Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - The customs in my hometown have a good start.

The customs in my hometown have a good start.

The customs in my hometown are as follows:

Fan Wenyi:

My hometown Jiujiang has many unusual customs during the Spring Festival! On the eve of Chinese New Year, every household is covered with bacon, preserved fish and sausages, which seems to announce the arrival of the New Year in advance for people, and seems to be fighting for who is happier. In my family, everyone is very busy, some are busy ordering new year's goods, some are still cleaning, and some are giving out red envelopes. Although we are tired and sweaty, the joy on our faces is the perfect yearning for the New Year.

Fan Wener:

There are many festivals in China, but the ways of festivals are different because of different regions. Come and see the festivals and customs in my hometown! Spring Festival is one of the most solemn festivals in China. On the morning of the New Year's Day, everyone is scrambling to eat jiaozi, and children who don't usually like to eat are also wolfing down. This means that this year is a blessed year!

After breakfast, one person sat in the paste, while others were sorting out couplets. Soon, the old colorless couplets became brand-new couplets, and then three guns were fired, indicating the beginning of a new year! Lantern Festival is the first important festival after the Spring Festival. On this day, everyone will eat glutinous rice balls. Put lights on both sides of the door at night and light a candle on each side. Lighting candles on children and pots indicates a better harvest in the coming year! Then adults take homemade lanterns and take their children for a walk in the street!

Fan Wensan:

My hometown is a small village with no special customs. Only during the Chinese New Year, the people here are the most lively. Because of the Spring Festival, the adults have all gone home.

Looking back now, I still miss the fresh air at night, Woods, ponds, fireflies, and the atmosphere of my hometown during the New Year, the ancestral temple sacrifice, and the dragon dance. However, I can't see them now. They have all become tall buildings, pieces of concrete, and now there is no dragon dance. Many interesting programs were cancelled because no one participated, and the atmosphere gradually faded during the Chinese New Year. The customs in my hometown are still there, but the atmosphere of the customs has gradually disappeared.