Showing posts with label chinese new year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chinese new year. Show all posts

Sunday, February 10, 2013

New Moon In Aquarius: Chinese (and Korean) New Year! Year Of The Snake

New Beginnings

Happy New Year Y'all! Enter into the year of the snake, a year said to bring slow progress... So, keeping in mind with that, understand why this post is so late and not even anything to do with this holiday, but pertinent nonetheless, because it's chock full of info that can aid in your successes or at the least, kill time in an entertaining fashion... Link to my features for VD Day (VD, as in venereal disease day)...and a HAPPINESS BONUS: The cutest message ever from the cutest boy ever!!!!! Warning: It will warm even the blackest of hearts.


At The Frisky, I have a Quick Seduction Guide Per Sign:
http://www.thefrisky.com/2013-02-12/how-to-woo-every-sign-in-the-zodiac-for-a-star-studded-valentines-day/

...And at Astrology.com I have a few fun things happening:
A Celebrity Slideshow of Fantasy Valentines:
http://www.astrology.com/dream-valentines-hollywoods-hottest/2-b-521800

How Each Sign Says, "I love you." http://www.astrology.com/how-say-i-love-you-stars-and-celebs/2-d-d-521923

...and which sign will have the best Valentine's: http://www.astrology.com/which-stars-will-have-most-romantic-valentine-s-day/2-d-d-521804

Monday, January 23, 2012

New Moon In Aquarius/Chinese New Year!

Happy Year of the Yang Water Dragon! Chinese New Year 4709!


Happy New Year Y'all, it's the year of the black water dragon, which means time to reset your goals and start off again. As for what your Chinese zodiac animal is and what this year brings, click here: http://www.almasryalyoum.com/en/node/614791

As for making the most of this year, superstitions to avoid on this day for a happy year, according to About.com:

1. Dirty Doings
Put your feet up and relax. Certainly the most enjoyable of the Chinese New Year superstitions, sweeping and cleaning is strictly forbidden. The Chinese believe cleaning means you'll sweep all of your good luck out the front door.


2. Time to Come Clean
Before you can enjoy number two, you need to give the house a full spring clean, before putting cleaning tools in the cupboard on New Year's Eve.

3. Read Between the Lines

Be sure to stock up on reading materials before Chinese New Year, as Hong Kong's bookshops will be padlocked tight. In Cantonese, book is a homonym for 'lose'.

4. Choppy Waters

Make sure you avoid rough seas in the new year by not buying shoes over the holiday period. In Cantonese, shoes are a homonym for 'rough'.


5. Balance the Books

If you're in debt, it's time to dip into your pockets and pay people off. The Chinese believe that if you start the new year in the red, you'll finish it the same way.


6. Ghostly Conversations

Caught round a campfire over the holiday period? No ghost stories. Tales of death, dying and ghosts is considered supremely inauspicious, especially during Chinese New Year.

7. Lady in Red

Chinese New Year is packed with colors, and while all the colors of the rainbow bring good luck, it's the color red that is considered the ultimate luck bringer.

8. Sweet Year

Hong Kongers have a sweet touch at the best of times, but Chinese New Year offers the perfect chance to raid the sweet shop, as eating candies is said to deliver a sweeter year.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

New Moon in Aquarius

The future now.

Today is the eve of Chinese New Year, launching the year of the Metal Rabbit, 4708! This means a new cycle of luck that is all about diplomacy, intellect and graciousness in victory is about to begin!


...So, to make the most of it, here are a few ancient Chinese superstitions to follow and ensure your upcoming year will wind up as ideal as possible. Do these things today...or as soon as you can...Ideally done on the first day or eve of, but since Chinese New Year festivities last as long as two-weeks, as it starts on a new moon and ends at the next full moon, procrastinators still wanting to score come luck can do the following:

  • Sweep all the dirt out of your home to symbolically clear out the preceding year's negativity.
  • Wear red on New Years to ward off evil.
  • Wear a new outfit to symbolize a new beginning and color-code your look to call upon what you want. Red for love. Green for money. Blue for peace. Yellow for happiness. Orange for success. Purple for spirituality. Avoid white, it symbolizes death.
  • Eat double of everything this day, to ensure your New Year is bountiful. (Do it for the entire two-weeks if necessary. After all, there's nothing wrong being safe than sorry....Although realize this isn't a Chinese tradition, just one I'm implementing.)
  • Put blooming flowers or new plants in your home for longevity.
  • Avoid distress on New Year's, as it's a day to spend setting the pace for your upcoming year. To set it up properly, only do things you love...i.e. sleep in, eat what you love, buy whatever, hang with people you enjoy, etc....and if you're Asian, do all these things twice as much!

