Chinese New Year, the Rooster and What it Means for You In The Coming Year

Chinese New Year, the Rooster and What it Means for You In The Coming Year

I was in London speaking at a corporate event when the monkey handed the reigns to the rooster. Yes, I’m talking about one of the most important and celebrated days of the year for 1.5 billion people?—?the Chinese New Year.

It seems that the only time I feel like running is when I travel. Not a good recipe for staying in shape but a simple an easy way to explore the city, take in the sites and clear my mind. The logical destination on the eve of this new year, was to head down to Chinatown in the City of Westminster and take in some of the festivities.

I had plenty of time to think along the run as the destination was 10km away.

As this was my first run in over a month?—?it was slow.

I began to think about the Chinese New Year after a couple of kilometers. It’s rich history?—?dating back to the 14th century, why and how it started and some of the myths and folklore that have carried on throughout the ages. Then I asked myself,

“I wonder how many people truly adhere to the beliefs that stem from the origin of this day.”

And more importantly, how do those beliefs impact the way people live their lives today.

One after another a tsunami of questions and thoughts kept crashing through my brain.

With all the consulting work and speaking I do around the world I see one constant in every culture that cripples people – fear.

Fear of job loss, fear of making a simple decision and even fear of communicating with someone in person.

Fear stems from lack of belief – especially in oneself. It promotes poor performance, diminishes company culture and stifles our ability to creatively solve problems.

For many of us we have more than ever before. Yet we are more uncertain, fearful and miserable than ever before – both personally and professionally.

After a brief stop for some oxygen relief, I began reflecting on how important our beliefs are in shaping our outcomes, desires and successes in business and in life.

But first some very interesting history.

Chinese New Year

The Chinese New Year is based on the traditional lunisolar Chinese calendar which means New Year’s Day can vary between January 21st and February 19th. Also known as the “Spring Festival, this year the party starts on Saturday, January 28th and continues until the Lantern Festival, 15 days later.

Each Chinese New Year is characterized by one of the 12 animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac.

The Rat. Ox. Tiger. Rabbit. Dragon. Snake. Horse. Goat. Monkey. Rooster. Dog. Pig.

There are many myths as to why and how each animal was chosen. There may also be variations in the animal representing the year depending on which version of the Chinese zodiac someone follows. Still, each animal has symbolic characteristics given to it by the ancient Chinese.

These animal attributes come in six contrasting pairs that are harmonized, like yin and yang, and are the primary factor governing the order of the zodiac. It is believed that your animal has a huge influence on various aspects of your life?—?personality, future, career, love and general luck.

If you’re familiar with western astrology, the major difference between the two is that each house (animal) in the Chinese zodiac is one year in duration instead of one month. This means that according to Chinese beliefs, people who were born in the same year have similar traits, as opposed to the Western belief that those born in the same month-long time frame have similar traits.

Are You a Rooster?

This year is said to be the year of the rooster. The rooster is the tenth in the 12-year cycle of Chinese zodiac sign. The Years of the Rooster include 1921, 1933, 1945, 1957, 1969, 1981, 1993, 2005, 2017, and 2029…

The Rooster is the embodiment of dependability and punctuality. For ancestors who had no alarm clocks, the crowing was significant, as it could awaken people to get up and start to work. It is said that people born in a rooster year are independent, honest, competent but can be emotionally volatile. (Aren’t we all?—?emotionally volatile that is :))

But…

As luck would not have it, the year of your sign is believed to be one of the unluckiest years of your life according to Chinese astrology. Sorry roosters.

If you’re not a rooster you can check out which animal you are below based on the year you were born.

  • Rat: 2008, 1996, 1984, 1972, 1960
  • Ox: 2009, 1997, 1985, 1973, 1961
  • Tiger: 2010, 1998, 1986, 1974, 1962
  • Rabbit: 2011, 1999, 1987, 1975, 1963
  • Dragon: 2012, 2000, 1988, 1976, 1964
  • Snake: 2013, 2001, 1989, 1977, 1965
  • Horse: 2014, 2002, 1990, 1978, 1966
  • Sheep: 2015, 2003, 1991, 1979, 1967
  • Monkey: 2016, 2004, 1992, 1980, 1968
  • Rooster: 2017, 2005, 1993, 1981, 1969
  • Dog: 2018, 2006, 1994, 1982, 1970
  • Pig: 2019, 2007, 1995, 1983, 1971

Once you’ve found your animal sign, feel free to indulge on one of the thousands of astrology sites to see if your animal is representative of who you are and what the year ahead may have in store for you according to Chinese astrology.

What Does This Mean For You In The Year Ahead?

Back to beliefs.

Do you believe in luck? Routines? Superstitions? Spirituality?

Black cats, breaking mirrors, lucky Jupiter, pregame songs or lucky socks.

Belief is a state of mind. It’s hard to describe or articulate especially when there’s little or no empirical evidence toward justifying its existence or consistency of truth. It’s purely subjective and can trigger many emotions.

Four words come to mind when I see or hear the word belief —COAT confidence, opinion, acceptance and trust. These are the building blocks of who we are, how we think, what we say and why we do the things we do.

I do believe that there are external forces that are constantly working for and against us which are beyond our control. Like when and where we were born.

We didn’t have a choice.

I also believe that our internal force, or belief system, is more powerful than any external forces out there.

And we do have a choice in defining who we are based on the circumstances that are presented to us.

No matter what your beliefs are, whether you belief in Chinese astrology or not, the Chinese New Year gives us all an opportunity to reflect and become more self-aware.

The world for many of us is one that is out of control?—?living constantly in a hyper-reactive unconscious state. One that sacrifices freedom for traditionalism.

There is nothing wrong with following traditional beliefs— if it serves you well. If it doesn’t then question it. Tune your beliefs to something that does.

Uncover which ones are moving you forward in a positive way and which ones are holding you back from the true essence of who you are.

Now is the time to change the latter.

It starts with a central belief. A belief that you control the life you were given?—?not someone, some app or something else.

Xīn Nián Kuài Lè (Happy New Year) (新年快乐)

“Gōng Xǐ Fā Cái” (Wishing a prosperous New Year )(恭喜发财)


Theresa Pachesny Chaze

Film and Television writer and producer

6 年

Life is a partnership.? Our present i the thin line of balance we walk between past and present--self-willed and guided--ego and faith.? When we fall of that line, one way or the other, we lose or miss opportunities.

回复
Saadon Aksah

Freelance Journalist/Content Creator

6 年

Fear..that motivating factor..

回复
Kathryn White

Author at kathrynwhite.net

6 年

I'm a monkey. I do believe you are right. To me life is all about accepting responsibility for the decisions you take. Some people are dealt such rotten cards: poverty, violence, prejudice, isolation, ignorance and war. All this suffering has nothing to do with the stars, whether monkey or rooster. It has to do with people making bad decisions that impact others in a horrific and negative way. Better world? ... Better decisions!

回复
Brian Letourneau

Communications Advisor

8 年

Great article Craig! I am a Rooster and a couple of traits you mentioned are right on. I am very punctual and become emotionally volatile when my friends are constantly late when meeting up. They see know problem meeting 10 to 15 minutes later than the designated time. Drives me crazy! :) When I become emotionally volatile, I go for a run. Hmm, not sure if that's a Rooster trait but it sure helps. Happy New Year to all you Roosters out there. Thanks again for the posting Craig - enjoy London!

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Craig Gauthier的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了