In Mexico and other Latin American countries, women wear new yellow underwear on New Year's Eve to bring good luck and wealth in the year to come. Red underwear (this vendor has every size for sale on the tables behind her) indicates a New Year's wish for an exciting love interest! Just remember that whatever color underwear you choose, it has to be NEW.
Superstition or not, many people here in Mexico have the custom of ritos del Año Nuevo (New Year's rituals). Some rituals include foods, others prescribe certain clothing, and still others warrant attention for religious interest.
As the clock strikes midnight, it's customary to eat twelve grapes--one at each ding, one at each dong of the clock. While eating the grapes, you make a personal wish for each grape you consume, welcoming the new year that's beginning. Mexico Cooks! finds that it's helpful to write down the twelve wishes so as not to forget one or choke in the rush to swallow the grapes before the clock finishes striking the New Year's earliest hour! Even the most elegant restaurants promise that along with your late-night New Year's Eve meal, they will provide the grapes and champagne.
Eating a tablespoonful of cooked lentils on New Year's Eve is said to bring prosperity and fortune. You can also give raw lentils--just a handful, with the same wish for abundance, to family and friends.
Mexico Cooks! has often received a New Year's detallito (a little gift) of a tiny bottle like this, filled with layers of different kinds of seeds and grains. This gift represents the giver's wish for your New Year: abundance.
Sweep all the rooms of your house, your front steps, and the street in front of your house to remove all traces of the old year. Some people put 12 golden coins outside--to be swept into the house after the inside of the house is swept clean. The coins are to invite money and other abundance to come into the home. Photo courtesy Jeff Trotter.
Give someone a little woolly sheep as a New Year's gift--it too is a symbol of abundance! Why? In Mexico, a slang word for "money" is lana--that means wool, in English. And what's a sheep covered with? Lana--wool--for an abundance of money in the New Year. Photo courtesy Etsy.
On a small piece of paper, write down the undesirable habits and customs you'd like to let go of in the New Year that's just starting. Burn the paper, then follow through with the changes!
Choose three stones that symbolize health, love, and money. Put them in a place where you will see them every day.
Light candles: blue for peace, yellow for abundance, red for love, green for health, white for spirituality, and orange for intelligence.
Spill clean water on the sidewalk in front of your house as the clock rings in the New Year. Your house will be purified and all tears will be washed away.
To have money for your needs all year long, have some bills in your hand or in your pocket to welcome the arrival of the New Year. Some people fold up the money and put it in their shoes!
Take your suitcase for a walk. Legend is that the farther you walk with your suitcase, the farther you'll travel. Several New Year's Eves ago, Mexico Cooks! and a few friends celebrated the stroke of midnight by walking our suitcases around the block. We all traveled far and wide during the new year that followed.
Mexico Cooks! wishes all of you a muy próspero Año Nuevo--and whether you're an hombre or mujer, especially wishes that your red underwear brings you (or keeps you) the love of family, friends, and that special someone.
We'll see you right here in 2020!
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¡Feliz Año Nuevo!
Posted by: Bruce Taylor | December 30, 2019 at 05:18 PM
Thank you.
Delightful to read about the new year customs post.
Próspero Año Nuevo
Posted by: Joseph | December 29, 2019 at 04:29 PM
We'll be in Morelia then, but don't have any new underwear.
----If you're arriving on the first, it's too late! The underwear requirement is on New Year's Eve.
Posted by: Paul D. Yeatman | December 28, 2019 at 05:11 PM