Introduction: Greeting as a Cultural Code and Ritual
A New Year greeting is not just a transmission of good wishes, but a complex communicative act that encodes cultural norms, historical experience, and collective perceptions of time and well-being. The "unusualness" of greetings is determined by their deviation from familiar verbal or behavioral patterns, the use of extraordinary carriers, recipients, or contexts. Scientific analysis of such practices reveals the deep layers of human creativity, adaptation to the environment, and social interaction.
Extreme and Professional Greetings
Unique rituals are formed in conditions of isolation or special professional environments.
Space greetings from the ISS: Since 1999, it has become a tradition for international crews of the International Space Station to record video messages for the inhabitants of Earth. This greeting, transmitted from orbit (about 400 km above the planet), has a sacred status of "a perspective from the outside." Astronauts demonstrate weightlessness, show the Earth through a porthole, emphasizing the fragility and unity of the world. The language of such a greeting is international, and its very existence symbolizes the overcoming of earthly boundaries.
Polar Telegrams: In Antarctic and Arctic research stations (such as "Vostok" or "McMurdo"), greetings have been and are being transmitted via radio communication in conditions of polar night and extreme isolation. Their value lies in overcoming the communicative vacuum, becoming a tangible proof of connection with "the big land." The text is often encoded with professional slang and references to the realities of the station.
Underwater Messages from Submarine Crews: For submariners in autonomous navigation, the New Year greeting from the fleet commander, transmitted via very long wave communication, is an important moral act. Its uniqueness lies in overcoming physical barriers (depth, water thickness) and in reminding of the invisible presence of the collective during the universal celebration.
Performance Greetings and Urban Interventions
Greeting becomes public art, changing the urban environment.
Light installations and projections: Modern artists turn the facades of buildings (Hermitage, Roman Colosseum, skyscrapers in Tokyo) into giant screens for New Year messages. For example, the project "Happy New Year, London!" projected the numbers of the coming year and the names of the city's inhabitants on the Big Ben building, collected through social networks. This greeting is a total inclusion.
Flashmobs and synchronized actions: Mass dances, singing anthems, launching kites or lanterns at the same time in different points of the planet (as the "New Year at Greenwich Mean Time" action). The uniqueness lies in the collective creation of a greeting as a global event, erasing geographical boundaries.
Graffiti and street art: Street artists create thematic works that become unofficial greetings for the entire district. In Berlin or São Paulo, such works often carry social or philosophical content, offering not standard wishes, but a reason for reflection on the future.
Ethnographic and Archaic Forms
In archaic and traditional societies, greeting is often part of a ritual.
"House rounds" with carols: In the East Slavic tradition (shchedrovki, kolядki), groups of masked people walked around houses, performing songs-wishes that were supposed to magically ensure the prosperity of the house in the new year. Greeting here was not an emotional gesture, but a routine service, paid for with treats. Its uniqueness for a modern city dweller lies in the fusion of aesthetic (song), magical (incantation), and economic (gift) acts.
Greetings to animals and spirits: In the shamanic cultures of Siberia and the Far East, the new year is celebrated as a renewal of the world, and greetings are addressed to the spirits-owners of the land, ancestors, as well as domestic reindeer or dogs, from which the survival of the community depends. In Japan, there is a tradition of joya no kane — 108 strikes on the bell of a Buddhist temple, purifying from 108 worldly passions. This greeting is a purification, addressed to the community and the cosmos.
Scottish "Hagmanay" (Hagmanay): The ritual of first-footing (the "first foot"), when the first person to cross the threshold of the house after midnight brings symbolic gifts (coal, whiskey, sand cookies) and delivers greetings, determining, according to belief, luck for the entire year. Greeting here is personified and materialized in gifts.
Technological and Digital Oddities
Greetings encoded in DNA: In 2017, the company Twist Bioscience, at the request of one of its clients, synthesized a DNA sequence in which a New Year greeting was encoded. This is probably the most compact and durable (under proper storage conditions) carrier of the greeting text in history.
Neural network generation: Modern AI (ChatGPT, Midjourney) create personalized greetings in the form of poetry, prose, or images based on the analysis of data about a person. The uniqueness lies in the fact that the author is not a person, but an algorithm, which raises philosophical questions about sincerity and authenticity.
Greetings via satellite communication with remote IoT devices: Engineers send text commands-greetings to automatic weather stations in deserts or buoys in the ocean, which is a form of professional humor and maintaining corporate spirit among specialists.
Conclusion: Greeting as an Expansion of the Boundaries of Communication
Unusual New Year greetings demonstrate that the need for symbolic participation in the cycle of time and the strengthening of social ties can overcome any limitations: gravity (space), pressure (ocean depths), isolation (Antarctica), species barriers (greetings to animals), and even the nature of the carrier (from rock art to a molecule of DNA). These practices transform the greeting from a formality into an act of creative mastery of the world, whether technological, artistic, or ritualistic. They remind us that the essence of the holiday is not in receiving a standard text, but in creating and experiencing a shared moment of meaning, which can be delivered in the most unimaginable ways. In this pursuit of a unique greeting, a deep human need is revealed not just to mark the arrival of a new year, but to leave an individual, special mark in it.
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