Light-hearted trivia but do you relate? Sneezing.....

Anyone else get mildly irritated when people say "Bless you!" after you sneeze?

For me, it's "Great! Not only was I interrupted by having to sneeze, now you've added the obligation to say 'Thank you' to my troubles!". Also, can we drop the ritualised superstition given that the year starts with a 20?

Parents
  • the "bless you" stems from the middle ages belief that when you sneezed you were vunerable to the devil entering you and  as with many sayings its just become common although to be honest i haven't heard it said in a long time since modern society is falling out of favour with religion 

  • Really? I thought the obligation to say ‘bless you’ when someone sneezes started during the plague when if someone sneezed they probably had caught the plague so you said ‘bless you’ to them as they were going to die shortly. 

Reply
  • Really? I thought the obligation to say ‘bless you’ when someone sneezes started during the plague when if someone sneezed they probably had caught the plague so you said ‘bless you’ to them as they were going to die shortly. 

Children
  • indeed that nursery ryhme was written over a hundred years or so after the plague plus the second part makes no sense to the plague

    Cows in the meadows
    Eating buttercups
    A-tishoo! A-tishoo!
    We all jump up.

  • There was a story that that was the case but it was apparently proved untrue. 

  • The nursery rhyme relates to the habit that decent folk were repulsed by the smell and so carried a "pocket full of poseys wrapped in a tissue ( or handkerchief tissue most likely used as its easier to put in to verse ) although most likely had nothing whatsoever to do with the plague at all... and neither of us made mention of the rats as everyone knows it was the fleas that rats carried that caused the spread
  • I've heard this too. Thought it was such an innocent game we played as children and then discovered we were singing about people dropping down dead.

    I wonder whether it really originated from there or whether that is an extremely well spread rumour, as said above, the sneezing doesn't really fit in as being associated with the plague.

  • Apparently thats where the kids game ring a ring o roses a pocket full of posies A-tishoo A-tishoo we all fall down, comes from as well durring the time of the plague.

  • far from it kitsun you quite rightly correct me to say it wasn't pnuemonic was incorrect what i meant was sneezing wasn't a side effect associated with the plague definitely not your bad more a case of we were neither wrong nor right but somewhere in between

  • To be fair actually thinking about it (rather than relying on myths) the bacteria that causes the plague, Yersinia Pestis causes 3 types of plague, bubonic; septicaemic and pneumonic, decided by the bacteria’s mode of entry to the body. While the pneumonic version would definitely have caused coughing it probably wouldn’t have caused sneezing so you were probably right about the origins of the term ‘bless you’. My bad!

  • We may never know it’s exact origin due to the time lapse but somewhere in the Middle Ages sounds good.

  • you could be right its hard to know for sure after so long though im pretty sure i read that in a history book plus the bubonic plague wasn't really pnuemonic it was more of a fever sepsis vomitous kind of disease so coughing wasn't really a big part of it generally