Ladybugs, a look at the calendar confirms that it’s time for 10 on the 10th 10.2020. And our theme for today? 10 superstitions, wives’ tales and family expressions. Thought this would be a fun pre-Halloween post. Have always found superstitions to be interesting. I like looking into the origins of superstitions, the history behind them. Grateful to Leanne for sharing this link on Aussie expressions.
And then there’s my mom. Who has always had a colorful way of speaking. We credit her Missouri upbringing. When I used those same family expressions, my English professor asked me about them. I explained I’d grown up hearing them from my mother all my life. He asked to contact my mom to get them from the “horse’s mouth.” And wound up interviewing Mom to get the background on her Missouri expressions for research he was doing on idioms. Thought it would be fun to share some with you.
10 on the 10th 10.2020
Can’t believe we are finally winding down this dreadful year! Two more months to 2020 and 2 more months of 10 on the 10th. Life gets really crazy with the holidays so want to remind you now of the prompts for November and December.
Will share the Thanksgiving questions toward the end of the month so you can be thinking on them.
If you have missed some of the earlier 10 on the 10th posts, you can check them all out here:
Now, on with the show. Let’s start with…
Superstitions and Old Wives’ Tales
Coming and Going
You might be familiar with the Irish superstition that dictates a person should be required to go out the same door she comes in. Otherwise they will take the ‘good luck’ (in the house or building) with them [source]. I was raised to do that but actually didn’t know why until now. My mom took it a little further, though.
- Not only must you enter and exit through the same door, but if you exit then realize you’ve forgotten something and have to go back in, you must sit down in a chair, slowly count to 10 before re-exiting. It’s bad luck to have to come back inside for something.
Finding a Penny
Ever heard the rhyme “find a penny pick it up; all day long you’ll have good luck”? According to this article, the origin of this superstition dates back to ancient times when “metals were believed to offer protection from evil and harmful spirits to those who possessed them.” Later coins were used as currency, those who had more of them were obviously more prosperous. The more money one had, the more fortunate they were believed to be. But there’s more to this superstition.
- Some believe that only a face-up coin is good luck and should be picked up. But I have never found a coin I didn’t like! I mean, how can finding money be bad? I believe that finding a coin face-up indicates that you’ll have good luck, while finding a coin face-down means that angels are with you. Win-win. Be sure to put any coin you find in your left shoe, though. Or in the case of sandals or open-toe shoes, in your left pocket.
Family Expressions
[source]
Since Mom’s stroke and cognitive decline the first of this year, she has really struggled with work finding. Sadly, the speech therapy she’s been receiving hasn’t helped much. Her once colorful Ozark Mountains speech is now punctuated with a lot of umms, and “I can’t think of the word right now.” It was very frustrating for her at first but has become her new normal. We miss hearing the family expressions we grew up with.
Expressions Like:
- I’m so mad I could bite a ten-penny nail in two.
- I feel like I’m coming down with a bad case of the epizootic. (Apparently this is real thing…ha!! But is a disease among livestock)
- Those poor souls are poor as church mice.
- She was up all night so her eyes look like 2 burned holes in a blanket.
- With her hair wet like that, she looks like a drowned rat. Or…She has a big rat’s nest in the back of her hair.
- It smells like Dutch love in here. (We never wanted to know more…)
- The flat tire made me late for work and they fired me, so now I’m fit to be tied.
- Whenever I’m with my grandbabies, I am in pig heaven.
- When I say she got mad, I mean she had a duck fit.
- With all the restrictions because of Covid, I’m as busy as a cranberry merchant these days.
- You better get your trotting harness on or we are going to be late for school.
And my all time favorite…
- She can’t help it if she’s ugly but she could stay at home. Or…He can’t help it if he’s ugly but he could wear a sack over his head. (Or you can sub in pillow case)
Lauren’s husband Francisco has always gotten a kick out of the things my mom says. He noticed early on that she would make a somewhat derogatory comment about someone or something then follow it by ‘bless her heart’. As if that would soften the things.
