Myths, Masala, and Maybe...Science?

 

Myths, Masala, and Maybe...Science?

“Don’t go out during an eclipse!”
“Don’t sleep with your head facing north!”
“Don’t cut your nails after sunset!”
Sounds like your grandma, right? But here’s the twist—some of these superstitions may have actual science hiding beneath all the drama.

Take eclipses, for example. Sure, they were once seen as bad omens, but traditional wisdom told pregnant women to stay indoors—not because of demons in the sky, but maybe to avoid radiation exposure or accidents in low visibility. Not exactly magic—more like early health hacks.




And sleeping with your head facing north? Turns out, Earth’s magnetic field might interfere with blood flow, especially in iron-rich blood. Coincidence? Or did ancient Indians figure it out without Wi-Fi and Google?

Even the nail-cutting rule? Before electricity, cutting nails after sunset = bad lighting = higher chances of injury or infection. Simple logic.

So no, not every myth is just superstition. Sometimes, it’s just old-school science in a sari—wrapped in storytelling to make it stick.

Comments

  1. Quite informative and entertaining

    ReplyDelete
  2. Now now...I thought there was possibility of chorioretinitis during eclipse..thats why we dont go outside or use sunglasses to see the sun?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Loved how you mixed tradition with science.

    ReplyDelete

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