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  1. Jan 7, 2024 · There are so many interesting Filipino superstitions or folk beliefs associated with New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day in the Philippines. Filipinos say you should observe the following customs and traditions to ensure that the new year being welcomed is a prosperous one. Many of these superstitions bear a strong Chinese influence.

    • Paying Debts. One of the most unique traditions in the Philippines is the focus on settling your debts. While nobody wants to ring in the new year with even more debt, this is a big focus of the holiday in the Philippines.
    • Making Noise. New Year’s Eve in the Philippines isn’t a quiet event! This is a time to be as loud as possible. Pots and pans are banged together, kids use homemade instruments, and everyone just turns up the volume.
    • Firework Displays. Speaking of loud, this is also a time for some of the most extravagant fireworks displays. Colors and lights are a big part of how Filipinos celebrate, so it’s no surprise fireworks are so popular.
    • Cleaning the Home. Cleaning is a shared New Year’s Eve tradition around the globe. The Cambodian New Year and Chinese New Year also emphasize the importance of cleaning before ringing in the new.
    • Jumping to grow taller. Most Filipinos love basketball, but our height sadly didn’t get the memo. Jumping to grow taller when the clock hits midnight is one of the most common superstitions observed by Filipinos.
    • Wearing red to attract good luck. Many of our superstitions are borrowed from the Chinese. Red is a lucky color in China, and Filipinos have also come to adopt wearing red outfits on new year’s in hope to have better luck in the coming 365 days.
    • Wearing polka dots to attract money. The logic behind this specific superstition is that polka dots resemble coins, and coins are money; ergo, wearing polka dots will increase your chances of wealth in the coming year.
    • Round fruits. Having round fruit around the house is another superstition borrowed from the Chinese. Traditionally, there are supposed to be a dozen round fruits to symbolize prosperity each month of the year.
    • Don’t clean your house on New Year’s Day. Filipinos would usually do all the cleaning and the throwing away of unused stuff in the days leading to January 1st but never on New Year’s Day itself.
    • Make loud noises to welcome the year. Lighting up firecrackers and fireworks is not only done to bring a colorful start to the year. Filipinos also do it to scare and drive away from the evil spirits.
    • Turn on all the lights at home. Filipinos believe that keeping all the lights at home on during New Year’s Eve would lead them to have a better and brighter year ahead.
    • Keep the doors and the windows open during New Year’s Eve. In anticipation of the year, families keep their windows and their doors widely open during New Year’s Eve.
    • DISPLAYING ROUND FRUITS ON THE TABLE. The presence of circular objects is something that cannot be missed at a Filipino household during the new years. This is because circles are considered a lucky shape and placing it everywhere means you are going to attract good things for the rest of the year.
    • CHICKENLESS TABLE. There is an old Filipino saying that goes “isang kahig, isang tuka”. This denotes the life of living paycheck to paycheck, earning some to spend it all at once.
    • MEDIA NOCHE. Filipinos go all their way to have enough to have a handa during the new years, no matter how little. Greeting the new years with a lot of food on the table is to be inviting good spirits, basically making the food as an offering for them to bless the house with.
    • VISITING THE CHURCH. As a heavily Catholic country, it isn’t a surprise that Filipinos still practice their faith on the brink of the new year. Families go to church to pray for blessings in the year to come, and to express their gratitude for the ones they already received.
  2. Dec 26, 2016 · Interesting Filipino Superstitions On New Year’s Eve. 10. Have a very round grape in your mouth at the stroke of midnight. 11. Eat a native delicacy made from sticky rice to make good fortune stick in the new year. 12. Eat long noodles (pansit) for long life. Interesting Filipino Superstitions On New Year’s Eve. 13.

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  4. Dec 31, 2018 · Here are the top Pinoy New Year practices and/or superstitions: Round fruits. Filipinos flock to get their fresh fruit at the market to buy not just one, but 12 pieces of round fruits as the shape symbolizes prosperity – and the number follows each month of the year. 12 round fruits usually bought are grapes, oranges, melons, watermelons ...

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