Is it unlucky to repair graves on the Chinese Valentine's Day in 2020? What are the traditional folk customs of the Chinese Valentine's Day?

Is it unlucky to repair graves on the Chinese Valentine's Day in 2020? What are the traditional folk customs of the Chinese Valentine's Day?
Introduction: It is necessary to choose an auspicious day for grave repair. So is it unlucky to repair grave on the Chinese Valentine's Day in 2020? What are the traditional folk customs of the Chinese Valentine's Day? July is the harvest season, and the air is filled with the scent of autumn fruits. We should be doubly happy in such a good time. Shuimoxiansheng.com will interpret for you the relevant information about the seventh month of the lunar calendar in 2020.

Is it unlucky to repair graves on Chinese Valentine's Day in 2020?

Lunar calendar: July 7, 2020 Gregorian calendar: August 25, 2020, Tuesday, Virgo [Today's old almanac is suitable] Pray for blessings, get married, move to work, fast and offer sacrifices, pray for offspring, move into a new house, pray for wealth, break ground, start drilling, remove mourning clothes, accept betrothal gifts, open the market, build a house, erect pillars and beams, accept wealth, remove planting and livestock, go to school, cut clothes, wear a hairpin [Today's old almanac is unsuitable] Litigation, bed installation, construction, groundbreaking, burial, travel, go out to teach, seek medical treatment
Since breaking ground [i.e. repairing graves] is auspicious in the lunar calendar, it is suitable to repair graves on the Chinese Valentine's Day in 2020!

What are the traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival?

Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: women worship the moon
In the culture of the Xia people, the ancient custom of worshiping the moon god was mostly on the new moon day, that is, the 17th or 27th day. It is believed that the 15th day of the month, which was popular in the Han Dynasty, was also a slight revision of the 27th day. In ancient times, many women had the custom of worshiping the moon. In traditional culture, the moon has always been a symbol of good fortune for women. They often pray or confide their deepest thoughts to the moon. There has been a tradition of women worshipping the moon since ancient times, especially on the Chinese Valentine's Day and the Mid-Autumn Festival. The legend of Diao Chan offering sacrifices to the moon is probably the most touching scene.
Praying for a child During the Chinese Valentine's Day, people use wax to make various images, such as the characters in the story of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl, or the shapes of vultures, mandarin ducks, and other animals, and place them on the water to float, which is called "floating on water." Among them is a wax baby doll called "Huasheng". Women bought them home and let them float on the water and soil, believing it was a good omen for having children.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: welcoming the immortals
The Qiqiao Festival in Guangzhou, Guangdong is unique. Before the festival arrives, the girls prepare various ingenious little toys with colored paper, straw, string, etc. They also put grain seeds and mung beans in small boxes and soak them in water to make them germinate. When the sprouts grow to more than two inches long, they are used to worship gods, which are called "worshiping the immortals" and "worshiping the gods". From the evening of the sixth to the evening of the seventh, for two consecutive nights, the girls put on new clothes and new jewelry. After everything is arranged, they burn incense and light candles, kneel down and worship the starry sky, which is called "welcoming the immortals". They have to worship seven times from the third to the fifth watch.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: worshipping gods
In some villages in western Guangdong, there is a custom of making dumplings to worship gods on July 7th.
According to traditional customs, people worship the "Lord" (Buddha) in the temple first, and then worship the God of Land. Offerings to gods usually include rice dumplings, three kinds of tea and five kinds of wine, fruits, etc.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: worshiping the Cowherd
According to some books from the Ming and Qing Dynasties and the Republic of China, the skills displayed by Guangzhou girls on the Chinese Valentine's Day included embroidered shoes the size of a grain of rice, various fans the size of fingernails, exquisite and light small silk curtains, and specially made lotus, jasmine, rose, night-blooming primrose, etc. The flowerpot was only the size of a drinking cup, with two flowers painted in the pot, one real and one fake, which made it difficult to distinguish.
On the seventh night, the worship of the god continues as it did the previous night, which is called "worshiping the Cowherd", and is usually performed by a boy.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: planting seeds to pray for a child
According to the old custom, a few days before the Chinese Valentine's Day, a layer of soil was put on a small wooden board, and corn seeds were sown to grow into green seedlings. Some small huts, flowers and trees were then placed on it to make it look like a small village of farmers, which was called "shell board". Or mung beans, red beans, wheat, etc. were soaked in a porcelain bowl, and waited for them to grow inch-long sprouts, and then tied into a bundle with red or blue silk ropes. This was called "seeding life", also known as the "five-life basin" or "flower basin". It is also called "Pao Qiao" in various parts of the south. The grown bean sprouts are called Qiao Ya, and people even use Qiao Ya to replace needles and throw them on the water to pray for cleverness. Various images are also sculpted out of wax, such as the characters in the story of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl, or the shapes of vultures, mandarin ducks, and other animals, and placed on the water to float, which is called "floating on water." There were also wax baby dolls that women would buy and place them in water and soil to float them home, believing that this would bring good luck in having a child, a practice called "transformation." Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: Tianhe Night Talk
On the night of the Chinese Valentine's Day, many young girls will secretly hide under a shed full of lush pumpkins. Legend has it that if one can hear the whispers of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl when they meet in the dead of night, the girl who is about to get married will be able to obtain this everlasting love for a thousand years. In an era of open social atmosphere, there were also lovers who would hide under the melon shed hand in hand and eavesdrop on the whispers of the Milky Way.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: worshiping the Weaver Girl
"Worshiping the Weaver Girl" is purely a matter for young girls and young women. Most of them make appointments with their friends or neighbors in advance to host the event together with five or six people, or as many as ten people. The ceremony was held by setting up a table under the moonlight, on which were placed tea, wine, fruits, five seeds (longan, red dates, hazelnuts, peanuts, melon seeds) and other offerings; there were also a few flowers tied with red paper and inserted in a vase, and a small incense burner was placed in front of the flowers. Then, the young women and girls who had agreed to participate in the worship of the Weaver Girl fasted for a day, bathed, and came to the host's house on time. After burning incense and praying in front of the table, everyone sat around the table together, eating peanuts and melon seeds, facing the Weaver Girl constellation, and silently reciting their thoughts. For example, young girls who hope to be beautiful or marry a good husband, and young women who hope to have a baby soon, can pray silently to the Vega. We played until midnight.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: storing Qixi water
"Qixi Water" is also known as "July Seventh Water". It is said that "Qixi Water" has magical functions. It can remain unchanged for a long time and can treat burns, remove sores, etc.
In Guangdong and Guangxi, there is a custom of storing "Qixi water". That is, after the first cockcrow on the morning of the seventh day, each family goes to the well or river to draw water and store it.
According to folklore, on the morning of July 7, fairies will come down to earth to take a bath, and the bath water can ward off evil spirits, cure diseases and prolong life. Therefore, people go to the river to fetch water in the morning of the Qixi Festival, and then collect it in new jars for future use.
It is said that on the night of Chinese Valentine's Day, washing your face with seven-color floral water made from seven kinds of flowers, such as Milan, jasmine, and rose, can make a woman more beautiful.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: celebrating the birthday of the ox
In the old days, children would pick wild flowers and hang them on the horns of cows on the Chinese Valentine's Day, which was also called "celebrating the cow's birthday." According to legend, after the Queen Mother of the West separated the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl with the Milky Way, the old cow asked the Cowherd to peel off its skin so that the Cowherd could cross the Milky Way to see the Weaver Girl, so the old cow could ride on its skin to see the Weaver Girl.
In order to commemorate the old cow’s sacrificial spirit, people have the custom of “celebrating the cow’s birthday”.
Traditional folk customs of the Qixi Festival: worshiping Kuixing
The ancients' worship of stars went far beyond Altair and Vega. They believed that there were seven stars in the east, west, south and north representing directions, collectively known as the Twenty-Eight Mansions. Among them, the Big Dipper was the brightest and could be used to identify directions at night.
The first star of the Big Dipper is called Kuixing, also known as Kuishou. Kuixing is the god in ancient Chinese mythology who dominates the rise and fall of articles. In the minds of ancient students, Kuixing has a supreme status.
It is said that July 7th is the birthday of Kuixing. Kuixing is in charge of literary affairs, and scholars who want to achieve fame and success particularly respect Kuixing. Therefore, they worship him on the Qixi Festival, praying for his blessing for good luck in the exams.
In ancient times, when a scholar won the top spot in the imperial examination, he was called "the best scholar in the world" or "the one who won the first place in one fell swoop" because Kuixing is in charge of the examination fortune. Scholars in the eastern Fujian area venerate Kuixing, and there is even a custom of "worshiping Kuixing" on the "Qixi Festival".

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