
“Everything I touch turns to ash. I share good news, and within days—disaster.” A Dominican man’s chilling confession.
A woman’s voice shakes: “My relationship crumbled hours after I posted about it online.”
A man whispers: “Told my friends about my promotion…suddenly, my bosses turned on me. Coincidence? I don’t think so.”
These aren’t coincidences. They’re victims of the EVIL EYE—the invisible predator stealing joy, success, and love.
"Okay. Let’s put it straight. Evil eyes are malevolent glares that, when someone is jealous of you, they can curse you with an ‘evil glare’ and send bad luck or injury your way.
It’s believed that when an evil eye glares jealously at someone walking, they could possibly bump upon a rock, stumble, and get injured. A man with a good job could lose his job due to evil eyes. A beautiful woman may lose her beauty because she’s been glared at by evil eyes. Also, a pregnant woman could miscarry due to glare from evil eyes. These were a few among many exemplary effects of evil eyes in various cultures.
Originally, the evil eye supernatural belief was first introduced in ancient Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq) and has been passed through many decades and cultures and still exists today.
Cultures that recently believed in the evil eye are the Mediterranean region, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia, South Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America. It’s real or supernatural belief; one may know when it occurred."
There was a publication on “The Wellcome Historical Medical Museum and accessioned” in 1937 that showed a woman in Cairo, reputed to possess the evil eye. Noticed her glare caused bad luck.
Traditional Protections
Some cultures had proposed protection from evil eyes. Like the Eye beads, one of many popular amulets and talismans used to ward off the evil eye.
Another protection is the bracelet charm with a fist and protruding index finger knuckle to protect a baby against the evil eye.
Others like the hamsa charm made to ward off the evil eye.
The Arab Muslims believed that by saying the Arabic phrase “Masha’Allah” (ما شاء الله) (“God has willed it”) alongside a compliment, it prevents the compliment from attracting the evil eye.
In addition to those protections, one should:
➜ STAY SILENT. Your joy? Private. Your pain? Private. Even loved ones can harbor envy.
➜ DIM YOUR LIGHT. If they must know, downplay your treasures. Make your greatest wins seem mundane.
➜ BECOME A GHOST. The less they see, the less they can destroy.
A sage’s bone-chilling warning: “They can’t ruin what they don’t know exists. But every fallen empire, every shattered dream? It began with a boast.”
They’ll hate this truth—because knowledge is power. This is lost wisdom, resurrected by SAGE GAMUT. Follow us NOW before they silence us again.
THE EYES ARE WATCHING… WILL YOU BE THE HUNTER OR THE PREY?