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Chinese New Year superstitions
Chinese New Year is steeped in superstition – here are just some of the ones you could come across:
- The entire house should be cleaned before New Year's Day. On New Year's Eve, all brooms, brushes, dusters, dust pans and other cleaning
equipment should be put away. Sweeping or dusting should not be done on New
Year's Day for fear that good fortune will be swept away.
- Shooting off
firecrackers on New Year's Eve is the Chinese way of sending out the old
year and welcoming
in the New Year.
- On the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve, every door in the house, and
even windows, has to be open to allow the old year to go out.
- All debts
had to
paid by this time. Nothing should be lent on this day, as anyone
who does so will be lending all the year. Back when tinder and flint were
used,
no one would lend them on this day or give a light to others.
- If you cry on New Year's Day,
you will cry all through the year. Therefore, children are tolerated and
are
not
spanked, even though they are mischievous.
- On New Year's Day, we are not suppose to wash our hair because
it would mean we would have washed away good luck for the New Year.
- A home
is
thought
to
be lucky if a plant blooms on New Year's Day, as this foretells
the start of a prosperous year.
- It is considered unlucky to greet anyone in their bedroom so
that is why everyone, even the sick, should get dressed and sit in the
living room.
- Do
not use
knives or scissors on New Year's Day as this may cut
off fortune.
Whilst many Chinese people today may not believe in these do's and don'ts,
these traditions and customs are still
practiced. Most families say that it is these
very traditions, whether believed
or not, that provide continuity with the past and provide the family
with an
identity.
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