"Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Every day we've got to hold on
'cause if we hold on we could find some new energy"
- Year of the Rat, Badly Drawn Boys
Every day we've got to hold on
'cause if we hold on we could find some new energy"
- Year of the Rat, Badly Drawn Boys
Tomorrow marks the beginning the Chinese' most important holiday, Spring Festival (or Chinese New Year). So, here are some do's and don'ts as you plan your celebrations:
To bring good luck to you and your family, do the following:
- Opening windows and/or doors is considered to bring in the good luck of the new year.
- Switching on the lights for the night is considered good luck to 'scare away' ghosts and spirits of misfortune that may compromise the luck and fortune of the new year.
- Sweets are eaten to ensure the consumer a "sweet" year.
- It is important to have the house completely clean from top to bottom before New Year's Day for good luck in the coming year. (however, as explained below, cleaning the house after New Year's Day is frowned upon)
- Some believe that what happens on the first day of the new year reflects the rest of the year to come. Asians will often gamble at the beginning of the year, hoping to get luck and prosperity.
- Wearing a new pair of shoes that is bought before the new year, because it means to step on the people who gossip about you.
- The night before the new year, bathe yourself in pomelo leaves and some say that you will be healthy for the rest of the new year.
- Buying a pair of shoes is considered bad luck amongst some Chinese. The word "shoes" is a homophone for the word for "rough" in Cantonese, or "evil" in Mandarin.
- Buying a pair of pants is considered bad luck. The word "pants"(kù) is a homophone for the word for "bitter"(kŭ) in Cantonese. (Although some perceive it to be positive, as the word 'pants'(fu) in Cantonese is also a homophone for the word for "wealth".)
- Washing your hair is also considered to be washing away one's own luck (although modern hygienic concerns take precedence over this tradition)

- Sweeping the floor is usually forbidden on the first day, as it will sweep away the good fortune and luck for the new year.
- Talking about death is inappropriate for the first few days of Chinese New Year, as it is considered inauspicious as well.
- Buying books is bad luck because the word for "book" is a homonym to the word "lose".
- Avoid clothes in black and white, as black is a symbol of bad luck, and white is a traditional funeral color.
So, as you enjoy your celebrations on the upcoming Year of the Rat, let me leave you with the wishes of my former Chinese student, Candice --
Hello my best friends:
Spring Festival is coming, and i hope you can have a healthy body and good mind for it. Good luck and keep in touch.

5 comments:
dang and I thought my new pants were gonna bring me good luck this year.
so I have double bad luck..those pants I mentioned were black. dang-it.
i just like the fact that i have an excuse not to clean now that the new year has come. i don't want to sweep away any of my good luck!
I was talking to a girl from China the other day about the year of the pig (I guess that was last year) and how all the babies born in that year were suppossed to be lucky. But then she said that analysts predicted they would have a more difficult time getting into schools and other things because so many were born that it would be really competitive. I didn't think that sounded like a very good fortune. :)
TARA! You are posting again! Here I hadn't been to your blog in forever and then by chance clicked and waiting for me was not one new post, but FIVE! Love you girl, keep posting!
Btw- you're the homophone. Let that haunt you. Heehehe...
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