In an Iraqi living room the language of caution is as everyday as the clink of tea glasses. Compliments are often folded into a quick protective phrase — “mashallah” — as if praise needs a polite buffer, and when someone wants to steer clear of envy a faint spitting sound or an emphatic “astaghfirullah” might follow. The idea of the al-ayn, or evil eye, threads through casual conversation: a neighbor’s praise for a child, a friend admiring a new piece of furniture, even a workplace success can be met with soft gestures meant to deflect unseen attention. These responses are ordinary, domestic rituals rather than theatrical displays; they sit alongside the steam of cardamom coffee and the rustle of a patterned rug without demanding much explanation. Objects carry meaning in ways outsiders notice quickly.
Small blue beads, the palm-shaped khamsa, bits of ribbon tied to prams or hooks by the door — they hang where people pass and catch the light, half ornament and half promise. For new arrivals, many households will add a dab of kohl near a baby’s temple or place a charm over a crib, acts described in a calm voice as “just in case. ” A faint curl of incense or oud drifting through a doorway can be part of daily scent-scape and also a quiet gesture of protection, nothing ostentatious, simply familiar and composed. There are everyday taboos that govern how to move through a home and a conversation. Shoes left askew on a porch, or stepping over someone who is seated on the floor, can be taken as signs of disrespect; bread dropped on the floor is handled with a particular awkwardness because bread often carries practical and symbolic weight.
Visiting without offering a small courtesy — a cup of tea, a piece of date, a moment of attention to an elder — can feel brusque. Questions about private matters, like a woman’s age or a young person’s engagement prospects, are often avoided out of deference; people steer conversations toward neutral subjects rather than press for answers. When households mark transitions — moving into a new flat, celebrating a birth, or simply welcoming the first guests after a long absence — the gestures are modest and sensory: the scrape of a broom at the threshold, a knot tied on a hanging, the warm, slightly bitter breath of fresh coffee poured into small cups. These practices are less about strict rules than about preserving a sense of balance and connection; they’re audible in the small phrases people use, visible in the tiny talismans on a keyring, and felt in the shared rhythm of everyday courtesy.