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Legends & Lore Other Games

Halloween Divination Games

Halloween Divination Games

According to legends of yore, Halloween night is the time when the veil between the living and spirit worlds is the thinnest. This not only means that you may see a spook or two cavorting about, but also that you may be able to use some of the otherworldly energies to peer into the future. Halloween divination games have been popular activities at Halloween gatherings throughout history.

Typically centered around finding love and foretelling one’s fate in the coming year, a variety of fortune-telling games were developed using items that were widely available long ago. Apples, garden vegetables, candles, and mirrors could all be used to glean insight into the future for those who dared to sneak a peek on Halloween night.

So gather your friends and give some of the below Halloween divination games a try this coming Halloween!

Halloween Divination Games Using Apples

Apples were used in many dishes during the harvest season – apple pies, apple cidar, apple sauce, plain ol’ apples themselves, etc. Being so common, it is no surprise that unwed young ladies used apples in their fortune-telling games. 

The Apple Peel

One game involved the peel of an apple. An unbetrothed girl would peel an apple in one long unbroken strand. If the peel broke, then she would have to start again with a new apple until she could peel the entire apple without breaking the peel. Then with her right hand she would throw the peel over her left shoulder. The shape the peel landed in on the floor would indicate the initial of the young lady’s true love. Whether it was the first initial, last initial, or middle initial was often left up to interpretation as the girls often already had a young man in mind.

This is one of my favorite dividation games and I still do it each time I bake an apple pie just to make sure it still lands in the initial of my Honey-Bunny’s name – which it always does (even if I have to squint very hard to see it).

Apple Seeds

So what happens if you have the attentions of two equally nice suitors and are unsure of which one to choose? If you have two apple seeds, you can try a quick dividation game to determine which one is the better match. Wet two apple seeds and stick one to each eyelid. The first one to fall off indicates the person who is not right for you. 

Of course, sometimes you may find yourself twitching one lid just a little more than the other to guide fate to a particular conclusion!

Apples and Mirrors

Many Halloween divination games have slightly different variations. Here are two of my favorites that use both apples and mirrors to catch a glimpse of your true love’s face:

Just before midnight on Halloween, place a candle by a mirror in a darkened room and light the wick. Face the mirror and cut an apple into nine slices. Eat eight apple slices while gazing into the mirror. Save the final piece and at the first stroke of midnight offer it to the mirror. If the spirits accept your offering, the face of your true love will appear over your shoulder in the mirror.

Another version of this game is slightly less complex. Sit in front of a mirror at midnight. Eat and apple while combing your hair. Your true love is said to appear in the mirror behind you. I prefer the version with a little more ritual, but this is a great quick game for the casual fortune-teller.

In either version, however, beware. If you see a skull in the mirror, it foretells that youi will die before marrying.

It never hurts to give fate a little nudge in the right direction.

Kaling

Fruits do not have all the fun when it comes to being a part of Halloween games. Kale vegetable gardens were also plundered for fortune-telling means. 

Young men and women would take turns walking backwards and blindfolded out into a vegetable garden. They would then pick out a stalk of kale and bring it back into the party. Once all the players had picked their kale, they would examine each person’s stalk. The kale’s characteristics were said to mirror the picker’s future lover: rich & sweet, or shriveled and bitter. 

The game could also continue by hanging the kale in a row above a doorway. The first person to walk through the doorway would share a name with the person who will marry the player to have picked the first stalk. The second person to walk through would share a name with the person to marry the player who picked the second stalk, and so on.

Nuts & A Fire

A Scottish Halloween divination game used nuts and a toasty fire to foretell one’s future: Name two nuts after a specific couple then place them into the fire. If the nuts burn together, it foretells that the couple will have a happy life. If the two nuts crackle and spring apart, then the couple is doomed to quarrel.

Irish Barmbrack Cake

A delishously fun and easy Halloween party game was baking Irish Barmbrack Cake and adding large charms for guests to find (make sure all guests know there are charms in the cake, or you may have a choking hazard).

