Why homeowners bury St. Joe
House Keys
By Marcie Geffner, Tuesday, June 9, 2009.He's back. He's buried. He's upside-down. How perfect. Or, alternatively, how weird.
"He" is of course St. Joseph, the patron of carpenters, who may be buried in a front yard near you at this very moment.
No one seems to know how this tradition got started, nor is there much agreement about the ritual itself. But in essence, the idea is that home sellers bury St. Joseph -- in statue form, of course -- in the front yard, say a prayer and, voila, a speedy sale is assured, even if their home has been on the market for months at a price that hasn't been seen in years.
Most of the instructions agree that St. Joe should be buried head first, i.e., upside down, rather than feet first or sideways as in a grave. Whether he should face the street, the for-sale home or the seller's next residence is open to debate.
The ritual is not new, though homeowners' faith in its effectiveness tends to be as cyclical as the housing market itself. When homes sell quickly, St. Joe falls out of favor, and when homes sell slowly, suddenly St. Joe is all the rage. These days, his Q-rating is reportedly on the rise.
Incidentally, St. Joseph is not only the patron saint of carpenters, though that seems the most logical explanation of his association with home sellers. He is also the patron of the Catholic Church itself, fathers, social justice and the dying, according to the Catholic.org Web site.
Surprisingly, some homeowners haven't heard that St. Joseph is the patron of lost causes when it comes to home sales. They've remained blissfully unaware of this tradition, and told of it, they scoff in amazement. For the record, the official Catholic Church doesn't sanction this ritual either.
So why do homeowners persist in this bizarre belief? The answer may be more a matter of superstition than religious faith, says Matt Wallaert, a behavioral psychologist at financial Web site JustThrive.com in New York City. That doesn't necessarily mean St. Joe isn't effective. Rather, he might not work the way people think he does.
"I hesitate to say that a superstition has no effect because it does have an effect: It's just not the effect that is presumed." Wallaert explains. "A superstition can have a placebo effect."
That effect is more in the mind of the seller than the buyer, but that doesn't mean it doesn't work. A buried statue might not compel anyone to buy a house, but it could make the make the seller more likely to accept an offer, Wallaert suggests. ...CONTINUED
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Submitted by Jerzy (George) Szkup on June 9, 2009 - 7:58pm.
George Szkup
www.DestinationTucson.biz
Marcie,
Foe your information - there is a book that covers this subject:
"St.Joseph, My Real Estate Agent" by Stephan J. Binz published by St. Anthony Messenger Press.
Submitted by Marcie Geffner on June 10, 2009 - 7:35am.
Cool. I had no idea St. Joe had been the subject of a book. Thanks for the info!
Marcie Geffner
www.marciegeffner.blogspot.com