यह शब्द होंडुरास और एल साल्वाडोर में जीवित है। यह एक साथ तीन अर्थ रखता है — कद्दू, पासे-कप और स्वयं उपहार-विनिमय — और क्रिसमस की यह प्रथा अपने नाम कलश से ही लेती है: पर्चियाँ अंदर जाती हैं, नाम बाहर आते हैं।
What a Cuchumbo actually is
The vessel — calabash and leather
The original Cuchumbo is a small vessel held in the hand: either a hollowed-out calabash gourd that farm hands carried water in, or a cup of raw leather used to shake dice. Same word, two everyday objects, both shaped like a fist. The Mayan root chum — gourd — is what binds them.
The exchange — December, in Honduras and El Salvador
By extension, Cuchumbo names the December gift exchange. Names go on slips of paper inside the cup; each person draws one in secret. Whoever you draw is who you give to. The custom runs alongside the wider Honduran and Salvadoran Christmas season — at the office wrapping up the year, at the family dinner, and among scattered friends.
The dynamics — pistas and the wish list
Once names are drawn, a wish-list sheet circulates so everyone can leave hints. Over the next week or two, small anonymous pistas appear on the recipient's desk or in their bag — a chocolate, a card, a teasing riddle — building anticipation without giving anything away. The secret is the whole point; the slow build is half the fun.
The reveal — circle, gift, kind word
On reveal day the group gathers in a circle. Gifts are opened together, one at a time. As each person opens theirs, the giver says something kind about the recipient — what they admire, what they appreciate, why they're glad to share the season with them. The tradition is officially about a gift; in practice it is about saying out loud what people already feel.
How this app carries the tradition forward
The app does the same thing the vessel did — it shakes the names privately and keeps the secret intact. The hint feature replaces the circulating wish-list sheet. Nobody — not even the organizer — sees the pairs until the agreed date. The reveal can happen in person, on a video call, or asynchronously; the format adapts, the spirit doesn't.
Run a Cuchumbo, anywhere
Wherever you are, in person or remote — the draw is sealed, the secret is honored, the gesture is the same. Set a name and a date, share the link, and let the Cuchumbo do the rest.