Happy New Year, Happy Life
The meaning of most holidays is clear: Valentine’s Day
celebrates romance; July First, independence; Thanksgiving, productivity;
Christmas, good will toward men. The meaning of New Year’s Day–the world’s most
celebrated holiday–is not so clear. On this day, many people remember last
year’s achievements and failures and look forward to the promise of a new year,
of a new beginning. But this celebration and reflection is the result of more
than an accident of the calendar. New Year’s has a deeper significance. What is
it?
On New Year’s Day, when the singing, fireworks and champagne
toasts are over, many of us become more serious about life. We take stock and
plan new courses of action to better our lives. This is best seen in one of the
most popular customs and the key to the meaning of New Year’s: making
resolutions.
On average each North American makes 1.8 New Year’s
resolutions. From New York to Paris to Sydney, interesting similarities arise
as shown in two very common resolutions: people wanting to be more attractive
by losing weight, and to be healthier by exercising more and smoking less. They
want to do things better, become better people.
New Year’s Day is the most active-minded holiday, because it
is the one where people evaluate their lives and plan and resolve to take
action. One dramatic example of taking resolutions seriously is the old
European custom of: “What one does on this day one will do for the rest of the
year.” What unites this custom and the more common type of resolutions is that
on the first day of the year people take their values more seriously.
Values are not only physical and external. They also can be
psychological. Many New Year’s resolutions reveal that people want to better
themselves by improving psychologically. For example, look at your own
resolutions over the years. Haven’t they included such vows as: be more patient
with your children, improve your self-esteem, be more emotionally open with
your spouse? Such resolutions express the moral ambitiousness of a person
wanting to improve his self and life. What then is the philosophic meaning of
New Year’s resolutions? Every resolution you make on this day implies that you
are in control of your self, that you are not a victim fated by circumstance,
controlled by stars, owned by luck, but that you are an individual who can make
choices to change your life. You can learn statistics, ask for that promotion,
fight your shyness, and search for that life partner. Your life is in your own
hands.
But what is the purpose of making such goals and
resolutions? Why bother? Making New Year’s resolutions (and doing so even after
failing last year’s) stresses that people want to be happy. On New Year’s Day
many people accept, often more implicitly than explicitly, that happiness comes
from the achievement of values. You want to enjoy that sense of purpose,
accomplishment and pleasure that one feels when achieving values. It is
happiness that is the motor and purpose of one’s life. It is New Year’s, more
than any other day, which makes the attainment of happiness more real and
possible. This is the meaning of New Year’s Day and why it is so
psychologically important and significant to people throughout the world.
If people were to apply the value-achievement meaning of New
Year’s Day explicitly and consistently 365 days each year, they would be
happier.
So every day, fill your champagne glass of life to the brim
with values–and drink deep to your life and the joy that it can and should be.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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