🦴 Feel it in one’s bones, to
Feel it in one’s bones, to - To anticipate something; to have a premonition or warning of a coming event. The expression appeared in Shakespeare’s Timon of Athens, in which the Third Lord responds to the statement that Timon is mad, “I feel ’t upon my bones” (3.6). The saying, which has been a cliché for a hundred years or so, most likely alludes to the alleged ability of those with old bone fractures and/or arthritis to forecast a change in weather (usually rain) based on their aching bones.
Related Terms & Similar Expressions:
- Sixth sense: An ability to know something without using the usual five senses; intuition.
- Gut feeling: An instinctive or intuitive feeling, often without logical basis.
- Premonition: A strong feeling that something is about to happen, especially something unpleasant.
Synonyms:
- Hunch
- Intuition
- Foreboding
Antonyms:
- Ignorance
- Unawareness
Fun Fact:
The idea may partly come from the folklore that changes in air pressure, preceding bad weather like rain, affect old bone fractures and arthritic joints, causing aches that serve as a natural weather prediction system.
Good Old Belly Laugh: 🤣
“I’ve got such old bones that I could give the Weather Channel a run for their money!”
Literary Nugget 📚:
Suggested Literature: Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
"‘I shall be better,’ she returned, becoming painful again, in perpetuity—would feel it in her bones." - This classic tale is filled with foreboding and emotional depth that aligns perfectly with the concept of feeling something deeply.
Musical Muse🎵:
Song Suggestion: “I Got a Feeling” by The Black Eyed Peas
Inspirational Thought 🌟
“Always trust those feelings deep in your bones—they’re often the whispers of your soul, guiding you.”
Stay heart-connected and bonafide! ❤️🦴
Farewell Thought: Always trust the feelings that bubble up from the deepest wells of your bones—they align you with the unseen threads of the universe. 🌌
~ A. Skeletone, 2023