You can find a recipe for this traditional Irish dish at Allrecipes.com.

When the cake is served, each guest checks to see if they have received any charms in their slice. The charms received indicate what awaits them in the coming year. Common charms include:

  • A Key for Travel
  • A Ring for Marriage
  • A Coin for Wealth
  • A Thimble for Spinsterhood

Irish Barmbrack

Brooke Elizabeth
Barmbrack is a traditional Irish cake eaten on holidays. After pouring into the prepared pan, it is tradition to add objects to the barmbrack which symbolize certain things for the person who receives each in their slice. Thoroughly clean objects before adding them to the barmbrack. These objects can be pressed into the bottom of the loaf after baking instead: coin-wealth or good fortune; ring-will marry within the year; bean-poverty; pea-will not marry within the year; matchstick-unhappy marriage; thimble-single for life.
Prep Time 2 hrs 15 mins
Cook Time 1 hr
Cooling 2 hrs
Course Dessert
Cuisine Irish
Servings 12
Calories 294 kcal

Equipment

  • 9-inch Bundt Pan

Ingredients
  

  • 2 ½ Cups Chopped Dried Mixed Nutes
  • 1 ½ Cups Hot Brewed Tea
  • 2 ½ Cups Flour
  • 1 tsp Ground Cinnamon
  • ½ tsp Ground Nutmeg
  • ½ tsp Baking Soda
  • 1 Egg
  • 1 ½ Cups Sugar
  • ¼ Cup Lemon Marmalade
  • 1 tsp Grated Orange Zest

Instructions
 

  • Soak the dried fruit in the hot tea for 2 hours, then drain and gently squeeze out excess tea.
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Grease a 9 inch Bundt pan. Stir together the flour cinnamon, nutmeg, and baking soda; set aside.
  • Beat the egg, sugar, marmalade, orange zest, and tea-soaked fruit until well combined. Gently fold in the flour until just combined, then pour into the prepared Bundt pan.
  • Bake in preheated oven for 1 hour or until the top of the cake springs back when lightly pressed. Allow to cool in the pan for 2 hours before removing. Continue to cool to room temperature on a wire rack. Press the objects of choice into the cake through the bottom before serving.

Notes

Recipe from AllRecipes.com

There are a mirad of other fortune-telling games you can play on Halloween to predict your fate for the coming year. Which are your favorite? Have you ever played any? Did they accurately predict your fate? Let me know on Instagram & Twitter @EmilyIsHorror !

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Games Legends & Lore Other Games

Hyaku Monogatari – One Hundred Candles

Hyaku Monogatari – One Hundred Candles

Hyaku Monogatari – One Hundred Candles (also referred to as “One Hundred Stories” – a literal translation from Japanese), is a traditional Japanese parlor game. Traditionally played on the eve of a full moon in the summer (a time Japanese folklore names as ripe with spirit activity), the game consists of a group of friends telling scary stories, and legend dictates that the evening culminates with the appearance of a spirit.

The exact origins of the game are unknown; records of the game can be found as far back as the 1600s, but the game is believed to be far older than that. Historians believe that the game originated among the samurai class as a test of courage. The book Yurei Attack! The Japanese Ghost Survival Guide by Hiroko Yoda and Mike Alt suggests that based on the name, “Hyaku Monogatari”, the game may have been based on a supposedly true story of an 11th century invasion of Kyoto by supernatural beings, “The Hundred Demons’ Night Parade”.

The tales of the supernatural and folklore that were told during these games became known as “kaidan”

Supplies

The game requires the following elements:

1. 100 candles – they must be slow-burning and able to stay lit for up to eight hours

2. A space with three rooms or two rooms with a long, dark hallway separating them

3. A group of friends with 100 scary stories to tell between them

4. A low table

5. A mirror

6. In the earliest versions of the game all the players must wear blue robes or clothing. In modern times, this requirement has been dropped, though there have been fewer spirit sightings in modern times – best to keep as close to the original as possible!

