According to Project Britain's British Life and Culture it is lucky to touch wood:
Lucky to touch wood. We touch; knock on wood, to make something come true.
Where does this superstition come from?
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Sign up to join this communityAccording to Project Britain's British Life and Culture it is lucky to touch wood:
Lucky to touch wood. We touch; knock on wood, to make something come true.
Where does this superstition come from?
Sailors in the 17th century would sometimes knock with their hands or tools on the wooden hull of their ship to listen for woodworm or rot, hearing a solid sound coming from wood in the hull would mean it was good to go (or ship shape). In fact this was a practice during the age of sail.
When sailors were conversing with one another and the subject of good luck came up the sailors would sometimes tell one another that they needed to touch or knock wood (implying the ship ofcourse).
This good luck could also be a reference to the fact they made the journey this far on good terms, and where hoping that their ship would finish its voyage fast and that their ship's hull would stay whole and strong.
In my country (the Netherlands) this superstition is also deeply embedded into our culture (among a lot of other maritime superstitions) and we call it "afkloppen".
Afkloppen of aftikken is een vorm van volksgeloof en een ritueel waarbij oorspronkelijk op ongeverfd hout wordt getikt, om daardoor mogelijk ongeluk af te wenden, wanneer men zich verheugt over genoten geluk of wanneer iets geprezen wordt. dutch wiki on "afkloppen"'Afkloppen, aftikken', in: Folkloristisch Woordenboek van Nederland en Vlaams België/ K. ter Laan, 1949, pp. 7.
Translated this loosely means :
Afkloppen or aftikken is a form of folklore and a ritual which originally meant that you needed to knock or tap on a piece of unpainted wood to ward off bad luck, especially when you already had a string of good luck and would like that good luck to continue. dutch wiki on "afkloppen"'Afkloppen, aftikken', in: Folkloristisch Woordenboek van Nederland en Vlaams België/ K. ter Laan, 1949, pp. 7.
At first I thought this was mostly because my country has a deep naval tradition (along with a reasonable amount of European countries) spanning back some centuries.
Looking further I found that most countries in Europe (and after looking at Wikipedia countries all over the world) have some sort of superstition/ritual implying that the knocking on or touching of wood seems to be a way of bringing good luck or to not "tempt fate"(jinx).
Wikipedia says that its rooted in German folklore but they are missing the citations needed to further investigate this claim. There is probably someone on this site that might be able to answer this.
If anyone has some sources I would be happy to investigate this further.
My anthropology professor linked it back to the belief that there were spirits, of whatever kind, living in trees and wood, and in order to keep them from hearing what you were saying and spoiling things when they were going well, you should knock on wood as you were speaking.