As The Night Goes By, So Does The Dream

  • Dates
    2025 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Contemporary Issues, Photobooks
  • Locations Switzerland, Ukraine

More than 90 forms of superstition are actively practiced in Weronika's family. Her work uncovers how inherited superstitions silently shape lives, revealing the complex ties between imprints on women’s self-perception, relationships, and heritage.

There are things we inherit without noticing. Passed on from generation to generation. Silently, often lovingly. A look, a silence, a way of crossing the street when a black cat passes or a gentle smile in the mirror before leaving the house. In my family, superstition was never named as such. It was simply the air we breathed, the logic behind small gestures, the quiet codes passed down from one generation to the next. No one explained them, but everyone obeyed.

Only later, in conversations with others, friends, lovers, strangers, I began to trace the outlines of these rules. I discovered how many of them were shaped like warnings. How many were shaped like cages. And how often, they rested on the shoulders of women. This book began with a question I couldn’t stop asking myself: what have I been taught to believe? And what has that belief made of me?

Through images, stories, and fragments of reflection, I navigate the rituals that once gave me a sense of belonging but now reveal themselves as something more complex. Sometimes beautiful, sometimes bruising, but always leaving its mark. As the Night Goes By, So Does the Dream is not an attempt to reject superstition or heritage. It is not about about right or wrong but about all the space in between. It is a walk, a search for what still holds value and what quietly asks to be let go.

Structured in three parts Childhood, Adulthood, and Love Affairs, this book moves through the stages of life where these beliefs first took root, where they were questioned, and where they continue to echo.

In the chapter Childhood, I focus on forms of superstition that had a particularly strong influence on me during my early years. It begins with my 1st birthday and two rituals that were performed on me and the chapter ends with a poem that addresses the burden i experienced as a child that such approaches to inherited belief systems. The second chapter, Adulthood, reveals how I began to question the behaviors modeled for me and the deeply rooted patterns of action – to break through them and gradually let some go. And in the final chapter, Love Affairs, I offer insight into how forms of superstition have shaped and continue to shape my romantic relationships and my self-perception as a women.

This book is not a study in folklore, but a personal archaeology, a way of digging into the soft ground between past and present, culture and control, tradition and autonomy. Superstition, I’ve come to understand, is not only about sprinkling salt over the shoulder or avoiding certain actions. It’s also about silence. About knowing your place. About learning not to speak too loudly, or want too much. And perhaps, more importantly, it is about unlearning all of that.

Because while this book is about superstition, its relevance reaches far beyond it. Each of us is shaped by belief systems we never chose. Inherited ideas, that often go unquestioned. But we do have a choice to look at them closely, to understand their hold on us, and to decide which ones we carry forward and which we finally let go.

© Weronika Welihodska - Image from the As The Night Goes By, So Does The Dream photography project
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'Belief systems' This book began with a question I couldn’t stop asking myself: what have I been taught to believe? And what has that belief made of me?

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Truth' 65. if you sneeze, after saying something, it means, you have told the truth. Or the said will come true.
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'Truth' 65. if you sneeze, after saying something, it means, you have told the truth. Or the said will come true.

© Weronika Welihodska - 'A man is on the way'
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'A man is on the way'

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Love Line'A seed has been planted
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'Love Line'A seed has been planted

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Lost Crown'71. shaving the head of your childon it’s first birthday, will maketheir hair grow stronger.
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'Lost Crown'71. shaving the head of your childon it’s first birthday, will maketheir hair grow stronger.

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Good Luck'27. when clinking glasses, the last person you clink glasses with should always be a man.
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'Good Luck'27. when clinking glasses, the last person you clink glasses with should always be a man.

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Injuries' 36.	You must never show others your injuries on yourself or you might attract them.
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'Injuries' 36. You must never show others your injuries on yourself or you might attract them.

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Rose Cage'
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'Rose Cage'

© Weronika Welihodska - Image from the As The Night Goes By, So Does The Dream photography project
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'Uneven Flowers'61/62. when giving flowers, the number of flowers must always be odd. An even number of flowers brings separation, misfortune and death of the relationship.

© Weronika Welihodska - 76. Never take shells home, they attract bad luck.
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76. Never take shells home, they attract bad luck.

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Wipe them away'47.	If you sweep around an unmarried girl or over her feet, she will never get married.
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'Wipe them away'47. If you sweep around an unmarried girl or over her feet, she will never get married.

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Make a wish'
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'Make a wish'

© Weronika Welihodska - 'Almost'40. never sweep around someone in a full circle. It brings bad luck.
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'Almost'40. never sweep around someone in a full circle. It brings bad luck.

© Weronika Welihodska - Image from the As The Night Goes By, So Does The Dream photography project
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'Miracle Garden'I never got a bouquet of flowersfrom a man I loved. That kind of grace was rationed.Today, we went to the market. You asked me my favorite flower.Violet hydrangeas I said, or anything blue.You nodded,like someone taking notes for a future you have not promised.And I thought One day, I will plant a garden so full of flowers I will lose count.

© Weronika Welihodska - Image from the As The Night Goes By, So Does The Dream photography project
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'3 Generations' In my family, superstition was never named as such. It was simply the air we breathed, the logic behind small gestures, the quiet codes passed down from one generation to the next. No one explained them, but everyone obeyed.

As The Night Goes By, So Does The Dream by Weronika Welihodska

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