This month, the full moon falls on
Friday the 13th.
Grotesque?
Nah, probably not. Afterall, it's just a myth, don't take seriously!
Despite countless
myths, the full moon does not actually hearten criminals, bring about childbirths
or make people furious, studies show. And even though Friday the 13th delusions may be well rooted,
there's nothing particularly distinct about a full moon falling on this date.
This
Friday's full moon will be the lowermost in the sky this year, though, since it
will happen so near to the summer solstice. You can watch this amazing full
moon rising in a webcast any program such as Live Science
Moon myths
June's
moon touches its fullest at 12:11 a.m. EDT (0411 GMT) on Friday, June 13. Of
course, this means that for people in the Central, Mountain and Pacific time
zones in the United States, this full moon not on Friday the 13th full moon at all. It exactly falls on June 12.
Friday the
13th full moons happen intermittently. The last one was on Aug. 13, 2011. The subsequent
Friday the 13th full moon will be on Aug. 13, 2049.
Even persons who live
in the Eastern time zone should not tension over the convergence of the full
moon with Friday the 13th. Opposing to myth, the full moon does not disturb
human actions or health
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