arclistings.com arclistings.com
   Main Page :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Get Multiple Links
 

Self Enhancement

Research & Science

Art & Creative

Home & Garden

Healthcare & Treatment

Careers & Employment

Online & Indoor Games

Vehicles & Automotive

Law & Politics

People & Communities

Hotels & Travel

Relationship & Lifestyle

Business & Commerce

News & Media

Academics & Learning

Eating & Drinking

Investment & Finance

Outdoor & Sports

Health & Therapy

Computers & Networking

Recreation & Entertainment

Online Shopping

Realty & Property

Teens & Children

 

Main Page › Home & Garden › Trips
 

8 Ways to Celebrate Chinese New Year

 
Author: Kah Joon Liow

What are the Chinese New Year activities for celebrating this most important festival in the Chinese calendar?

Let's start at the beginning...

In China, Chinese New Year is called the Spring Festival.

Thats because the first day of Chinese New Year falls on the start of spring.

The beginning of spring is a fresh start

It's the start of a new year of sowing and reaping.

A wish for a good harvest in the year ahead.

(That's how the Chinese character for "year" nian2 ? came about.)

A cause for celebration!

All around the world, Chinese families...

put up Chinese New Year scrolls on both sides of the door,

set off firecrackers (It's illegal in many Chinese cities now, but people do it anyway)

and married adults give children red envelopes filled with lucky money.

Chinese New Year activities begin 2-4 weeks before the "big day".

Here's what you can do to celebrate Chinese New Year.

It's what Chinese families do all over the world.

1. Clean up the house

Select a day and together with the family, clean up the house.

This ritual gets rid of bad luck in the ending year and welcomes in good luck in the new year.

2. Send greeting cards

Send greeting cards with new year wishes to friends, relatives and colleagues.

Remember to post your greeting cards early!

3. Go shopping

Go shopping to buy new clothes for the whole family, food and sweets, and festive home decorations.

Looking for Chinese New Year activities for kids? Go to http://www.living-chinese-symbols.com/chinese-new-year- activities.html

4. Get ready some red packets.

You'll need them later.

5. Decorate the house

Hang Chinese New Year scrolls called spring couplets on both sides of the door to usher in good wishes for the new year.

Paste paper cuts of upside down good fotune "fu" characters, happy children and tangerine oranges on the wall.

Make sure you have vases of flowers in the house during Chinese New Year.

They do more than just add a new year atmosphere to the home.

Living plants symbolize growth and flowers represent wealth and prosperity.

Pum blossoms can be arranged together with bamboo and pine.

They stand for endurance, nobility and longevity.

Other favorite flowers are pussy willow, azalea, peony and water lily or narcissus.

6. Prepare the reunion dinner

Gather your family together for this most important and sumptuous meal of the year on Chinese New Years eve.

Prepare a meal with auspicious dishes like chicken, fish, oysters, dumplings, green vegetables and noodles.

They have meanings of prosperity, longevity and abundance.

I've put together some Chinese New Year recipes and a list of what different foods symbolize at http://www.living- chinese-symbols.com/chinese-new-year-activities.html

7. Pass the year

After a hearty meal, stay up late to pass the year guo4 nian2 ', an ancient tradition.

You can watch TV, play card games, or chat.

After midnight (or on the morning of Chinese New Year's day), give your children the red envelopes filled with money (called lucky money).

Put the red packets under the pillow of children. This is said to ward off evil.

8. Send New Year greetings

Call up friends or SMS them on the morning of Chinese New Year and wish them Happy New Year, Good Health and Prosperity.

Visit the homes of friends and relatives with two big tangerines.

Bring red packets to give to the children at the homes you're visiting.

These are eight ways to have a roaring Chinese New Year celebration with family and friends!

Eight is the most auspicious number for Chinese people.

It means wealthy and properous.

Here's to your good health and prosperity in the New Year!

Author Bio:

Kah Joon Liow

LIOW Kah Joon is the award-winning author of A Musical Journey, a children's book about China. Through his site, he guides readers to appreciate the culture of Chinese symbols and characters and discover creative ways to make it part of their lives. Sign up for his free Chinese Symbols ezine. It's guaranteed to expand your world, enhance your lifestyle and enable you to speak better Chinese!

You can search for this article using: trip planner, boat trip, train trips, quick trip, cheap trips, trip maps, plan a trip, field trips
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Garden Sheds
 
Baby Shower Planning and Hosting
 
Sound Therapy: Support For Elders and Caregivers
 
Classy Bathroom Faucets Bring Amazing Life to a New Bathroom Vanity
 
Taking Care of Your Holiday Plants
 
Consider the Egg
 
Cheap Landscaping Ideas
 
Air Purifiers - A First Time Buyers Guide
 
Surface Grinders
 
How to Train Your Puppy to Sit
 
 
 
   Main Page :> Privacy :> Terms of Use
All Rights Reserved © 2006 www.arclistings.com