Playing Hyaku Monogatari :

For the initial set-up, pick one room to make comfy for your guests and another (preferably far away down a dark corridor)to fill with 100 candles. In the candle-filled room, also set up a low table and a mirror. Make sure this room is as dark as possible, so the only light will come from the lit candles. Right as your party begins, light all the candles.

The group arranges themselves in the non-candle-filled room and each participant will take  a turn telling the scariest story they can think of. Stories can be about ghosts, monsters, real-life horrors, etc. Each story should only be about 3-5 minutes in length (as you have 100 to get through in the evening – this game does take about 8 hours of your night).

After each story, the teller must walk alone to the candle room and extinguish one candle flame.  He or she must then kneel by the table and look into the mirror for one minute. This might not seem like a challenge for the first few trips, but as the night wears on, the room becomes darker and the scary stories begin to put one in a fearful state of mind.

After the 100th tale and the final candle is extinguished, the spirits are said to appear in the mirror. Will your group be brave enough to face them? Many groups choose to end their evening at the 99th tale to avoid welcoming the spirits into their homes.

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Legends & Lore News

Friday the 13th 2015

Friday the 13th 2015

Friday the 13th is considered by most to be the unluckiest day of the year. In 2015, we have three Friday the 13ths to survive; a rare situation – most recently, it occurred in 2012 and it will not occur again until 2026.

In celebration of this superstitious day and paraskevidekatriaphobists everywhere, here are a few of the most common legends and lore associated with Friday the 13th:

Origins of 13 as an Unlucky Number

Thirteen is often considered an unlucky number in many cultures. In Christian mythology, thirteen men gathered at the last supper – with the thirteenth guest, Judas Iscariot, betraying Jesus shortly thereafter. (Coincidently, Jesus was then crucified on a Friday).

Norse mythology also includes an unlucky dinner celebration by 12 gods and a 13th party crasher, Loki, god of mischief and trickery.

Another theory of why thirteen is shrouded in so much superstition is its relation to a “complete” number, twelve. We have twelve months, our day is divided into two twelve hour segments (a.m. and p.m.), there were twelve apostles,  twelve gods of Olympus, twelve tribes of Israel, etc. Thirteen adds one more to this perfect number, breaking the completeness.

Friday as an Unlucky Day

Maritime folklore deems Friday as an unlucky day in general (regardless of the numerical day of the month it falls on). Sailors believed it an ill omen to begin a voyage on a Friday.

Christianity has many examples of the unluckiness of Friday. Aside from being the day on which Jesus was crucified, Christian mythology also places these events as occurring on Fridays: Adam and Eve being banished from the Garden of Eden, the death of Adam and Eve, and the destroying of the Temple of Solomon.

Predating these Christian beliefs, even Norse mythology has a slight aversion to the day. The day was named after the Norse goddess Freyja (also known as Frigg), the goddess of love, beauty, wisdom, war, death, and magic. Most likely because of the connection to war, death, and possibly magic (which usually wasn’t filled with cute unicorns and happiness in those days), Fridays were considered poor choices for weddings.

Actual Events Occurring on Friday the 13th

So, is the 13th actually an unlucky day? Of the many scientific studies on the subject, none have factually proven that the day is “unlucky”. Of course, if you become overly paranoid and frantic, you do risk in creating a self-fulfilling prophesy, but there are not concrete links to increase in “unlucky” accidents on Friday the 13th.

However, history does have some varified morbid occurrences on Friday the 13th. For example, on a Friday the 13th in 1307, King Philip IV of France raided the homes of the Knights Templar and arrested thousands of men (a very bleak and horrific occurrence). Additionally, Tupac Shakur, Julia Child, and Tim Russert (beloved news anchor from Buffalo, New York) all died on a Friday the 13th.

In the end, we all have our own beliefs and superstitions. To some Friday the 13th is a horrible day filled with nervousness and fear, to others, it is just a regular end of the workweek day. Either way, I hope that you have a wonderful day today and only a few black cats cross your path.

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