The Spirit in the Glass is Sweden’s version
of a Ouija Board. Teenagers mostly participate in this activity. A large piece
of paper or cardboard is used as the surface. A glass is used as a template to draw circles, within these circles are placed the letters of the alphabet and
the numbers 0-9. The words: Yes, No, I Don’t Know, Start and Finish are written
as well.
This glass is then used as the plancette. Before starting this glass must be warmed
up. The teens do this by rubbing it between their hands, breathing on it, or
warming it with a candle that has been lit.
It is warned that this
activity should never be done in a room that has mirrors for the spirit can
appear within this mirror--which will upset it. This spirit then will shatter the mirror into pieces.
The teens place The Spirit in the Glass in a dark room with only candles for light. The young participants
after warming the glass take turns asking a question by placing the open rim of
the glass next to their mouths and whispering their question. It is then placed
open rim down on the paper.
The participants place their fingers on
the bottom of the glass as the answer is spelled out. If no answer is given the glass usually just tips over.
There are strict rules as to what question can and cannot be asked. For instance, the participant should
never ask, “When will I die?” or “Can I speak to the devil?”
One legend is told about a
young man who broke one of these rules. He asked when he would die--the glass
moved to the number “4” and then to the number “0”--so 40 years old. Eerily years later to the day he died when he committed suicide by hanging himself at the age of 40.
Black Madame, Come Out!
Black Madame is the Swedish
version of “Bloody Mary.” But “Swedish children are more dismissive of spirits”
so their version of this game is not as scary.
The traditional game involves
Black Madame or in Swedish Svarta Madame appearing
after a child stands in front of a mirror and states 12 times “I don’t believe
in you, Black Madame.”
Yet another version involves them
chanting into a bathroom mirror “Black Madame, Black Madame, daughter of the
devil show yourself.” As they chant this phrase they splash water on the
mirror.
This chanting is most often
done on a “dare” just like Bloody Mary.
If Black Madame appears in the mirror it is said she has green hair, red teeth and luminous yellow eyes.
Other names for her include:
Bloody Black Madame, White Madame, Dirty Madame and Creepy Madame. In the 1970s
some Swedish children adopted the European names of “Mary” and “Black Molly”--but
the term Svarta Madame is still used widely in Sweden.
This game actually originated
in Europe centuries before the European, Swedish or American children’s
versions. It was a fortune-telling game--which involved “mirror gazing.”
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