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This episode explores the connection between food and superstition—how everyday meals become rituals of luck, protection, and meaning. From tossing salt over the shoulder and avoiding upright chopsticks to eating twelve grapes for New Year’s luck, these customs reveal how humans use food to control uncertainty. Psychology explains them through magical thinking, reinforcement bias, and the emotional comfort of shared rituals. Whether at weddings, funerals, or daily meals, food superstitions reflect our desire to find order, gratitude, and connection in the act of nourishment itself.
By rayanderlxxxThis episode explores the connection between food and superstition—how everyday meals become rituals of luck, protection, and meaning. From tossing salt over the shoulder and avoiding upright chopsticks to eating twelve grapes for New Year’s luck, these customs reveal how humans use food to control uncertainty. Psychology explains them through magical thinking, reinforcement bias, and the emotional comfort of shared rituals. Whether at weddings, funerals, or daily meals, food superstitions reflect our desire to find order, gratitude, and connection in the act of nourishment itself.