Saturday, February 13, 2010

New Moon in Aquarius & Chinese New Year 4707, The Year of The Metal Tiger (Feb. 14)

Give way to new traditions!

Chinese New Year is my favorite time of the year in my hood, as the whole place goes nuts with sights and sounds that is so fun and festively exciting that it totally makes up for all the crap I put up the rest of the year living down here (AKA the smells, the excessive road kill, the third world conditions (like dead phone service after rainstorms, etc.).

During CNY, I love waking up to the drumming, like I'm in the jungle; the massive amounts of confetti flying in the air; the lion dancing; the hordes of people I can watch, but not have to subject myself to and of course, the best part is that it's all about superstitions, and recalibrating yourself with symbolic gestures to ensure a better future. I totally love all that, am a total sucker for it and also, I grew up with it, so I am use to it.

However, since I moved down to Chinatown, I wanted to make the holiday my own. So I created a few new traditions to ensure my life keeps going with more good than bad. These rituals include throwing confetti and whatever else that won't kill anyone out my window and off my fire escape (there is no reason CNY can't be C-town's Mardi Gras); always color coding the food and drinks of the day, like dying the dumplings blue (peace) or red (love); give out stuffed red envelopes with candy and fortunes, with a few extra lucky ones with coins that can win someone fabulous prizes. (Prizes from the past include the punching Yasser Arafat hand puppet, the boobie stress balls and a stick of 'Macho' deodorant--and yes, all local finds) ...and always have the day be a collective effort, as in everyone joining in must contribute something in a color that represents something they want more of in the new year, (like yellow for success, bananas; green for money, spinach, etc.)...but most importantly, it's having the best time possible for as long as possible....and while living in the heart of it all, sometimes that meant 12+ hour parties in my compact apartment, with karaoke sometimes being involved and decadence always being involved.

One of my favorite CNY moments was during the Year of the Rat. While I was doing party prep, I kept going back and forth to look at lion dances from my window. The day just started, but the streets were packed and people were going nuts shooting off tons of confetti rockets into the air (pre-recession). That year there were surprises in the tubes, fortunes written on big fat red ribbons and some attached to parachutes. I had just got to the window, when I saw a lucky parachute coming down from the sky just out of reach. As in slow-mo, I stretched out of my window to just be able to grab it and as I did, the crowd down below broke out in a LOUD roaring cheer. They were all watching my 3-second plight. The wave of energy and excitement from 4 floors down that shot up was amazing! I waved down after, like Evita — a moment of celebrity I’ll never forget!

..but atlas, the good times are coming to an end, as I'm moving out at the end of the month and will no longer have this access just outside my door....or the other perks of my address, like living next to a barber shop called MEI DICK, and when giving directions, being able to say, "If you've gone past MEI DICK, you've gone too far."

...but whatever, got to keep on keeping on and its been a fab 7 years...but as I go into the home stretch of time over here, hoorah for it going out with another bang!

Scenes from Chinese New Year 2010, Year of the Tiger...





The midnight parade. The drums start beating 15 minutes before midnight, usually with 3 lions dancing. Love this one, because it's a secret.







My favorite people of the day coming...









...and going.







Fong Inn Too, Inc. makes CNY!!! They are the best. They always put out cabbage for the lions to eat, so they all come there to dance and sometimes in groups. Last year, during the CNY closing ceremony they had 11 lions, all in different colors. If you ever come down here for CNY, stake out a spot there and stay put, lots-o-fun.





CNY is the only time I really cook and I love coming up with new stuff. This year's invention: fried Hickory Smoked Tofuky and shredded Parmesan pirouettes! Delicious!






This is the insanity that is CNY. The most ridiculous part of the day: when the cops had to get a marching band through the crowd — and they kept playing!







Added Video Bonus:
2009 Closing Ceremony, Fong Inn Too, Inc. shutting it down!!!!