A Little Broom Lore and Superstition For Your Wednesday
*Certainly, the most common superstition connected with brooms is that they were used by witches to fly on… However, did you know that it was in the fourteenth century that brooms were first regarded as a vehicle for witches’ transportation? This tradition may stem from the fact that, in many of their ceremonies, witches did dance with a stick between their legs, jumping high in the air. Toward the end of the eighteenth century, the question of witches flying was settled once and for all in an English law court. Lord Mansfield declared that he knew of no law that prohibited flying and, therefore, anyone so inclined was perfectly free to do so.bShortly thereafter, reports of witches flying on broomsticks ceased (except for isolated reports of East Anglian witches skimming across church spires).
*It is said that a new broom should sweep dirt out of a house only after it has swept something in.
*An ole English Rhyme…..”Buy a broom in May, and you will sweep your friends away.”
*Also never sweep after sunset since so doing will chase away happiness or hurt a wandering soul.
*According to Yorkshire belief, should a young girl inadvertently step over a broom handle she will become a mother before a wife…..
(I will add here….this belief is also Appalachia and rural country folk)
*Among the Dyak people of Indonesia brooms made out of the leaves of a certain plant (doesn’t say which plant) are sprinkled with rice water and blood. These are used to sweep one’s house, and the sweepings are placed into a toy house made of bamboo. The toy house is then set adrift on a river. It is believed that bad luck will be carried out to sea with it.
*In Africa, should a man be struck by a broom, he will grab hold of it and hit the broomstick seven times, or he will become impotent.
*In Sicily, on Midsummer’s Eve, people often put a broom outside their homes to ward off any wickedness that might come knocking.
*In Wales, among the Gypsies, an old custom of the broomstick wedding persisted for some time. The couple solemnized their rites before witnesses by leaping over a broom placed in a doorway, without dislodging the broom. Should they wish to dissolve the marriage, they simply had to reverse the process, jumping backwards out of the house, over the broom, before the same witnesses.
*American country folk say no good can come of carrying a broom across water, leaning a broom against the bed, or burning one. Good luck can be had by sending a new broom and a loaf of bread into a new home before entering it.
*Likewise, brooms laid across the doorways are believed to keep out bad…
*And a few more traditional ones….
Never use a broom when there is a dead person in the house.
Never use a broom to sweep outside the house, unless the inside of the house has been cleaned first. (oops!)
Never walk on a broom.
Never sweep upstairs rooms in the afternoon.
Never sweep the room of a departing guest until he has been gone for some time, or else your sweeping will bring him back
Never bring old brooms into new houses…(remember a broom becomes attached to houses…always leave the old one behind….)
Finally………always sweep dustballs into the middle of a room…..they will protect against bad luck
*One old wart cure consists of measuring a wart crosswise with a broom straw, then burying the straw The straw, so intimately connected with the wart, will decay, and so too should the blemish.
*Placing a broom across any doorway allows your departed friends and family to speak to you if they so choose. As long as the broom remains in place, they can communicate freely.
*If you feel as though you are being followed and haunted by unfriendly ghosts, stepping over a broomstick will prevent them from disturbing you.

I always heard to banish bad luck, or bothersome guests, to turn the broom upside down.
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I always heard you lay it across the door. And like you, I heard you turn it upside down and stand it in a corner near the door. I believe superstitions change over the year. Someone accidentally does something and it works, so they remake the superstition. These superstitions span over one hundred years. It just goes to show you how things change over the years. Thank you for your comment. It is wonderful to see you here.
Have a great day,
Lady A
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Lol yeppers by the door. I think we evolve with the need to protect. I am not in the closet, and the 78 churches in my Kentucky county, have sermons about not going to the local witch for psychic readings, they are damning thier souls, and inviting the devil in……. hahaha
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Kentucky, now I am curious….you don’t have to tell me specifically what town you are in. How about Western, Central, Eastern, or the line toward Tennessee. It is great to meet another witch from Ky, I love it. It is so nice to meet you, hun. I hope you stick around for a while. All my bunch of witches are up from Eastern Kentucky. I happen to be in Western Ky. It has took some time but they have become accepting of us down here. I know what you mean about those churches. We run into a few of those bible thumpers ourselves. They can be a pain in the butt to say the least. But the only time we run into them is when we venture out from where our family is located. They found out who we are, they sort of run (there happens to be a large number of my family up there and I believe they know them, so they run, lol!). But again, it is fantastic to meet you.
Lady A
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