Monday, August 20, 2018

Why Friday The 13th Is A Very Lucky Day, Indeed!



Fear of the number 13 is the most prevalent
superstition in the Western world. We even have a name for it: triskaidekaphobia. It is quite common for even the most ordinarily
rational and otherwise exemplary person  Winston Churchill, for example  to refuse to sit
in row 13 in the theater or on an airplane. J.

Paul Getty and Franklin Delano Roosevelt
suffered from triskaidekaphobia. Napoleon was also plagued by a dread of 13. Christopher Columbus, too, seems to have been
afflicted. In the 1950s, the Columbiana, a group of Italian
Columbus experts, concluded upon careful study of his ships logs and notes, that Columbus
actually landed on the Western Hemisphere on October 13, 1492.

The date, apparently, was deliberately changed
to October 12, to avoid the imprint of such an evil omen. When the 13th day of the month lands on a
Friday, the culturally unfavorable attributes of each are multiplied by infinity. Friday is heavily charged with guilt and pain
and death in the Judeo- Christian tradition. It was on a Friday that Eve served forbidden
fruit pie at her legendary garden soiree.

Friday was the day that Adam was expelled
from Paradise, the day he repented, the day he died and the day he was cremated. And it was on a Friday  Good Friday  that
Christ was killed on the cross. Friday, the day of original sin, the day Jesus
died, the day of public hangings, in combination with 13, the number of steps on a gallows,
the number of coils of rope in a hangmans noose, the number of the Death card in the
tarot deck, is indubitably designated as a day of portent and doom. The pitiful suicide note of a window washer
that was found with his body in a gas-filled room at his home and quoted in a 1960 issue
of the Yorkshire Post, underscores its powerful, popular reputation, It just needed to rain
today  Friday the 13th  for me to make up my mind.

Poor sod. Ironically, and in definite defiance of the
laws of probability, the 13th day of the month is more likely to fall on a Friday than on
any other day of the week. The precisely aligned pattern of our calendar
days, weeks and months  repeats itself exactly every 400 years. In that 400-year period there are 688 Friday
the 13ths.

2012 Has three Friday the 13ths. Just our luck! Some might say. And, though they would mean it facetiously,
they would, indeed, be right. For up until the patriarchal revolution, both
Fridays and 13s were held in the very highest esteem.

Both the day and the number were associated
with the Great Goddesses, and therefore, regarded as the sacred essence of luck and good fortune. Thirteen is certainly the most essentially
female number  the average number of menstrual cycles in a year. The approximate number, too, of annual cycles
of the moon. When Chinese women make offerings of moon
cakes, there are sure to be 13 on the platter.

Thirteen is the number of blood, fertility,
and lunar potency. 13 Is the lucky number of the Great Goddess. Representing as it does, the number of revolutions
the moon makes around the earth in a year, 13 was the number of regeneration for pre-Columbian
Mexicans. In ancient Israel, 13 was a sanctified number.

Thirteen items were decreed necessary for
the tabernacle. At 13 years of age, a boy was (and still is)
initiated into the adult Jewish community. In Wicca, the pagan goddess tradition of Old
Europe, communicants convene in covens of 13 participants. Thirteen was also auspicious for the Egyptians,
who believed that life has 13 stages, the last of which is death  the transition
to eternal life.

Held holy in honor of Shekinah, the female
aspect of God, Friday was observed as the day of Her special celebrations. Jews around the world still begin the observance
of the Sabbath at sunset on Friday evenings when they invite in the Sabbath Bride. Friday is the Sabbath in the Islamic world. Friday is sacred to Oshun, the Yoruba orisha
of opulent sensuality and overwhelming femininity, and also to Frig, the Norse Goddess of love
and sex, of fertility and creativity.

Her name became the Anglo-Saxon noun for love,
and in the 16th century, frig came to mean to copulate. Friday was associated with the early Mother
Creation Goddesses for whom that day was named. In Anglo-Saxon, Scandinavian, Icelandic, and
Teutonic cultures She was called variously, Freya, Freia, Freyja, Fir, Frea and Frig. Friday is Frigs Day, Frigedaeg, in Old
English, Fredag in Danish, Freitag in Dutch.

In Mediterranean lands, She reigned as Venus. In Latin, Friday is the Day of Venus, Dies
Veneris; Vendredi in French, Venerdi in Italian and Viernes in Spanish. Friday the 13th is ultimately the celebration
of the lives and loves of Lady Luck. On this, Her doubly-dedicated day, let us
consider what fortuitous coincidences constitute our fate.

The lucky blend of just the right conditions,
chemistries, elements, and energies that comprise our universe. The way it all works. The way we are. That we are at all.

That, despite whatever major or minor matters
we might think are unlucky, we have somehow managed to remain alive and aware. This Friday the 13th, let us stand in full
consciousness of the miraculousness of existence and count our blessings. Thank Goddess! Knock on wood!.

Why Friday The 13th Is A Very Lucky Day, Indeed!

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