In talking about the last week of
the year, a friend mused, “We’ve entered that time between Christmas and New
Year’s Day, where you don’t know what day it is, who you are, or what you’re
supposed to be doing.” How right she is.
As an active Salvation Army
officer, I loved the days nestled between Christmas Day and New Year’s Day.
With a very full November and December schedule, we generally took a few days
of vacation to unwind, sometimes traveling but more often spending time at
home. While there were still plenty of tasks to be accomplished (laundry comes
to mind), my calendar squares were blank, and those “in between” days offered
space for novel-reading and Law and Order marathons, the only time of year when
I watched hours of Olivia and Elliot without guilt.
Traditionally, Americans have used
the days between December 24 and January 2 to connect with family and to refuel
in preparation for a new year. While I’ve been jotting down dates in the back
of my 2017 calendar for a few weeks, I’ve used this week to crack open my new hot
pink calendar (a gift from the hubby) so I can sort out my schedule for the
next few months. As a borderline techie, I’m still not ready to give up my
physical calendar for the convenience of storing my life on my phone, and I
find pleasure in seeing the blank pages, awaiting the unfolding possibilities
of 2018.
Historically, the beginning of a
new year has been celebrated for 4000 years. The Babylonians used the first new
moon following the vernal equinox to mark their new year with Akitu, a ritual
occurrence over a period of eleven days. In 46 B.C., Julius Caesar introduced
the Julian calendar, beginning with January 1, and adding ninety extra days to
make the numbers work. In medieval times, attempts were made to change the date
of the new year to more religious ones, such as December 25 and March 25 (the
Feast of the Annunciation), but in 1582, Pope Gregory XII claimed January 1 as
New Year’s Day once again.
Much of our contemporary celebration
centers around midnight on New Year’s Eve. Those of us of a certain age miss
bandleader Guy Lombardo’s rendition of Auld Lang Syne, along with long-time New
Year’s Eve host Dick Clark, but we still look forward to the ball drop at Times
Square as the clock strikes twelve. Unless, of course, we live in Dillsburg,
PA, where residents gather to watch a six-foot-tall pickle drop from the fire
department’s ladder truck – destination, a pickle barrel.
Not to be outdone by the
pickle-droppers, the good folk of Tallapoosa, GA (formerly Possum Snout, GA), use
a possum drop to bring in the new year. Fortunately, the curly-tailed marsupial
is stuffed, not live. I wonder if Ashland is missing out on something here. An
iconic pickle, the Tallapoosa possum, the appearance of Punxsutawney Phil on
Groundhog Day, and Hinckley, Ohio’s buzzards – these crowd favorites do wonders
for tourism. Time to put on your thinking caps, Ashlanders.
Pickles and possums aside, the
in-between space of transition prepares us for the new year as we contemplate
my friend’s words: Who am I? What day is it? What am I supposed to be doing? It’s
a perfect time for resolutions, even if 80% will be laid to rest by February.
Days of transition from one year to
the next can also open us to liminal space, from the Latin word “threshold.”
Franciscan Richard Rohr suggests we “allow ourselves to be drawn out of
‘business as usual’ and remain patiently on the threshold, where we are betwixt
and between the familiar and the completely unknown . . . this is the sacred
space where the old world is able to fall apart, and the bigger world is
revealed.” Liminality allows us, as Nancy Levin suggests, to “honor the space
between no longer and not yet.”
My New Year’s wish is that beyond the
revelry of dropping balls, pickles and possums, and the discomfort of pork and
sauerkraut-induced indigestion, you might discover the transformative liminal
space offered by these days of waiting. Happy New Year!