Ah, perhaps to you, it may be. I still have a lot to look forward to and have plans of all types for the upcoming year. I'm not big on celebrating the new year, as some are. I make no resolutions or anything of that nature. However, I do see the year switch as somewhat of a clean slate. The garbage that happened last year is done. I'm moving forward, taking what I learned, and making 2018 a better year than 2017 was.
It is a symbolic mulligan, a mental reset of sorts, when we can think 'this year _____.' Each filling in the blank with their hopes and/or resolutions.
I don't celebrate it. I celebrate the simple fact that I woke up alive this morning and stayed that way until bedtime. Not an easy achievement given the amount of idiots out there on the roads and in the government.
According to the world book encyclopedia, "the Romans dedicated this day (January 1)To Janus, the god of gates, doors, and beginnings, the month of January was named after Janus, who had two faces-one looking forward and the other looking backwards."-1984, vol. 14, p.237 Both the date and the customs associated with new year's celebrations vary from one country to another. In many places revelry and drinking are part of the festivities. True Christians strive to keep in mind the words found at Romans 13:13: "as in the daytime let us walk decently, not in revelries, and drunken bouts, not in illicit intercourse and loose conduct, not in strife and jealousy."