Today, 15 February, is Yuan Xiao (元宵节 / yuán xiāo jié) the Lantern Festival, which marks the final day of the Chinese New Year celebrations. Light a new lantern and let it show you the way towards all the things you hope for this new year! (I don't have a lantern handy so I’ll be using a candle)
After the lantern festival, the Chinese New Year starts in earnest as everyone goes back to work. Taboos are no longer in effect and the new year decorations can be taken down.
Some more traditional people wait till after the Lantern Festival to start on new work or life projects!
The lanterns also symbolise letting go of the past year, which is necessary to welcome good fortune into your new year. Legend has it that the Jade Emperor intended to destroy a village with fire on the fifteenth day of the lunar year. However, the Jade Emperor’s daughter warned the villagers in time and the enterprising villagers hung red lanterns all over the village to give the impression that it was already in flames… and the Jade Emperor was fooled and the villagers survived.
The lesson? Fake it and you might make it, maybe? Anyway, celebrate surviving the night by making a new start.
It’s also a romantic time. In Ancient China, the Lantern Festival was the only time of year when women could mix freely with men with everyone going outdoors with lanterns to wish a year of good fortune on everyone else.
Normally there are lanterns and celebrations all over. But Covid has taken its toll.
And I don’t really feel like celebrating because Xiao Huang (literally ‘little yellow’, my Honda Jazz), is fifteen years old today and though she still runs fine, she’s run out of time.
In Singapore, having a valid COE (Certificate of Entitlement) is mandatory. It’s part of a quota system meant to price people out of cars and into public transport. The goal of the system is to limit vehicle sales. Every new car registered requires a COE so the LTA can control sales directly. If it allows 2,000 new vehicles to be sold this month, it’ll release 2,000 COEs.
These are the rates for now:
COE Category | CAT A CAR UP TO 1600CC & 97KW | CAT B CAR ABOVE 1600CC OR 97KW |
---|---|---|
Quota Premium | $60,761 | $86,102 |
Change | $2,863 | $4,101 |
Quota | 542 | 550 |
Bids Received | 819 | 865 |
PQP | $56,670 (Feb) | $80,583 (Feb) |
Enjoy your dance classes, always wonderful to hear people starting new things - and sorry you are losing your Jazz. They are the most spacious little things, aren't they? I'm on my second one.
ReplyDeleteGood retirement, Xiao Huang. It is always so hard to let good friends go.
ReplyDeleteWould anyone be interested in acquiring a 2000 Ford 250 V-10 Superduty? Just asking. I dare not think what the Quota Premium would be on that trusty old pick-up.
ReplyDelete