Evening in a Sierra Leonean compound has a softness to it that seems to make old rules louder. Smoke from cooking fires hangs low, the song of crickets threads through conversation, and certain corners are left quieter than others as if out of habit. In many homes a small bowl, a sprig of kola, or a little spill of palm wine is left at a threshold or beneath a mango tree—less a show than a steady, private acknowledgment of what came before. People move around these places with a practiced lightness: a footstep avoided, a door left ajar, gestures that make sense in context but sound like superstition when described bluntly. Those small courtesies are part etiquette, part conversation with neighbours and ancestors, and they keep household life moving with minimal bumping against what the past still expects. Beyond the compounds, secret societies cast a patient, watchful influence on rhythm and timing.
The men's and women's associations that exist in various regions mark transitions with drums, masks and seasons of seclusion, and their rules create pockets of silence and taboo that are respected across generations. Children learn early to notice which paths should be avoided at certain times and to stand respectfully to the side when elders recount a story that must not be interrupted. Masks and carved figures are kept tucked away until the right moment; when they emerge, a hush settles that is as much about reverence as it is about ritual. People will speak carefully about these groups—there is pride, curiosity, awkwardness—because they are woven into local senses of identity and propriety. Charms and what outsiders call “juju” are woven into daily life in unobtrusive ways. A worn cloth tied to a hat, a seed strung on a bracelet, an old woman’s whispered advice—these are practical precautions for uncertain things like travel, harvests, or new beginnings.
Warnings about whistling after dark, stepping over a child’s head, or carrying a load in a certain manner are often offered with the same tone used to warn about potholes: neither hysterical nor dismissive, just useful. When misfortune happens, explanations tend to mix the visible and the unseen; household conversations might move from lamentation to consultation with a trusted elder or herbalist, and then back to the tasks of the day. In towns and cities, these older touchstones adapt rather than vanish. A young person commuting to work may still stop briefly at a roadside shrine, or elders may advise a family to postpone a celebration until the right moon. Faiths brought from different places sit alongside these customs without always extinguishing them; sometimes they blend, sometimes they tangle, and sometimes they are politely compartmentalised. What remains striking is how these taboos and superstitions are practiced: not as spectacle, but as quiet rules for negotiating risk, respect and connection—small customs that shape who sits where, when a drum will sound, and how one steps into the uncertain spaces of everyday life.