The period of New Year's and Christmas holidays represents a unique cultural and psychological phenomenon, highlighting a complex set of deep existential experiences. These holidays, marking the end of one temporal cycle and the beginning of another, act as a powerful trigger for reflection, leading the individual from the automatism of everyday life to questions of meaning, finitude, loneliness, and authenticity of existence. Socially prescribed joy and family idyll often conflict with internal states, giving rise to the phenomenon of "holiday depression" or "existential melancholy".
New Year's Eve is traditionally associated with the ritual of retrospection. The individual is forced to conduct an existential audit of the year lived:
The feeling of wasted time ("Fever of the Passing Year"). The analysis of unfulfilled plans, missed opportunities, and unfulfilled promises to oneself gives rise to a sense of guilt, regret, and existential anxiety (Kierkegaard), described as "Angst". The thought "another year has passed, and I..." becomes a source of fear of "inauthentic life" (Heidegger).
Confrontation with one's own limits. Societal expectations and internal ambitions clash with real achievements, revealing a gap between "ideal self" and actual position. This is the experience of the boundaries of one's own capabilities and the time allotted for their realization.
The holiday is sold and consumed as a ready-made scenario of happiness: a reunited family, a generous feast, universal joy. This ideal narrative imposed by culture creates existential discomfort:
The gap between expectation and reality. Even a successful celebration rarely corresponds to the glossy image, causing a sense of frustration and inadequacy ("something is wrong with me, because my Christmas is not perfect").
Loneliness in the crowd. In a family or corporate holiday setting, a person may acutely feel inner loneliness, misunderstanding, and their existential separation from others (Jaspers). Ritual actions (toasts, gift exchanges) emphasize rather than alleviate this experience.
Untruth ("Being-for-others" according to Sartre). The individual is forced to play social roles (a loving relative, a cheerful guest), which may enhance a sense of alienation from oneself and one's true "project" (Sartre).
Christmas, unlike the secular New Year, carries a powerful religious and symbolic charge that can also give rise to existential questions:
Encounter with absurdity in the secular world (Camus). Rites devoid of the original sacred meaning (visiting churches, caroling) may be perceived as meaningless, absurd actions, highlighting the gap between tradition and personal feeling.
Nostalgia for lost wholeness. Christmas is often associated with childhood, family, "cozy world." For an adult, this becomes an occasion for existential nostalgia – not for the past, but for the lost sense of security, meaning, and belonging. This is the experience of the "lost paradise" of individual existence.
The search for transcendence. Even outside the context of faith, the holiday can provoke a search for something greater than everyday life: attempts at "miracles," hopes for change, thirst for forgiveness and reconciliation. This is an attempt to go beyond the existing being, which is the core of the existential project.
The moment of transition (the chime of the clock) creates a unique borderline experience (a term introduced by psychologist E. van Dorn). In this second, the individual finds themselves "between" the past and the future, which sharpens the feeling of freedom and responsibility for the upcoming life project.
Terror before freedom and possibility (Sartre). New Year's Eve is a symbol of a clean slate, opening up many possibilities. The need to choose and the lack of guarantees of success can paralyze, causing "dizziness from freedom".
Accepting finitude as motivation. The realization that another year has passed can, in a positive sense, motivate to a more authentic life, to the realization of postponed projects, to greater sincerity in relationships – that is, to what Heidegger called "life-towards-death," filled with meaningful action.
New Year's and Christmas serve as a powerful existential laboratory where, under the pressure of social rituals, the basic conditions of human existence are exposed: temporality, freedom, loneliness, the search for meaning. The experiences of this period are not a pathology, but a natural reaction to encountering fundamental questions that everyday life allows to ignore. The holiday becomes a mirror reflecting not so much our external well-being, but the internal "truth" of our existence. Successful passage of this "laboratory" does not lie in mindless joy, but in the ability to acknowledge and integrate these experiences: to accept the finitude of the year as a call to meaningful action, to turn loneliness into an opportunity for a true encounter with others, and the pressure of social scenarios into an occasion for an honest dialogue with oneself about the life project we intend to implement in the measured time. In this sense, the existential tone of the holidays, despite its pain, can serve as a source of personal renewal, deeper than the formal change of the calendar date.
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