by Paula Gail Benson
This year a series of February celebrations follow
each other closely on the calendar. Valentine’s Day on February 14,
Washington’s Birthday or President’s Day (or Family Day in Canada) on February
16 (see background in my post on The
Stiletto Gang), Mardi Gras’ Shrove Tuesday on February 17, and Ash
Wednesday on February 18 (I still remember the scene from Julie Smith’s Skip
Langdon novel New
Orleans Mourning where Skip takes a break from an investigation to go
to the service where ashes are imposed at the St. Louis Cathedral on Jackson
Square).
Right in the middle of all these events, also on
Tuesday, February 17, is Lunar New Year, also known as Chinese New Year, which,
this year, is the Year of the Horse. The Smithsonian
website indicates that February 17 (when the new moon appears) begins a
fifteen-day Spring Festival (celebrating the transition from winter) that ends
with the Lantern Festival (where children traditionally go out at night taking
lanterns to solve riddles). Many lanterns are simple, with the emperor and
nobles having more intricate ones. Often, they are red in color, symbolizing
good fortune, and in the shape of animals. According to Wikipedia, “The
lanterns can symbolize the people letting go of their past selves and getting
new ones, which they will let go of the next year.”
The China
Highlights Travel Guide explains that the “Chinese Zodiac or shengxiao
(/shnng-sshyao/), [which means] ‘born resembling,’ has a twelve-year cycle of
animals, each representative of a successive year. In order, they are the Rat,
Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat, Monkey, Rooster, Dog, and Pig.”
Also, the animals may be characterized by the five elements: wood, fire, earth,
metal, and water.
According to the Smithsonian website, the horse
represents hard work, bravery, and resilience. The Year of the Horse occurred
in 1990, 2002, 2014, and 2026.
This is a unique Year of the Fire Horse, which takes
place every sixty years. The
English edition of the Economic Times (indiatimes.com) indicates that fire
“is associated with passion, intensity, courage and transformation.” Following
a Year of the Wood Snake (wood being associated with trees and growing matter that can fuel
fire and snake like a shedding of skin), “astrologers say 2026 could be a
year of bold decisions, rapid progress and dramatic change. It is also a Yang
year, traditionally linked to outward action and assertiveness.”
Hoping to understand what previous Years of the Fire Horse have brought about, I looked back to see when they occurred: most recently, 1906 and 1966.
Significant events that occurred in 1906 include the
San Francisco Earthquake, beginning work on the Panama Canal, the first ever
feature film being shown in Melbourne, Australia, the oldest African American
Greek letter intercollegiate fraternity opening at Cornell University, and
President Theodore Roosevelt winning the Noble Peace Prize. Persons born that
year included Bugsy Siegel, Ozzie Nelson, Roberto Rosselini, Josephine Baker,
Anne Morrow Lindberg, Estee Lauder, Satchel Paige, and Grace Hopper.
In 1966, several NASA launches took place, “It’s a
Small World” ride opened at Disneyland, Walt Disney recorded his final message
talking about the plans for EPCOT, the U.S. Supreme Court issued the Miranda
warning case, and Ronald Reagan was elected Governor of California. A few
well-known actors, directors, musicians, and sports figures were born in 1966,
including Helena Boham Carter, Jon Favreau, J.J. Abrams, Janet Jackson, and
Kurt Browning.
One development from 1966 that has continued to evolve
is the Star Trek franchise, celebrating sixty years in existence with
its latest series, Starfleet Academy, which was contemplated in earlier
times and explored briefly in J.J. Abrams’ alternative Star Trek with
Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, and Karl Urban. Wouldn’t that be incredible to
write something that continues to be a source for the imagination more than a
half century after its inception?
Are you a Trekkie or a Star Wars fan? What challenges and opportunities do you foresee for this Year of the Fire Horse?
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| Fire Horse Journal Available on Amazon |




Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteInteresting stuff. I have no big plans for the year of the Fire Horse. I hope it has no big plans for me.
ReplyDeleteI've never been to Disneyland, but I do remember the "It's a Small World" from the NY World's Fair.
ReplyDeleteOne of my daughters is embarking on a Trekkie cruise with a friend. They've had a great time finding costumes, etc.
Let's hope the Year of the Fire Horse brings great progress, not great tragedies.
Kathleen, I've seen those advertised and wondered about them. You will have to write about their adventure!
DeleteI'm hoping for a less stressful 2026, though that may be hard to achieve. The Westminster Dog Show also occured this month--always at the top of my list.
ReplyDeleteI love watching the Dog Show on TV. I have never been to one in person. I bet it is fabulous!
DeleteInteresting stuff, Paula. Thank you for enlightening us. I think I was born the year of the rat. Which to me didn’t sound great.
ReplyDeleteGrace, according to AI, the rat is the first Zodiac animal and has symbolizes intelligence, resourcefulness, adaptability, and new beginnings.
DeleteI’m sure all of the signs must have some positive traits even if we perceive the animal in a negative way.
ReplyDeleteWhen I have looked up my sign some sites show me to be a rooster and others indicate I am a monkey, I don’t know how to determine which is correct. In the regular zodiac my sign is Capricorn.
Since the Chinese new year and the Western calendar don't completely align, you can be different from someone born in the same Western year. If your birthday is in January or early in February, before the Chinese new year starts, you would be a monkey. Most people born in that year, however, would be roosters. You would have to look up when the Chinese new year was in your birth year. Perhaps an easy task for the dreaded tool AI.
DeleteKathleen is correct. Here's a chart that tells you the dates when each lunar year began and ended: https://www.yourchineseastrology.com/zodiac/years-chart.htm
DeleteUsing the chart above, I am neither a rooster nor a monkey this one indicates a sheep. How does one determine which chart is accurate since I have now had three different animals being listed as the correct sign. My birthday is in the middle of January, does that affect it in a different way from other months?
DeleteWhat a wonderful blog. I am a definite Trekkie – harking back to Capt. Kirk and company. I haven’t kept up with the franchise, but there’s a warm place in my heart for the adventures of the Starship Enterprise.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kait. I'm a Trekkie, too, and like you really enjoy the original series.
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