Quick question: What will your wardrobe be on New Year’s Eve?Nice dress?Black tie?How about your, ahem, underwear?If you lived in parts of South America, it wouldn’t even be a question. In Sao Paulo, La Paz, and other spots, people don brightly colored underpants to ring in the New Year—red if they’re looking for love, and yellow for money.
No matter what we wear, though, New Year signifies a new beginning. Flipping open a fresh calendar, with its 12 pristine, as-yet-unmarked months, is perhaps one of the most universally hopeful acts we humans perform: finally, a chance to shrug off a year’s worth of worries, conflicts, and mistakes; finally, a chance to start over.
It’s no wonder we all welcome the holiday with such enthusiasm. In the U.S. (and in lots of other countries), the event is celebrated with fireworks and parades, carousing and toasts. Some cultures, though, have more unusual ways of ushering in the New Year.
In many countries, there’s a shared belief that specific actions taken on New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day—or at the stroke of midnight when one becomes the other—can influence the fate of the months ahead. In the Philippines, for example, wearing polka dots and eating round fruits is supposed to ensure a prosperous new year; in Spain, wolfing down handfuls of grapes as the clock strikes 12 is said to have the same effect.
In other countries, New Year’s customs are about driving away the bad spirits of the past year, so that the new one can arrive unsullied and uncorrupted. The purifying power of fire is often used in such ceremonies: during the Scottish festival of Hogmanay, for instance, parades of village men swing giant blazing fireballs over their heads as they march through the streets.
In Panama, effigies of popular celebrities and political figures—called muñecos—are burned on bonfires. Other bad-spirit-banishing customs are less fiery and more fun-like the Danish tradition of jumping off chairs at midnight (which gives new meaning to the term “leap year”).
No matter how odd they may seem to us, though, these customs share an optimism that’s hard not to appreciate. Out with the old, in with the new!
How about a new tradition??Perhaps wearing our clothes backwards on New year's eve to say goodbye to the old year. Or, at the stroke of midnight we could shed all our clothes, wherever we are, to symbolize ushering out the old year and don only fruit and flowers in strategic areas to represent a fruitful new year. I got a million of em.
Happy New year
ReplyDeleteI had on a pair of faded jeans and an old sweat-shirt to bring the New year in.
My man and I seen the year in with a glass of wine and a kiss/hug.
A quiet evening, we prayed this will be a better year and people will be more kind to each other.
Hope you had a nice evening and know the New Year have a lot of good things in store for us.
Tonight you can have a nice quiet date night with the "Rock", and enjoy your tubing down the hill or your outing with Dale and Barb, which ever you decide to do, I know it will be fun.
Have a good time and I will see you around the beeen.......NEE
[giggles] I forgot today was Friday. So that means you have tonight to rest for your date night on Saturday.
ReplyDeleteYou can let him poke you a little tonight so he will know what he's getting tomorrow night.
I will not be on line tonight, we have a party to attend, hope I can sneak out early. Sometime they are so boring, but I do have fun laughing at the drunks and the next day they pretrnd they wasn't the party clowns. Hahaha
Later gator.....NEE
Jeannie
ReplyDeleteDid you bring in the year with good tiding with the hope that the good feeling continues all year?
Had a great time, we stayed home as usual you can't go out and celebrate anymore there's always people acting fools and starting trouble .
We are getting the barn ready to have a hoe down it's not realy a barn anymore we fixed it up to have parties in.
Nee says you have a busy weekend
I know you will enjoy next week I don't know which day maybe tuesday or wednesday not sure Nee will be out and she asked me to say hello to you so let me know if you thinks it's o.k.
Eat drink be merry but most of all be safe.
Nan