Traditional shipbuilding involved placing a gold coin under the mast step (the base socket where the mast sits) before raising the mast. This coin, typically of high value and sometimes minted in the vessel’s launch year, was believed to ensure the ship’s safety, structural integrity, and good fortune. The presence of the coin was meant to bind the vessel spiritually to the prosperity of its first journey, acting as both a physical charm and a metaphysical talisman. Shipwrights treated this step with great reverence, sometimes holding short ceremonies to bless the ship and its future crews. The practice was considered so important that older ships being refitted would carefully preserve and replace the original mast coin even when installing new timbers.

A baby’s future career or fate is predicted by the first object they select during a ceremonial setup.
In several Asian and Eastern European cultures, a traditional ceremony is held for babies usually around their first birthday. Known