Internet Bingo Superstitions

Online Bingo and Bingo in common is as rife with superstition as all other branches of gambling that revolve around luck. Look around a Bingo lobby and you"ll most likely find a numeral of humans surreptitiously fingering lucky charms, crossing and uncrossing their legs in certain ways and all the more muttering little personal charms under their breath.

Superstition is defined by the dictionary as growth "an irrational belief that an object, action, or circumstance not logically related to a course of events influences its outcome. " These include throwing salt over your left shoulder when you"ve spilt some and never walking under a ladder. Take a closer look at these beliefs and it becomes a bit clearer where they originated from. Salt, for instance, was once cerebration to be a very powerful magical substance fixed sufficiently to ward off various forms of evil. When one takes into invoice that the ancients used vigour to cleanse wounds, preserve meat and even had a rudimentary understanding of its biological importance, it makes aces notion that they attributed supernatural powers to this substance. Furthermore, the tradition of never walking under a ladder, seen by some as common meaning (i.e. it may fall on your head), was originally a way of ensuring no-one disturbs a symbol of the Holy Trinity (the triangle created by the ladder, the wall and the ground).

Sound a bit flimsy? Interestingly enough observation studies conducted in England revealed that an unbelievable 70% of modern-day Britons still refuse to pass under a ladder if there is an alternative route.

In 1984, behavioural psychologist BF Skinner observed a type of superstition amongst the pigeons he was using as check subjects for his experiments concerning operant conditioning. He observed that the pigeons, after being reared on a constant ratio/interval feeding schedule, would routinely flap their wings and do turns in their cage as whether to influence the feeding times. It seems that this behavior had once or twice correlated with food career dispensed and an erroneous connection had been established between their behaviour and the resultant food pellets.

This theory has been hotly disputed but some psychologists much use the theorem in order to decipher the phenomenon of human superstition. It seems that partial reinforcement, i.e. winning a game of Bingo while you were wearing a certain shirt or after you took a different route to the Bingo hall, gives rise to a solution of persistence within some individuals. The person feels that by repeating this action they will arrange the same desirable outcome and continues to believe this whether or not it makes logical sense. Research suggests that the core cognitive wrong lies in the person's notions concerning randomness.

Multifold superstitions are purely personal, but there exists a rare universal gambling beliefs. Particularly widespread notions suggest gamblers should never gamble with their legs crossed, let dogs near the table, always stack their chips neatly, blow on the dice and whenever possible, carry the toenail of a horned toad.

Some beliefs are culturally bound. The Chinese, for instance, put great stock in numbers. Many will avoid sleeping in hotel rooms with the number 58 which, in Cantonese sounds collateral to the term "won"t prosper". Instead they prefer the figure 84, which sounds similar to "prosperous until death". Carmine underwear, prolonged abstinence and entering the casino nailed down the back entrance may very contribute to beneficial luck. Due look out for those pesky nuns - if you spot one while you are on your way to go gambling you"d better button your lip until you clock a four-legged animal.

Yes, there sure are some unusual people in this world. My opinion? To each his own. If you feel that clutching a bunch of dried sage or plaiting your moustache counter-clockwise testament ease you win the online Bingo jackpot, then bang right ahead. Positive thinking makes a world of difference. Just don"t expect me to do the same, as my fortunate pebble will do the trick.

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