditions, Lucky Foods & Kentucky Family Customs Podcast Por  arte de portada

New Year's Superstitions & Folklore: Dark Traditions, Lucky Foods & Kentucky Family Customs

New Year's Superstitions & Folklore: Dark Traditions, Lucky Foods & Kentucky Family Customs

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There's a moment every year where time feels thin—and for centuries, people believed what you did in that moment could shape everything that followed.In this episode of The Dark Folio, we explore New Year's folklore from around the world: the dangerous midnight hour, why you should never clean on New Year's Day, the eerie tradition of First-Footing, and why people ate specific foods to survive the year ahead.But we also explore something warmer—the personal New Year's traditions passed down through Kentucky hollers and river towns, where black-eyed peas, cabbage and family gatherings marked the turn of the year.Eating black-eyed peas (often with pork, cornbread) for good luck and prosperity — southern U.S. custom tied to symbolism of coins, gold, and forward motion with pork: Why Eating Black‑Eyed Peas on New Year’s Day Is a Tradition for Good Luck (Vogue) VogueBlack-eyed peas, greens (including cabbage), pork, and cornbread together symbolizing good fortune — includes how these foods are interpreted in Appalachian and Southern tradition: From Holler to Hearth, New Year Folklore in Appalachia (Echoes of Appalachia) Echoes of AppalachiaBlack-eyed peas, collard greens, cornbread, and pork in New Year meals with symbolic meanings — explains peas as wealth, greens as money, pork for progress, etc.: Southern New Year’s Day Meal — Peas, Greens & Good Luck (Hillbilly Slang) Hillbilly SlangBlack-eyed peas and southern New Year tradition history (symbolism and practice) — adds context on long history of these foods in U.S. tradition: New Year’s Food Traditions Around the World (Wikipedia) WikipediaRegional Kentucky tradition of eating black-eyed peas with cabbage/cornbread for good fortune: Old Time Kentucky: For good fortune in the New Year (NKyTribune) NKyTribuneDon’t wash clothes on New Year’s Day to avoid “washing away” luck or someone in your family — traditional superstition: New Year’s Superstitions | Snopes SnopesNot doing laundry on New Year’s Day as a bad-luck / risk tradition: New Year’s Day Superstitions (WSOC TV) WSOC TVGeneral New Year eve/day superstitions from multiple cultures (e.g., avoiding laundry, payback of debts, not taking out trash, etc.): New Year Traditions & Superstitions (North County Daily Star) North County Daily StarNew Year’s practices about noise to ward off spirits, eating particular foods, and not washing (broader folkloric list): New Year Superstitions & Traditions (Meredith Plays) Meredith PlaysMusic and sounds from Zapsplat
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