Lost in the Translation
When we lived in Panama, I often had a house full of little ones visiting from my (ex)husband’s family in the interior. Apparently one the expressions I said on repeat was fat as mud, speaking of myself. (As an aside, looking back at pictures from that time of my life…I was not fat…as mud or anything else. What do they say about hindsight?) After hearing me say fat as mud over and over, the kids asked me to translate fat as mud into Spanish. Just so you know, it doesn’t translate well.
Your Turn
Are there expressions you grew up hearing that you still say today? Maybe an old wives’ tale you have taken to heart? Do you pick up pennies and put them in your shoe? Would love to hear! Leave me a comment below. Or link up your 10 on the 10th 10.2020 (that’s a lot of 10s) with me.
This morning, as I got ready to put on my tennies, a penny fell out of my left shoe. Made me smile. May your weekend be full of smiles and happiness. Thank you for spending a few moments here with me.
Hugs and kisses,

All I could think of as I read this is that most stores & buildings now have one way signs for exiting and entering with all the new restrictions in place!
You are so right!!
Put a beggar on horseback and he’ll ride to the devil. (not sure but it might be a putdown about those who try to rise above their station. Probably came from Grandma)
Go take a long walk on a short pier. (my dad. Get lost!)
Useless as teats on a boar. (Dad)
Don’t open your umbrella in the house (?)
common as dirt (another nasty)
Don’t put new shoes on the table (?)
Eat carrots, they’re good for your eyes.
If you eat the seeds (of any fruit) a plant will grow in your tummy.
You need to eat a peck of dirt before you die. (immunity?)
She was so thin, if she swallowed a pea, all the men would leave town. (definitely Grandma)
I don’t use any of these expressions. Some of them seem really unkind. I think that we are so much more aware of what we say in front of children now.
Have heard about the teats on a boar…my ex-husband said that one. And swallowing a seed or gum, was not supposed to be good, for different reasons. Not familiar with the beggar on horseback. People certainly had a colorful way of saying things back in the ‘day’.
Those family sayings cracked me up. Like why do we say some of those things?!?! Just passed along through the years I suppose. Hope you have a FAB weekend, Leslie!
Thank you!! Had fun collecting these expressions.
Wonderful expressions, Leslie – Most of them were brand new to me!
Would love to hear some of your family’s expressions!!
I’ve heard of a few of those! I would never put new shoes on a table (apparently before people were hung, they were given a pair of shoes before they went to the gallows so when the new shoes hit the wood, it meant you had only seconds to live)
I have to salute any magpie that I see and say ‘good morning Mr Magpie’ (no idea why!)
Don’t open an umbrella indoors
Never cross on the stairs if someone is coming down at the same time as you are going up
Don’t walk under a ladder
I’m sure some of our British expressions would make no sense to you
I’ll go to the foot of our stairs – (if you are surprised)
A man on a galloping horse wouldn’t notice – (if you’ve made a mistake and wonder if anyone will see it)
Six of one, half dozen of another – (when two things are more or less the same)
Pardon my French – (if you accidentally swear in front of someone)
Off to see a man about a dog – (if you’re going somewhere but don’t want to say where you are going)
The ones about people being ugly made me smile, sometimes when we age our sense of what we should be saying out loud disappears! Over here they would have ‘fallen out of the ugly tree and hit every branch on the way down!
So enjoyed your expressions. We don’t walk under ladders over here, either. And opening an umbrella indoors is a definite
no-no. Never heard of saluting a magpie. Not sure I would recognize a magpie to salute it.
Six of one, half dozen of another is something my mom would say. Pardon my French is familiar, too.
So sad about the shoes and the gallows.
I’m sorry to hear about your mom, and speech therapy not working. I can understand how frustrating it would be to not be able to come up with a word. I love all the sayings you shared! Lately my girls have been trying to avoid stepping on cracks, and I told them saying “don’t step on a crack our you’ll break your mother’s back”. I let them know they wouldn’t actually break my back if they stepped on a crack. haha.
