A LUCKY RED ENVELOPE FOR YOU
(AND AT LEAST
ONE IDEA
MORE VALUABLE
THAN $$$)
Welcome to the Year of
the Horse.
Sculpture of Chinese zodiac Horse in a park in Zhejiang Province, China |
You may know that, based on an ancient system of astronomy
and astrology, last Friday -- give or take a few hours depending where in the
world you were/are -- the so-called Chinese New Year began.
So called? This
New Year observance is determined by a lunar calendar. In China, the
festivities are known as Spring Festival (春節) or Lunar New Year (農曆新年).
From late January to mid-February, Korea, Vietnam, Japan and other countries also
celebrate Lunar New Year.
Or maybe you know because you clicked through on the
seasonal Google Doodle.
No matter how you come by the information, the Lunar Year
ahead (year 4712) is designated the Year of the Horse -- particularly the
Wooden Horse, incorporating a traditional Lunar New Year designated “element” into
the mix.
You may also recognize some of the traditions that will be
observed over the stretch of 15 days of ceremony and celebration to attract and
welcome good luck and happiness.
Not surprisingly, many are customs that would fit in any
cultural context at the beginning of a new year.
- People dress in finery to represent contentment and wealth.
- Homes are scrubbed clean.
- Rooms are decorated for the holiday.
Other traditions are
unique.
- The room decorations are paper lanterns and flower blossoms.
- Walls are adorned with the Chinese characters for “Happy New Year” – Gung hay fa choy in Cantonese.
- Dragon-dance parades snake along streets with clashing cymbals and firecrackers exploding to ward off evil spirits.
And --
- Children and single, unemployed adults look forward to receiving red envelopes stuffed with cash from elders.
As the “elder” co-creator with my friend Eric Taylor of the Best
Year Ever Program! some years (both lunar and solar) ago, I sort of feel
obliged to commemorate any “New Year” observance and tie it to our message that
–
Any time is the right time
to begin Your Best Year Ever!
So, although you may not be a child or an unemployed single,
here’s –
A Red Envelope for you.
Sorry, no actual cash.
(Awwww …)
More valuable than
money.
Think of it this way:
If I have a dollar and you have a dollar, and we give our dollar to one
another, we each still have only a dollar.
But, and it’s a Big BUT: If I give you an idea, and
you give me an idea, then we each have two ideas that we can contemplate, be
inspired by, work on with our individual talents and craft into something even
greater than the original inspiration.
So, having “horsed around” with that concept some, let’s get
back to this idea of astrology and universal truths.
According to the astrological aspects of the holiday, babies
born in a Year of Horse are expected to have the following traits:
Strengths
People born in a Year of the Horse
have ingenious communicating techniques and in their community they always want
to be in the limelight. They are clever, kind to others, and like to join in a
venture career. Although they sometimes talk too much, they are cheerful,
perceptive, talented, earthy but stubborn. They like entertainment and large
crowds. They are popular among friends, active at work and refuse to be
reconciled to failure, although their endeavor cannot last indefinitely.
Weaknesses
They cannot bear too much
constraint. However their interest may be only superficial and lacking real
substance. They are usually impatient and hot blooded about everything other
than their daily work. They are independent and rarely listen to advice.
Failure may result in pessimism. They usually have strong endurance but with
bad temper. Flamboyant by nature, they are wasteful since they are not good
with matters of finance due to a lack of budgetary efficiency. Some of those
who are born in the horse like to move in glamorous circles while pursuing high
profile careers. They tend to interfere
in many things and frequently fail to finish projects of their own.
Were you born in a
Year of the Horse? You probably don’t know. But you also probably felt that
some of the characteristics – especially the positive ones – fit you.
Now for me, almost any astrological stuff is –
Beyond understanding.
Yet, as I’ve confessed before, I do look at my horoscope in the newspaper. I’ve
got the daily Libra prognostication popping up on my computer home page.
And I read them with the fascinated knowledge that there is
guidance to be gleaned in the cryptic messages (although that it is celestial
and unwavering universal is highly suspect to me).
Year of the Horse TGIM Takeaway: I figure, at the
least, horoscopes are well-intended advice. I’m certainly open to that. So that
leads me, at the auspicious new beginning of the Year of the Horse, to this –
TGIM Takeaway: “We are wiser
than we know.” Ralph Waldo Emerson said that some solar years ago in
1841.
How does that relate
to this New Year 4712? We all would want the positive characteristics of
those born in a Year of the Horse as well as the Water Snake (last year’s creature
designation) or the Dog (my Chinese astrology birth year; I looked it up) and
the other nine Chinese astrological animal signs.
And who wouldn’t want to embody the best parts of Libra,
Scorpio, etc., etc.
TGIM ACTION IDEA: If we’re wise enough to know what
characteristics are desirable, then we should be wise enough to set our own
course in raising our skills in those areas in order that we might become all that
we might become.
Our fate is not in
the stars. The future is in our own hands. Self-improvement is the
precursor to all improvement. So --
Quit horsin’ around.
Gung hay fa choy! Get started on Your Best Year Ever! NOW.
Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
P.S. “The horse, the horse! The symbol of surging
potency and power of movement, of action, in man.” British author D. H.
Lawrence (1885 -1930) made that observation in 1931 (which was a lunar calendar
Year of the Sheep.)