In Dominican homes, certain quiet practices carry as much weight as spoken advice. Talk of the mal de ojo surfaces the way a familiar scent does: quickly, and with recognition. I’ve watched a grandmother rub a cool egg over a child’s forehead, feeling its slickness between thumb and palm, then crack it into a glass of water and lift it to the light to read the shapes. Small objects—an azabache bead pinned to a shirt, a red ribbon tied to a baby’s wrist—are handled like talismans passed down with stories rather than declarations. Domestic rituals organize ordinary movement.
Brooms are more than cleaning tools; their bristles seem to whisper the rules: don’t sweep after nightfall, and never brush a person’s feet with a broom unless you want to invite long-standing jokes about marriage prospects. Parents will warn a child not to step over someone sleeping on the floor, as if the act might pinch a little growth out of them, and elders will nudge an unmarried niece away from the corner of the table where sitting is said to jinx future weddings. These cautions live in the cadence of household life, shaping gestures as much as etiquette. When things feel out of joint, people turn to hands-on traditions rather than headlines. A visit to a curandero or a respected neighbor for a limpia is intimate and smoky: bundles of ruda or other herbs are snapped and burn with a sharp, green scent, candles pool honeyed wax, and a practiced hand moves in slow, attentive sweeps.
Prayers and music sometimes thread through the work, and small offerings—often a pour of rum or a bit of fruit—are placed on an improvised altar; the whole scene feels like the neighborhood taking a breath together, practical and ritual at once. Outside the house, taboos continue to mark social space. Whistling after dark is discouraged in some streets because it is believed to summon trouble, umbrellas are opened indoors only with a raised eyebrow, and spilled salt is sometimes thrown over a shoulder with a quick laugh and a muttered apology to chance. These gestures are rarely presented as rigid laws; they’re the soft grammar of respect and caution, the kind of inherited behavior that keeps conversations with older relatives easy and keeps certain corners of life predictably tender.