In Côte d’Ivoire, taboos and superstitions weave through daily rhythms in ways that often feel more practical than mystical. In a market at dawn, the clipped admonishments of elders can carry the same weight as a law: don’t whistle after dark, don’t set a broom across a doorway, don’t point at a newborn with a bare finger. These cautions are spoken softly and repeated — the crackle of charcoal, the smell of frying plantains, the thump of cartons being loaded — so they become as familiar as the sound of the neighborhood. There is a sense that these small prohibitions tune bodies and voices to the community’s comfort, a shared etiquette that tells people how to move through each other’s lives without raising invisible trouble. When the subject turns to the dead, the air in a house often changes in an almost sensible way: conversations slow, fabrics are adjusted, favorite plates might be set aside.
For many families there are clear practices around mourning and remembrance — hours of drumming at the grave, quiet evenings for visitors who come to pour small offerings, and an unmistakable hush around certain objects until rites are complete. Ancestors are treated as present neighbors rather than abstract history; some households keep carved figures or inscribed cloths in alcoves, and the scent of smoke from libations or incense marks those moments when the boundary between past and present feels thinest. Naming and beginnings carry their own careful rules. A child’s arrival often brings a flurry of advice: about when a name should be spoken aloud, which relatives ought to be consulted first, or which rituals will invite protection. In some communities twins are greeted with particular attention and ceremonies, and in others there are discreet customs meant to ward off envy or bad luck without fanfare.
These practices are rarely loudly proclaimed; they’re woven into hospitality and the textures of family life — the warmth of a grandmother’s hands adjusting a wrapper, the whisper of instructions passed from mother to sister — and they help people negotiate vulnerability with ritualized care. On ordinary days, superstition shows up in errands and meals as small, sensible acts. A vendor might refuse to sweep after sunset, a friend might refuse an offered shoe placed on a chair, and a photographer will often ask before lifting a camera near a shrine. Market stalls with bundles of herbs and strings of colored beads are not only sights and smells but also a reminder that unseen safeguards are for sale or for lending — tokens that people tie to wrists, plant roots, or doorframes to mark intentions. These customs don’t always make the headlines, but they steady social life: an often-quiet moral map that tells people where to tread lightly, where to speak, and when to observe a respectful silence.