Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - What do you mean you don't take the Gregorian calendar for other things?

What do you mean you don't take the Gregorian calendar for other things?

Don't take the rest, that is to say, you can't do anything except what you should do in the yellow calendar.

So, this is not a good day to do the rest. On this day, you can only choose what you should do. If you do other things, there will probably be unexpected changes and things will go wrong. There are many kinds of folk sayings in the yellow calendar. For example, the word "don't take the rest" is a sentence in the yellow calendar, which means that when this day comes, you can only do the right thing in the yellow calendar, otherwise it will lead to obstacles and everything will go wrong.

However, if things like getting married, moving and getting married are recorded in the Gregorian calendar, then these things can be done. For these things that should be done, this day is an auspicious day for them. They can act with confidence, and the process of doing things will be very smooth and there will be a good result.

Application of almanac:

In modern times, the main contents of the Gregorian calendar include three calendars: solar calendar, lunar calendar, and dry calendar. Good luck should be avoided, washed away, auspicious, evil, combined harm, singing, dry branch, twenty-four solar terms, twelve gods, duty, fetal god, Peng Zu Bletilla, Liu Yao, nine planets, fleeting time, prince, three yuan and nine luck, nine planets in Kong Xuan, and the god of wealth. That is, people in ancient China recorded their daily likes and dislikes on the calendar as a guide to action.

China's traditional calendar is based on heavenly stems and earthly branches's arrangement, combination and circulation, which means circulation and reappearance. It is this "recurrence" that makes it meaningful to choose a date to avoid it. The fundamental basis for the ancients to formulate calendars and determine auspicious days is the sun, the moon and the stars. Among them, the stars are the most critical factor in determining the date, and the Gregorian calendar basically does not consider these, so there is no so-called taboo.

The above contents are for reference only.