The concept of tabula rasa ("clean slate"), derived from ancient philosophy and developed by John Locke, metaphorically describes the state of consciousness free from previous experience. Christmas and New Year, especially in their secular, modern interpretation, represent a complex cultural ritual aimed at symbolically creating a state of tabula rasa for the individual and society. This is not an instinctive tradition, but a highly organized mechanism of psychological and social "reset," allowing for the experience of renewal within strictly designated calendar periods.
The connection of the festival with the idea of purification and the beginning of a new cycle dates back to pre-Christian traditions. Winter solstice festivals (Saturnalia in Rome, Yule among the Germans) were a time of symbolic chaos and subsequent renewal of the world. The world "died" at the darkest point of the year to be reborn. Rites included:
Purification by fire (burning a log, bonfires).
Exorcism of evil spirits (noise, masked figures).
Abolition of social norms (masters and slaves changed roles), allowing "resetting" of accumulated social tensions.
Christianity, placing Christmas in this same period, sublimated these archaic practices into spiritual purification through repentance (Advent). The secular New Year, finally separating from the religious context, inherited and exaggerated this function of "resetting" — purely calendar-based, accessible to all regardless of faith, tabula rasa.
The collective pre-Christmas and New Year's actions represent a sequential program for erasing the old and preparing for the new.
A. Pre-festival phase (December): "Erasing" the old.
General cleaning. This is not a domestic action, but a material ritual of exorcising the old year. Sweeping away the trash symbolically equals sweeping away failures, dirt, negative memories. In the Japanese tradition (osodзи), this is elevated to the level of a national ritual.
Summarizing, "tidying up the mess." Compiling reports, closing projects, reconciliation, repayment of debts. The goal is to draw a line, complete gestalts, to enter the new year with "clean conscience" and without the burden of unfinished business.
Getting rid of old things. A symbolic gesture of liberation for new things. This is a modern form of sacrifice to the old year.
B. Festival phase (night from December 31 to January 1): The moment of zero point.
The countdown and the chimes. This is the climax — creating an extra-temporal liminal space ("threshold"). 12 strikes — 12 steps from the old time to the new, where the past has already died and the future has not yet been born. It is in this second that wishes are made — the act of writing the first lines on the "clean slate" of the future.
New Year's toast. A ritual collective drinking (often champagne) — an act of "sealing" a new contract with life and each other. Glasses — a symbol of emptiness, ready to be filled.
C. Post-festival phase (January): Affirmation of the new.
New Year's resolutions. A direct declaration of intentions for the "new me." Statistically, most of them are not fulfilled, but their value lies not in practical implementation, but in the ritual act of compiling a program for tabula rasa.
New habits, calendars, notebooks. The material embodiment of a clean slate. Filling the first day of the new daily planner — a symbolic act of taking control over clean time.
The surrounding environment is specially constructed to enhance the feeling of a clean beginning:
Snow and white color. An untouched snow cover — a visual metaphor of tabula rasa. A white tablecloth, snow-white shirts, frost — all work to create an image of untouched purity.
The Christmas tree and decorations. The ritual of decorating the Christmas tree — it's not just decoration, but creating a model of an ideal, shining, ordered world that should replace the chaos of the old year.
New clothes. The tradition of welcoming the year in new clothes (often never worn) — it's a literal dressing in a new "skin," a new image for a new life stage.
Interesting fact: In the Italian tradition, there is a custom of throwing old things out the window (first of all, broken crockery) on New Year's Eve, directly materializing the liberation from the old. The authorities of Rome and Naples have to call on citizens to safety every year, and cleaners have to work in an intensified mode.
From an anthropological point of view, the ritual performs several key psychotherapeutic functions:
Reduction of existential anxiety. Linear time and the finitude of life are frightening. New Year as a cyclic festival illusorily overcomes linearity, giving an annual opportunity to "start from scratch." This is a cultural equivalent of psychological defense.
Cognitive relief. The brain tends to think in categories of narratives with a beginning, middle, and end. The calendar year is a ready-made narrative. Its "closure" allows archiving the experienced experience (even negative) as a completed story and starting a new one.
Symbolic control over the future. Making wishes and compiling plans — it's an attempt to inscribe desired scenarios on the clean slate of the future, giving a sense of agency and predictability in an unpredictable world.
The idea of the festival as tabula rasa confronts modern realities:
Consumerism has turned the ritual of purification into a ritual of shopping (new things, gifts), muddying the metaphysical meaning with materialism.
Procrastination and burnout. The pressure to "start with Monday/New Year" can create additional stress and a sense of guilt if the "clean slate" is immediately stained.
Global uncertainty. Against the backdrop of crises, the idea of personal renewal may seem naive when the world as a whole is perceived as unstable.
Nevertheless, the resilience of these rituals proves their deep root. Today we are witnessing a transformation: tabula rasa becomes segmented — promises concern specific areas (health, hobbies), and "purification" takes the form of digital detox (cleaning gadgets, social networks).
Christmas and New Year, as the culmination of the calendar cycle, are a powerful cultural institution for producing hope. They perform the function of collective psychogigienics, offering society and the individual a universal, ritualized scenario for symbolic liberation from the burden of the past and planning the future on a "clean slate."
This is not just holidays, but a complex social mechanism for managing time and memory, allowing us to periodically, by common agreement, become Lockean philosophers for ourselves — even if only for a few magical hours, between the chimes and the first morning of the new year. Their strength lies not in mysticism, but in this deep, almost unconscious, psychological need for reference points and acts of renewal, without which human existence in time would be unbearable.
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