[lit-ideas] Re: "Bless You" (Was: Sneeze)

  • From: JulieReneB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 30 Jul 2004 11:40:34 EDT

Thanks -- I'm forwarding this to my daughter to accompany the origin of  
nursery rhymes I sent her. Why do I suddenly feel the urge to debunk the  
saccharine stuff of life for her?
 
Julie Krueger
========Original  Message========     Subj: [lit-ideas] "Bless You" (Was: 
Sneeze)  Date: 7/29/2004 11:48:17 PM Central Daylight Time  From: 
_Jlsperanza@xxxxxxxx (mailto:Jlsperanza@xxxxxxx)   To: 
_lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
(mailto:lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   Sent on:    
In a message dated 7/28/2004 5:07:13 AM Eastern  Standard Time,  
JulieReneB@xxxxxxx writes:
I'm  curious about  the African word for "blessing".  In Hebrew,  "Baruch"  
means  "blessing" 
If you are curious why people say 'bless you' after other people  sneeze,   
below.
Cheers,

JL

-----

_http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mgesundheit.html_  
(http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mgesundheit.html) 

Why do we say  "God bless you" after a sneeze? 
27-Sep-2001

____________________________________
Dear Straight Dope:How or why did  saying "God bless  you" become associated 
as an expression one says to  another after the other  sneezes? I've found 
some 
reasons listed below,  but, somehow, I don't think any  of them are very 
legitimate: 
When  someone sneezes his heart stops and saying "God bless you"  means "I'm  
glad your heart started again." 
Saying "God bless you" when you sneeze  keeps the devil from flying  down 
your 
throat. 
When someone  sneezes, say "God bless you and may the devil miss  you." 
When you  sneeze your soul tries to escape and saying "God bless  you" crams 
it  back in (said by Millhouse in an episode of The  Simpsons). How about  
giving 
me the Straight Dope? --Rob  Amato, Washington, DC 
SDSTAFF  Songbird replies: If you've just sneezed, Rob, I think I'd rather  
give  you a box of Kleenex. The custom of saying "God bless you" after a 
sneeze   
was begun literally as a blessing. Pope Gregory the Great (540-604 AD)  
ascended  to the Papacy just in time for the start of the plague (his  
successor 
succumbed  to it). Gregory (who also invented the  ever-popular Gregorian 
chant) 
called for  litanies, processions and  unceasing prayer for God's help and 
intercession.  Columns marched  through the streets chanting, "Kyrie Eleison" 
(Greek 
for "Lord  have  mercy"). When someone sneezed, they were immediately blessed 
("God  bless  you!") in the hope that they would not subsequently develop the 
 
plague. All that  prayer apparently worked, judging by how quickly the  
plague of 
590 AD  diminished. The connection of sneezing to the plague  is not the 
first  
association of sneezing with death. According to Man,  Myth, and Magic: The  
Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion  and the Unknown, many  
cultures, even some in Europe, believe that  sneezing expels the soul--the  
"breath of 
life"--from the body.   That doesn't seem too far-fetched when  you realize 
that sneezing can  send tiny particles speeding out of your nose at  up to 
100 
miles per  hour!  We know today, of course, that when you sneeze,  your heart 
 
doesn't stop, nor will your eyes pop out if you can keep them open   
(_www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_30  4.html_  
(http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_304.html) ), nor does your soul get  
expelled. What does get expelled are  hundreds 
upon thousands of  microscopic germs. The current advice when you sneeze  is 
to cover your  mouth with your arm rather than your hand. That way, all those 
 
germs  won't be on your hands when you touch the countless things you're 
going  
to  touch in the course of the day (don't tell us; we don't want to  know).   
There are many superstitions regarding sneezing, some of  which you've 
already  
listed. But here are some of my favorites.   
Sneeze on Monday for health,
Sneeze on Tuesday for wealth,
Sneeze  on  Wednesday for a letter, 
Sneeze on Thursday for something   better,
Sneeze on Friday for sorrow,
Sneeze on Saturday, see your   sweetheart tomorrow,
Sneeze on Sunday, safety seek.  
One for  sorrow
Two for joy
Three for a letter
Four for a  boy.
Five for  silver
Six for gold
Seven for a secret, never to be  told. 
And  lastly, a sneeze before breakfast is a sign that you will hear exciting  
 
news before the end of the day. I assume you sneezed this morning, Rob,  
because  you've just been blessed with the Straight Dope.   --SDSTAFF 
Songbird --  
Straight Dope Science Advisory Board   



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