Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Can we share a room on Mid-Autumn Festival? Is pregnancy a ghost in Mid-Autumn Festival?

Can we share a room on Mid-Autumn Festival? Is pregnancy a ghost in Mid-Autumn Festival?

Can we share a room on Mid-Autumn Festival?

Yes, you can share a room on the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Mid-Autumn Festival is one of our traditional festivals, also called Ghost Festival. It is because of the name Ghost Festival that superstitious friends will think that bad things will happen in the Mid-Autumn Festival.

But in fact, it won't, because the Mid-Autumn Festival is just an ordinary festival, and it's normal to get pregnant in the same room on this day.

Therefore, it is possible to share the rent on the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Is pregnancy a ghost in Mid-Autumn Festival?

No, it's not the Mid-Autumn Festival ghost.

Because the Mid-Autumn Festival is called Ghost Festival, on this day, all ghosts will also come back to spend their holidays on earth. All superstitious friends will think what the hell is pregnant in the Mid-Autumn Festival. But this statement is wrong and belongs to feudal superstition.

No matter which day you get pregnant, it is the best gift from heaven, so getting pregnant in the Mid-Autumn Festival is naturally a gift from heaven. Don't feel bad about your child just because you are pregnant during the Mid-Autumn Festival. The fate of children born at different times is completely different, so the fate of children depends on the specific time of their birth.

July 30th was originally an ancient folk festival to worship ancestors, but it was called the Central Plains Festival, which originated from Taoism after the Eastern Han Dynasty. Buddhism calls July and a half Kogasawara Festival. In a sense, the ancestor worship festival in July and a half belongs to folk customs, the Mid-Autumn Festival belongs to Taoism, and the Arahara Festival belongs to Buddhism.

Sacrificing ancestors on July 14/ 15 is a traditional cultural festival popular in Chinese character cultural circles of various countries and overseas Chinese areas, and it is also a traditional festival to worship ancestors on the same footing as New Year's Eve, Tomb-Sweeping Day and Chung Yeung Festival. 20 10 In May, the Mid-Autumn Festival declared by the Ministry of Culture of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region was included in the first category of intangible cultural heritage.