Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Chinese zodiac birthday star personality

Chinese zodiac birthday star personality

Characteristics: "Birthday star" represents a person with good fortune and longevity.

On this planet, you appear to be indifferent and indifferent to the world.

But once you have a goal, you will be full of energy and accumulate accumulated experience.

The so-called "If you don't make a sound, it will be a blockbuster" is talking about you, but you must also overcome the shortcoming that it is difficult to sustain enthusiasm, and at the same time, you must also accept the shortcomings and mistakes pointed out to you by others.

The longevity star in the Chinese twelve constellations represents Sagittarius. The longevity star corresponds to the White Dew and the Autumnal Equinox. The longevity star is located in the constellation Carina. It is now called Canopus and is the second brightest star in the sky after Sirius.

Sagittarius, the zodiac sign that falls between September 8 and October 7 of the lunar calendar, is considered by astrologers to be the most optimistic, most religious, and easiest to become a believer.

Broad-minded Sagittarius loves to travel. They are known as bohemian travelers who have one foot inside and one foot outside, ready to go out at any time.

It is their hyperactivity and optimism that make it easy for them to find positive meaning in life from hardships without getting caught up in small details, or to find relief from death because of a blinding leaf.

They are least prone to depression and anger, and therefore live longest.

Origin of Chinese Constellations Generally speaking, the general framework of Chinese constellations is the "Three Walls and Twenty-eight Constellations (xiù)" system.

We know that the earth revolves around the sun, once a year. From our perspective, it seems that the sun is slowly moving on the background of the starry sky, moving exactly once a year and returning to its original position (of course the sun is high in the sky)

, we cannot see the stars, but we can infer this by observing the stars around the sun after it sets or before it rises).

The path that we see the sun slowly travel along is called the "ecliptic".

Moreover, the ancients have long discovered that the paths taken by the moon and the five planets of gold, wood, water, fire, and earth are also near the ecliptic.

Because of the need to measure the position changes of these moving celestial bodies, the starry sky near the ecliptic is particularly important.

So the ancients roughly divided this part of the starry sky into 28 parts along the ecliptic, each part was called a "constellation", and together these 28 constellations were called "Twenty-Eight Constellations".