In the low light of dusk, when charcoal smoke threads through the doorways of a village and the evening chorus of goats and dogs settles into a steady rhythm, taboos move like an unspoken choreography. In many places people avoid sweeping the compound after nightfall, not out of superstition for its own sake but because doing so is said to chase away blessings or disturb the rest of the spirits that linger near the threshold. Whistling after dark is another caution taught softly to children: the sound is small and bright, but in some neighborhoods it is thought to call attention where attention is not wanted. These practices are not worn as rigid rules so much as a shared language that shapes how households close their day — the creak of a latched door, the careful placement of utensils, the low murmur of a neighbor checking in. Pregnancy and early infancy carry their own delicate set of customs.
In certain families a newborn is not introduced by name until the child has passed through the most vulnerable early days; the delay is a quiet strategy, a way of confusing mischief or jealous spirits that might look for a name to call. The placenta often receives a particular kind of attention — wrapped, carried, and given a place in the earth or a private corner of the homestead — a gesture less about instruction and more about belonging, tying a new life to a particular place. You notice these rituals in the texture of things: the soft folds of cloth, the earth’s cool scent when a small grave is turned, the lullaby hummed by a woman who knows which songs are meant for open ears and which are kept for the night. Respect and restraint show up in other daily exchanges. There are gestures to avoid, ways of pointing and presenting that feel intrusive if misused; shoes often come off without fuss before stepping into certain rooms, not as a rule stamped on every doorstep but as an instinctive courtesy in some households.
Photographs and images can be sensitive — taking a picture at a funeral or snapping faces in the middle of a ceremony may be met with unease because those moments are considered private or charged with presence. Instead of arguing about right and wrong, many conversations around these practices sound like navigation: asking first, stepping lightly, watching to learn which boundaries matter in that place. Even the small, almost private acts carry meaning: hair and nail clippings are seldom tossed casually where they can later be found by anyone, and certain nights are simply unsuitable for cutting or styling because of stories about misdirected fortune. Seeing an owl at dusk, a sudden change in the behavior of livestock, or a strange pattern of day-to-day events can prompt quiet consultation — elders, a neighbor with a reputation for steadiness, someone who knows the right words to ease the worry. These moments are not theatrical; they are woven into how life is read and responded to, a kind of cultural weather that people learn to sense and move within with care.