May the Graces Bless Us with
Joyful New Beginnings!
Take out, then take in:
Bad luck will begin.
Take in, then take out:
Good luck comes about.
Blessings of the Tarot Year of The Wheel of Fortune – a time of radical changes, surprises, and dramatic turning points. I’ll be writing much more about what this means in the coming week.
But meantime, today is a very magical day, full of lore and custom.
As I wrote yesterday, everything you do on this day has magical implications for the coming year. So don’t throw anything out (even the trash), or lend money or pay bills.
If you must carry something out, be sure to bring something else in first, preferably the coin or cash you should have concealed outside last night!
Since whatever we do on this day will be repeated throughout the year, I like to make New Year’s Day an ideal day, and do a little of all the things I most want to enjoy in the coming year.
For instance, it is good luck to do a little bit of work on the first day of the year, as long as you enjoy and are successful at whatever it is. But more than a token amount of work today is very unlucky.
Also, I will not be doing any laundry today, lest someone I love be ‘washed away’ (die) in the upcoming months. The more cautious warn against even washing dishes, which is just fine with me.
Naturally, I will wear something new to ensure that new clothes will be coming my way in the new year. And, just like my mama taught me, I will be speaking only sweet words.
A Little History
New Year’s, as we now celebrate it, comes from the Romans, who moved the New Year from Spring Equinox to January in 153 BCE and celebrated with six days of carousing and rejoicing, ending just as the Twelve Days of Christmas do, on January 6.
They got drunk, wore disguises, and kept their tables laden with food all night long to ensure plenty in the coming year (and perhaps to appease the Fates).
In that spirit, I love what the ever-sublime Caitlín Matthews observes regarding the revelries of Hogmanay and other New Years’ festivities:
If the celebrations of this evening become sometimes riotous or rowdy, it is worth remembering that the mysterious crack between one year and another is best leaped rather than crawled over.
– The Celtic Spirit: Daily Meditations for the Turning Year
Too bad Archbishop Boniface, visiting from England in 742 C.E., didn’t possess this wisdom. He complained about how the Kalends of January were celebrated in Rome with “dancing in the streets, heathenish cries, sacrilegious songs, tables laden with food and women wearing amulets and offering them for sale.”
To somewhat dampen the enthusiasm, the Roman Catholic church declared this the Day of the Circumcision. The less said about that dour decision, the better.
The ancient Romans also gave each other small gifts (called strenae) on this day, symbolic of good luck for the new year, like coins with the two faces of the God Ianus (Janus) on one side and a ship on the other (for He was considered the patron of ships and trade).
The modern Roman ritual is a plunge in the icy Tiber River. For better or worse, it seems that the custom has caught on in many other places as well.
New Year’s Around the World
In England, gloves and pins were the traditional New Year’s gifts up until the 19th century. In France, children give their parents handmade gifts with a wish of “Bonne Année!”
Food eaten on New Year’s Day always has significance, as it also affects the quality of the coming year. In ancient times, the Romans gave friends a glass jar full of dates and dried figs in honey, along with a bay leaf branch, so the coming year would be sweet and full of good fortune. (Bay is a well-known prosperity botanical).
Throughout Japan, preparing and serving special New Year’s foods are important rituals. This sacred meal is shared with the kami (spirits) as well as family members.
Rice is one of the most important foods served. It is specially prepared and shared with the ancestors and the Gods, like Toshigami, the rather fierce Year God, who each family hopes will smile upon them and bring good fortune for the coming year.
Hoppin’ John
One of the most famous magical foods to be eaten on New Year’s comes from the American South.
Hoppin’ John is an old favorite dish that was a staple of the enslaved people of the American antebellum Carolinas, where African bean stews (also found in the Caribbean) met the local rice industry and came deliciously together.
Possibly the earliest appearance of the dish by the name Hoppin’ John was in an 1847 cookbook called The Carolina Housewife. No one knows for sure how the name originated, but one reasonable suggestion is that it’s a corruption of the French-Caribbean words pois à pigeon, or pigeon pea, a relative of the black-eyed pea, and which would be pronounced “pwah-ah-pee-john.”
Practically every Southern cook (and cookbook) I know has a recipe for Hoppin’ John, but there are three basic ingredients that never vary (unless you are a vegetarian).
The black-eyed peas (sometimes field peas or crowder peas may be substituted) are the most important symbolic food. In many cultures, beans and other legumes are thought to bring good luck because of their resemblance to coins (which means the promise of wealth).
The rice is for fertility, which is why we used to throw rice at newlyweds with such gusto, until we realized it was harmful to birds.
And of course, most old Southern recipes require that fatback, ham bone, or bacon are used to flavor the stew, since (as mentioned yesterday) pigs are lucky and cooking up a pig in a pot is a sign of prosperity.
