What Is Kanreki? Japan's 60th Birthday Tradition Explained
The morning of January 1st, 2026, I turned 60 — a milestone that in Japan carries a significance far beyond the usual birthday fanfare. I celebrated my kanreki (還暦), one of the most meaningful long...

Source: DEV Community
The morning of January 1st, 2026, I turned 60 — a milestone that in Japan carries a significance far beyond the usual birthday fanfare. I celebrated my kanreki (還暦), one of the most meaningful longevity celebrations in Japanese culture. What is Kanreki? The word itself tells the story: kan (還) means "return" and reki (暦) means "calendar." At 60, you've completed a full cycle of the traditional East Asian zodiac calendar and symbolically returned to your birth year. Think of it like an odometer rolling over. The zodiac system combines 12 animals (the jūnishi) with 5 elements (wood, fire, earth, metal, water), each appearing in both yin and yang forms. Multiply these together — 12 × 5 = 60 — and you get the complete cycle. When you turn 60, the same animal-element combination that marked your birth year comes around again. I was born in 1966, the Year of the Fire Horse — hinoe-uma (丙午) in Japanese. This year, 2026, is once again hinoe-uma. The circle is complete. The Fire Horse's Shadow