海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Letting go 鈥 and looking ahead

Saying 鈥榞ood riddance鈥 to the old year is only a start.

By By the Monitor鈥檚 Editorial Board

As New Year鈥檚 Day approaches, thoughts can teeter on a pinnacle. Tracing the terrain left behind shows both the rugged patches and the pleasant strolls of the closing year. But thought also swivels ahead, squinting through the mists to determine the path ahead.

In New York City鈥檚 Times Square 鈥淕ood Riddance Day鈥 has become an annual event. It's based on a tradition in Latin America, where people stuff objects that symbolize for them the worst aspects of the previous year into dolls that are then set on fire, freeing them of troubling memories.

In the Manhattan event, held this year on Dec. 28, a bonfire was replaced by a giant shredding machine. People wrote down what they wanted to forget 鈥 an event, an action, a person 鈥 and threw the note into the shredder, all with the aim of ending its hold over them.

Long lines suggested a lot of people had a lot they鈥檇 just as soon forget. Those who weren鈥檛 present could tweet their bad memories, which were printed out and fed to the shredder.

鈥淚t really is this need we have, even when the world is crazy, to say, 鈥榊ou know what? I鈥檓 gonna let go of the things that have been dragging me down and ... look forward with a sense of hope and the possibility of change. Either for myself personally or the world,鈥 said Tim Tompkins, president of the Times Square Alliance, which sponsors the event.

A little letting go may open thought to fresh possibilities. People need 鈥渁 new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes鈥 to detect the potential of a new year, British author G.K. Chesterton wrote a century ago.

In a guest editorial 鈥淣ow Is the Greatest Time to Be Alive,鈥 which led the November edition of Wired magazine, President Obama wrote how much he admired 鈥淭he Martian.鈥 The movie, whose plot involves an American astronaut stranded alone on the Red Planet, showed 鈥渉ow humans 鈥 through our ingenuity, our commitment to fact and reason, and ultimately our faith in each other 鈥 can [solve] just about any problem.鈥

He also mentioned the vast improvements he鈥檚 seen during his lifetime, including in the lives of racial minorities and people with disabilities. A whole slew of big problems 鈥 crime rates, teen pregnancies, poverty 鈥 have all markedly improved.

鈥淸T]he truth is, if you had to choose any time in the course of human history to be alive, you鈥檇 choose this one,鈥 the president added. 鈥淩ight here in America, right now.鈥

Rather than wait passively to see if the new year might surprise people with some good news, they can choose to live lives that anticipate good, says one US religious figure.

鈥淸I]n order to be hopeful, ... we must constantly work at it. We must make hope a lifelong spiritual discipline,鈥 wrote Robert Hardies, senior minister of All Souls Church, Unitarian in Washington, D.C., recently in the Washington Post. 鈥淚n this way, hope is like love. It鈥檚 ... one of the most important ongoing spiritual projects of our lives.鈥

A new year: That鈥檚 365 new opportunities to explore.