Thank you. Good news, mom has a new speech therapist and she is wonderful!!
I remember avoiding cracks in hopes of protecting my mom’s back. Must have worked.
She is 93 and still going strong.
I can’t think of any family expressions that we use, but I know we do use gesundheit instead of God bless you when someone sneezes-does that count? Haha!
Gesundheit counts!!
I have never heard “fat as mud”, but I have heard “dumb as dirt”. My mom had a lot of sayings too. My brother-in-law, who is from Boston, always made fun of our “Pennsylvania-isms”. I tell him thaat is like the pot calling the kettle blaack. He adds an “r” to words that shouldn’t have them and drops the “r” from words that do have one. For example, “My daughtah, Dakoter”. (My daughter, Dakota).
Haha!! I love that one…pot calling the kettle black. We say that one, too. And from the pot to the frying pan.
I lived in Boston for 6 years as a child and I add an R to wash to make it warsh. My daughters still make fun of me
for that.
My mum has lots of different sayings too – my favourite was always “no blood no noise” and she used to tell me I was like a fairy bushorse…I think it is what it sounds like.
Fairy bushorse? Hmmm, not sure what that would be. Love the sound of it, though.
I do plan on posting mine tomorrow meaning I have to get working on it! I’ve heard bless your heart is a southern thing that people say when they give an insult!
I think bless her heart can be used genuinely but my mom always preceded it with a derogatory comment. Ha!!
These are so fun. People around me say “rats’ nest” and “fit to be tied.” Someone I knew growing up always said her kids were “as slow as molasses.”
And YES, Bless Her Heart. It’s a Southern thing. hah
-Lauren
Ohhhh, slow as molasses. Slow as Christmas. Love it!! When I try hard to think of these expressions, I can’t! And then when I start talking, they fall out of my mouth!!
I’m so sorry that your mom’s speech therapy is not working. I’ve never heard of most of your family expressions except the drowned rat and poor as church mice. And that coming and going through the same door is an interesting wives tale!
Jill – Doused in Pink
Thank you!! It was fun to reminisce about the crazy things my mom used to say.
These were great. I was going to participate but couldn’t really think of anything..lol. I’ll have to think more on sayings we’ve said or heard. I will be participating in November though.
Yay, glad to have you participate in November!! Thank you!
To my surprise, I’ve only heard of a few of these sayings. Your mom sounds like quite the character.
Oh, Amy, we have lost a lot of the character my mom once was. Every once in a while we get a glimpse again. I started saying some of her expressions back to her and she remembered them and had a good laugh.
So many of those are familiar to me, but then again my mom is from the MidWest too….how funny.
I’m trying to remember some of the ones she says or said all the time, but of course I’m coming up blank. I’ll remember them at midnight tonight and come back and tell you then, LOL
XOXO
Jodie
http://www.jtouchofstyle.com
You know, when I started this post, I had drew a blank. I got too wrapped around the hub about thinking of them. If I had just started talking, half a dozen would have come out of my mouth!!
It was fun reading about your mother’s expressions. I’m sorry she is losing her speech. That must be so disheartening. I’ve heard some of the expressions she used to use. My mom also said “poor as church mice” and “fit to be tied.” If we were whiny or complaining, she would threaten “I’ll give you something to cry about.” Though she never did. And if we left the door open, she’d ask if we were raised in a barn. Kind of funny since she raised us!
Nice to know our mothers used the same expressions with us. I miss my mom’s colorful speech.
These are interesting expressions! I haven’t heard a lot of them before, although we know the “see a penny pick it up, all that day you’ll have good luck” song, used to sing it a lot as kids but you never see many coins on the ground now, with people using cash less, haha! Or maybe I just notice less!
Hope you had a wonderful weekend 🙂
I think you are right. There are fewer coins everywhere. We are seeing a shortage here in the U.S.