Stevie's song Superstition is about how it's wrong to believe in things you don't understand. He's expressing that superstition is not a good thing to believe in.
No. Although this is part of a very old superstition, it does not happen.A performer might only do so metaphorically, similar in a way to the idiom selling out.
It is believed that if a bird flys in your home someone in your family will die
Stevie Wonder"Superstition" (song), a 1972 song by Stevie Wonder"Superstitious" (song), a 1988 song by EuropeSuperstition (album), a 1991 album by Siouxsie & the Banshees
superstition by Stevie wonder
I've heard of a superstition that mermaids are real and that they kill marine animals for food.
No. This is superstition and not real.
Realism is what is 100% real in life. Superstition is believing in something without knowledge or reason.
You can wear whatever you want. Superstition is not real.
No. This is superstition and not real.
The idea that a curse can gather in a place where horrible things happened is probably an authentic Japanese superstition. However it is no more "real" than a voodoo doll or a gypsy curse, or any other superstition from any other culture.
Yes it is. _++ The Myth is real - ie it is an old superstition that forms the basis of a lot of fantasy stories. The creatures themselves are NOT real!
The idea that a curse can gather in a place where horrible things happened is probably an authentic Japanese superstition. However it is no more "real" than a voodoo doll or a gypsy curse, or any other superstition from any other culture. And The Grudge movies are entirely fictional. Kayako and her family were not real people.
It's a superstition/belief some people have. No one knows for sure if it's right
Succinctly, no. Vampires are creations of paranoia, fear, superstition, and myth.
it depends what the superstition is, superstition itself is a feeling, something of the mind.
Karma is not considered superstition, because it is considered real by many believers. Instead of just a simple belief, it is regarded as a law. What goes around, comes around, whether in this life or another, in one form or another.