CURE FOR WORRY AND
THE EVIL EYE
The Potti Team Blog
It is a scene from
one of my all-time favorite novels - they are British, and run into each other
on holiday. He is driving a new Porsche,
of which he is obviously quite fond. He
tells her in the marketplace that he is going to buy an evil eye for his
love. Later, he presents the evil eye to
her. "I thought you were buying it
for your car," she replies.
"I said,"
he tells her, "that I was buying it for my love."
I read it in high
school, and it was the first reference to the evil eye that I had encountered
(other than that look my mom gave us as a warning that we needed to cease
something immediately!). Since then I
have seen numerous beads and charms referred to as such, but I have not known
much about their meaning, or their use.
PANOS AND ANGIE
Since we have a
Greek Etsy shop on the Potti Team that specializes in evil eyes, and komboloi
and worry beads, and also has kind shop owners willing to indulge my curiosity,
I was able to ask questions about which I have wondered for years, and also some that
have surfaced more recently.
Panos
and Angie are the Owners of SunnyBeadsByTheSea in Athens, Greece. Panos began making worry beads as a hobby,
and gave them as gifts to friends. His friends then requested that he make
more, so they could give them to their friends.
![]() |
| SunnybeadsByTheSea |
Panos provided me
with answers to numerous questions, information about worry beads and evil
eyes, and helpful sources that I will list for you at the end of this article
as well.
So what did I
learn?
THE EVIL EYE
The evil eye is a
term for a bead or charm, or for the ill from which it protects. This ill can cover a number of things from a
feeling of malaise, sometimes accompanied by a fever, to bad luck. One article stated that it was a way to
explain sickness before germs were understood, but in general, it seems to be
taken more seriously than something that has been explained away by germs.
Babies and children
are often given evil eye jewelry because of this vulnerability. Other people wear evil eyes as well. They are also used on cars and homes -
anything that could theoretically be cursed.
I get the impression
that giving someone an evil eye can be a way to express that you care about
that person and do not want anything bad to happen to him or her. That is a universal feeling, and this is the Greek way of expressing it.
(Should
you wish to express your affection to someone in this manner, SunnyBeadsByTheSea has a nice selection, many of
them sterling at very reasonable prices!)
People of an unusual
appearance, such as the deformed, were once credited with the ability to cast
the evil eye. Blue eyes are not so
prevalent in Greece, and are even now considered suspect compared the
more common brown eyes. It is highly likely that this is the reason most evil eye charms or beads are blue, that they could effectively ward off the stare of the evil blue eye.
WORRY BEADS
Komboloi and worry
beads are the same thing - a fact that simplified some of my questions.
The first komboloi
in Greece are believed to have been strings of wool knots used to keep track of
prayers by the monks of Mt. Athos in the middle ages. In modern times they have no religious
significance for Greeks.
They are useful,
however, to still restlessness, and are used to help stop smoking, to lose
weight (to keep from eating), to calm stress, and just for the pleasure of
feeling them with your fingers.
There are komboloi
used solely as decoration, and Panos included a photo of a home komboloi that
is used in this manner. You can see that
it is absolutely lovely!
Worry beads, or
komboloi, can be valued for the substances they are made of, for the
sentimental value of their previous owner(s), or as a very personal object with
which one has bonded. Panos shared a
photo of the komboloi that belonged to
his grandfather, probably made around the 1920s. This has special significance in his family,
as would a family memento from the 1920s to any of us!
There
are two ways to use komboloi or worry beads.
One of them involves a very deliberate system of running the beads
through one's fingers (in a precise manner); the other involves dividing the
beads in half at a particular point, holding the connecting threads between
your index and middle fingers, and swinging half of the beads over your hand to
make a clicking sound against the beads that are there, then manipulating the
threads so that you can swing the other half up and around to click against the
second set. You then repeat. This site
illustrates very simple methods for both ways of using your beads: www.wikihow.com/Use-Worry-Beads .
Worry beads are
sometimes offered as gifts to the guests at a wedding. Bomboniere are special gifts for guests who
attend events like a baptism or wedding.
Sometimes komboloi are used to decorate these.
At one time worry
beads were used in public only by men.
That has changed, and women using komboloi are accepted in all but rural
settings.
It was in another
novel I read, that a British spy, incognito, sent
SOS by the clicking of his beads in Morse code.
My father, who has been into ham radio (and thus Morse code) since his
teens, says that is impossible, because some clicks need to be longer than
others. This has been a source of
contention between my parents for years. Okay, my father doesn't really know
anything about it, but my mom disagrees with him. (That just doesn't have the same
punch!!) My mom thinks (and I do too)
that it would be possible to slide the beads together, thus producing a longer
sound, in contrast to the clicking.
I think, rather than troubling Panos with any more questions,
I need to just buy a komboloi and experiment myself!
~ Michele Davidson
I need to just buy a komboloi and experiment myself!
~ Michele Davidson







.jpg)
Wow... Another great post full of information that I would have never known if it wasn't for your curiosity... Thank you for sharing this information... :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jesse! That is one thing that I am - curious! I thoroughly enjoyed doing it!
ReplyDeleteInteresting ~ Never Knew!
ReplyDeleteThanks Debra, I find it very interesting too!
DeleteLearn something new all the time in this Blog. Great info Michele! Love all the creativity in these shops with their beads.
ReplyDeleteThanks Joyce - I love the learning and the creativity too!
DeleteVery informative. You live and learn. I have often seen people wear these pendants and wondered what it meant. Thanks for sharing Michele for the next time I see one of these I will know. Another great blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks Caryl - some people do wear it merely as a fashion, but it is fun to imagine that they all have someone who wanted them kept safe.
DeleteWonderful post, well written and informative! Thank you SO much for featuring our items!
ReplyDeleteThank you for making it so easy and fun! I appreciate all of the help - very much!!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, so many tidbits I did not know about! Well done.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Char! It's wonderful for us to learn about each other. :)
ReplyDeleteI was wondering why someone would want an evil eye item. Thanks for doing the research for us.
ReplyDeleteThanks Laraine! I knew so littlewhen I began - I hoped this would be helpful to others too! (I have to give Panos credit for a lot of the research. :)
DeleteI never knew that. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks Debbie! It's pretty cool to learn about!!
DeleteWow, I never knew! Very interesting and beautiful work! Wonderful and informative blog!
ReplyDeleteThanks Rachel! I agree - their shop items are so beautiful!! Great material to work with!!
DeleteThank you MIchele - I had no idea about any of this but did wonder. Wonderful write-up and so informative -
ReplyDeleteThank you Vallee! I should know you would wonder too~ :)
Delete