Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Why do college-educated women not believe in science and insist on waiting for the good day of having another child?

Why do college-educated women not believe in science and insist on waiting for the good day of having another child?

First of all, I think a person's superstition has nothing to do with her education, but with her own thoughts. Especially those who have such a serious superstition, they must have grown up in this superstitious environment when they were young. It is even possible that they have experienced some bad things and cured them by magical methods, which will lead them to believe such things from now on.

For example, there is an example around me, that is, I have a female friend. In junior high school, she caught a bad cold and then had a high fever, but she went to the hospital many times and failed to be cured. Besides, the high fever made her head ache and she didn't even want to eat rice. Then her mother looked at her and felt very uncomfortable, so she invited a witch from the village to see her. Miraculously, after the witch came, she did nothing but wash her chopsticks, then locked her in the room and ate a pack of instant noodles. She recovered from the disease.

Moreover, after she left, she told her mother that it was because your child was possessed by a ghost, so from then on, she believed in this kind of thing and dared not go out at night. Moreover, someone died in other people's homes, and she did not dare to walk or even take a detour. So I think this female college student may have the same experience.

Secondly, it has something to do with the poor publicity of the school, that is, when I was a student, the teacher of the school did not explain this kind of thing to the students well, and then the students' thoughts never changed, so they went to college.