Usually, just to ensure plenty of extra folding cash, collard or mustard greens are also served on the side.
While nowadays, you can find Hoppin’ John recipes that are all chic and gussied-up, with tomatoes, artichoke hearts, black beans, or made with a fancy rice pilaf, I think that plain and simple is the real spirit of it. It is just a mix of cooked rice, black-eyed peas, and some kind of seasoning (pork, if you eat it).
As a vegetarian, I skip the ham hocks. But I have found that original (formerly Uncle) Ben’s Wild Rice® is very satisfying. Besides, it reminds me of my mom, who always fixed it for our holiday meals when I was a little girl.
If you’re veg, too, be sure to read the ingredients carefully. Some kinds have chicken flavoring. Simmered with black-eyed peas, served with sides of greens and cornbread, this is a simple, tasty, and satisfying meal that has brought plenty of luck to our table!
Blessings of the Three Graces – Aglaia, Euphrosyne, and Thalia
Despite all the terrible things that transpired in 2025, and will probably haunt us for a long time, the page has turned. As our Solstice Wreath ceremony has proven, from heart to heart, across the distance, we can share a cup of kindness yet.
Rainer Maria Rilke was right when he wrote:
And now let us welcome the New Year
Full of things that have never been.
The days ahead will be full of things that have never been. And with the strength of our ideals, our courage, and our unfailing generosity to one another, there will be marvelous things, wondrous things that have never yet been!
So here’s to gentle months ahead, vital with the growing light, bringing us good health, ample wealth, and overflowing love.
Wishing you vast reserves of courage to leap with faith, and leap yet again when needful.
May the Gods of plenty load your life with more and finer abundance than you could imagine! We implore the Graces, who are always invoked at the commencement of every meal, journey, and important endeavor, to illuminate all the days of this year.
May peace, prosperity, goodwill, and harmony be restored in plenty, for ourselves and all our relations.
Welcome, 2026 — Happy New Year!


Comments on this entry are closed.
Thank you! What inspiration to start the year with!!
Thank YOU! May it be a brilliant one, whereby we each discover our deepest agency and compassion. 🙏🏻
Thank you so much for this. May we all
indeed discover our deepest agency and our compassion for ourselves and for others.
🙏🏻🌟🙏🏻
This is beautiful, and wish you the same, thank you, Beth.
Thanks SO much for your good wishes. Blessings and more blessings!
May Blessings and Peace overtake all our hearts. Onward we go. 💙🙏🏻
Onward indeed. And in the finest company, I think! ✨
Power of Raven be thine.
Power of Eagle by thine.
And power of the Clans*.
Power of Storm be thine.
Power of Moon be thine.
And Power of Sun.
Power of Sea be thine.
Power of Land be thine.
And Power of Heaven.
The words above are a translation of an ancient Gaelic blessing invocation, from me to anyone who wants and welcomes it, with my love, thanks, and deep respect. *Clans in our time can be understood as family, friends, community.
I love this blessing. Thank you so much! And I agree with your wise assessment of what a clan means these days. Love you, dearest Niamh!
thank you
happy new year
Here’s to a much, much better year for you, dearest Kathleen, and for us all! 🥂
May it be so! Happy New Year and May all good things be yours!
As you have said it, so may it be. xoxoxo!
Thank you for this, Beth. Happy New Year. I’m curious why this year which adds up to 10 (The Wheel of Fortune) doesn’t break down to 1, The Magician? Can it be both?
Not really. The way that every Tarot authority I know does it is that if the number falls within the Major Arcana (1-21), it only reduces to that number. It is not reduced further down.
So while The Magician (I) is numerologically connected to the Wheel of Fortune (in that the Magician, the Wheel, and the Sun are all a part of the same “constellation,” as Mary Greer and Angeles Arrien call it), there can be no Magician years until the year 10,000 C.E.
➡️ The rule is: the first Major Arcana card encountered when reducing the year’s number defines the year.
Thanks for asking, because there is a VERY dishearteningly lot of misinformation floating around.
Thank you so much for clarifying! That means 2029 is a Death year. Yikes.
That’s right. But a Death Year is not that bad, just like the Death card is rarely as ominous as some folks think.
Otoh, a Devil year or Tower Year … 😳
happy new year to you, dear beth! may it be filled with health and prosperity for you and your loved ones.
And the same to you, Ann. Heaven knows you have been through the grinder this past year. Here’s to a better one all around, my friend! 🥂
Many blessings to you Beth and so grateful for all you do for all of us. May the year of the wheel and year of the horse fill us all with strength, love and clarity❤️
Oh, yes, you are right! I had not yet connected the Wheel year and the Horse year together. That’s very, very interesting. 🤔
Blessings to you, dear Marguerite – for your generosity of spirit, for sharing your experiences and insights, and for all I know you do for others. 💚
And to you as well, Beth!
💚