Libmonster ID: NG-2240

What to Start on Old New Year's Day, or "Vasilev evening": initiation rituals and year programming

The period of Old New Year, centered around Vasilev evening (January 13), was perceived in folk tradition not just as the continuation of holidays, but as a key chronomagnetic "window" — a time when a person's actions have a special power to influence the future. This was a moment of conscious programming of reality for the next year through a system of rituals that had both practical and deeply symbolic significance. "Starting" on this day should not be abstract endeavors, but specific practices that laid the matrix of well-being.

1. Domestic and household initiations: "launching" abundance.

The principle of "as the beginning, so the continuation" lay at the foundation of many rituals. Therefore, one should start with actions that model the desired outcome.

Start the financial year and account for well-being. Vasilev evening was the time for final calculations, the distribution of debts, and the beginning of a new economic cycle. It was forbidden to enter the new year with debts or deceit — this programmed poverty. It was important to put a large bill (a gold coin) into the wallet or a special place — "to attract" money throughout the year. This was a prototype of modern financial planning and the formation of a "financial cushion".

Start "work" with grain — a symbol of life. The ritual of "sowing" (scattering) grain around the house, performed by boys ("sowers"), was not just a greeting. It was a magical action of "sowing" the future harvest and prosperity. The housewife had to cook "Vasilev's porridge" from new grain before dawn. The process of her preparation and the result (a full pot, fluffy porridge) served as a diagnosis and program: good porridge meant a happy year, and it was eaten, "starting" the year with luck in this way.

Start the meal with ritual dishes. The first dish to try at the festive dinner was "rich kutya." It was eaten at the beginning, "starting" the year with abundance (grain), sweetness (honey), and multiplicity (poppy). Pork (legs, head, aspic) was also mandatory — a symbol of fertility and abundance under the patronage of Vasiliy-"piglet." Starting to eat with it meant calling for patronage in livestock breeding.

Interesting fact: In some regions of Belarus and Smolensk, there was a ritual of "hitching up." After dinner, the host symbolically "hitched up" the family members in an improvised plow and "rode" around the house, "starting" the plowing. At this time, the children scattered grain. This was a theatrical initiation of the agricultural cycle directly in the living space, translating the house from a festive status to an active one.

2. Social and communicative beginnings.

Vasilev evening was the time for strengthening and restarting social connections, which was also a form of "securing" the future through the collective.

Start with the ritual of almsgiving and caroling. Unlike Christmas carols, the carols on Vasilev evening had a more down-to-earth, pragmatic character. The carolers, greeting the hosts, wished them not spiritual blessings, but concrete material prosperity: "Generous evening, good evening! May good people be healthy! May the cow milk, the sheep lamb, the pig fatten!". Starting this round meant activating a network of mutual obligations and good wishes in the community.

Start with the exchange of gifts and food. It was important to start the exchange with the nearest neighbors and relatives: bring them kutya, pies, and receive something in return. This was not just a treat, but a ritual of the circulation of well-being, creating a closed circle of giving, which, according to beliefs, should ensure abundance for all its participants in the new year.

Start with reconciliation. The evening was considered the time when it was important to start a new chapter in relationships — to forgive old grievances, to reconcile. Entering the year with a clean heart and without enmity meant protecting oneself from disputes and conflicts in the future.

3. Personal-magical practices: programming destiny.

This was one of the last evenings of the Old New Year, when the boundary between worlds was still thin, and therefore it was possible to "peek" into the future and influence it.

Start the year with a new name. There was a custom of "renaming." People who had a difficult year could ask to be called by another name (at least within the ritual) on this evening to "fool" fate and start a new life. This was a deep psychological technique of "rebooting" identity.

Start divination with an action-based setting. Divination on Vasilev evening (especially for girls — on a husband) was different from Christmas divination. They often had not just predictive, but programming character. For example, flattery of the domovoy or rituals with shoes ("throwing out the slippers") were not only attempts to find out where the groom would come from, but also magical actions to make him come. That is, divination became the first step to actively attracting the desired.

Start with speech — verbal settings. It was extremely important to pay attention to the first phrase spoken on the morning of January 14, as well as to toasts and wishes at the evening table. Words were considered especially weighty on this day. Therefore, wishes were formulated as specifically and vividly as possible, starting the year with a positive verbal matrix. Arguments, cursing, and profanity were strictly tabooed — they could "program" the year for conflicts.

4. Modern interpretations: what is important to "start" today.

In the modern urban context, archaic rituals transform, but their profound meaning — conscious creation of starting points and intention formation — remains relevant.

Start with a ritual of gratitude and summarizing. Before planning, it is important to complete the gestalt of the old year: write down or remember the good things for which you can be grateful in a family circle. This is a psychologically healthy practice that creates a foundation for the new.

Start with joint cooking and a meal. Preparing kutya or a special dinner with the whole family is a modern analog of "Vasilev's porridge," an act of joint creation of the holiday and strengthening of ties.

Start with the formulation of intentions, not goals. Unlike strict New Year's resolutions (SMART goals), it is more productive to start with an intention (intention) on Vasilev evening — a more flexible, value-oriented installation. For example, not "lose 10 kg," but "start treating my body with care." This corresponds to the spirit of the ritual as creating a common vector, not a rigid plan.

Start with cleaning the space and giving away excess. Analogous to ancient calculations with debts — sorting out the wardrobe, getting rid of clutter, charity. Starting the year with order in the house and a generous gesture means creating space for the new.

Conclusion.

"Starting" on Vasilev evening means joining the ancient rhythm of cyclic time, where the moment of transition between the old and the new is filled with special power. This is not about superstitions, but about deep psychotechnology that uses symbolic actions to focus attention, mobilize resources, and structure the future.

Traditional "beginnings" — from sowing grain to generous wishes — were a way for the peasant to actively participate in shaping his destiny, projecting a matrix of abundance, health, and social harmony into the future. In the modern world, it is important not to literally repeat the rituals, but to absorb their internal logic: mindfulness, gratitude, strengthening of ties, and bold programming of personal and family well-being through the first symbolic actions of the year. Vasilev evening offers us not a second chance to make a wish, but a tool for its thoughtful "launch" — through word, deed, meal, and communication. This is the time to start the year not with a blank page, but with a wisely filled ritual matrix that carries the centuries-old experience of "tuning" life to prosperity.


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New Year's resolutions // Abuja: Nigeria (ELIB.NG). Updated: 13.01.2026. URL: https://elib.ng/m/articles/view/New-Year-s-resolutions (date of access: 27.05.2026).

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