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It seems that some people are more prone to weird events happening to them. Like your high school friend who swore they saw a ghost in their house one night in a creepy encounter that changed how they feel sleeping in darkness to this day. Isn’t it just because some of us are more superstitious, while others are realists who seem to always find an explanation for almost everything, even things that by their own definition are unexplainable?
In order to dig deeper into the topic, Bored Panda contacted Susan Petang, a certified life coach, teaching adults and teens. Susan runs “Quiet Zone Coaching” where she teaches essential life skills and coping tools people need when stress is overwhelming and life is hard.
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Susan confirmed my inkling that some people are indeed more superstitious than others. “Many folks take their cues from their parents. What we were taught to believe as children can become important to us as adults,” the life coach explained.
“For example, if we were raised in a very religious family, we're more likely to be religious as adults, Susan said and added: “If people we loved and respected as kids were superstitious, we'll have a tendency to be superstitious, since that way of thinking is familiar to us.”
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When we experience something out of the ordinary, Susan argues that we tend to look for explanations since humans like to understand things. “We're curious, and if something doesn't make sense, we look for reasons why. We also seek explanations for things that we fear,” she added.
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Meanwhile, a lot of superstitions have been established a long time ago in our culture and they’re not something new that just pops up one day. “They have their origins in times when we didn't have as much scientific information about how things work. The appearance of comets meant something bad would happen, for example. Droughts were viewed as punishment from the gods.”
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However, Susan believes that “while we now understand how many things work, there are always going to be times when it's just more fun to be superstitious.” She gave an example: “my husband and I see 11-11 all the time—in phone numbers, coincidentally when we look at clocks, totals on shopping receipts, etc. It doesn't mean anything, but it's a lot more fun to think it does,” the life coach concluded.
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