Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - What should I avoid from the first day to the fifteenth day of the first month?

What should I avoid from the first day to the fifteenth day of the first month?

The custom from the first day of the first month to the fifteenth day of the first month is currently during the Spring Festival. Among the people in our country, there are many topics about the Spring Festival and many customs.

On the first day of the first month, you can't use a broom. On the second day of the first month, the married daughter returned to her family. On the third day of the first month, the traditional custom of the Han nationality on this day is to burn the door god paper. On the fourth day of the first month, the gods returned to earth from heaven. The fifth day of the first month, commonly known as breaking the fifth. Before the Han folk custom broke the "Five-Year Plan", many taboos could be broken. On the sixth day of the first month, shops and restaurants officially opened their doors and set off firecrackers, no less than on New Year's Eve. On the seventh day of the first month, it is People's Day, that is, people's birthday. On the eighth day of the first month, it is the day to break the valley. Legend has it that Xiaomi's birthday is also called Shunxing Festival. Legend has it that the stars are in the lower bound and the stars in the sky are the most complete. If the weather is fine this day, it indicates a bumper rice harvest this year and the sky is overcast. The ninth day of the first month, commonly known as "born in heaven", is one of the traditional lunar festivals of the Han nationality. On the tenth day of the first month, it is Shi's birthday. On this day, no stone tools such as grinding and grinding can be moved, and even stones must be sacrificed. On the eleventh day of the first month, it is the "son-in-law's day", which is the day when the father-in-law fetes his son-in-law. After the eleventh day of the first month, people began to prepare for the Lantern Festival. From the twelfth day of the first month, they began to buy lanterns and set up light sheds. The nursery rhyme goes like this: "Eleven chirps, twelve light sheds, thirteen people turn on the lights, fourteen lights turn on, fifteen lines and a half months, and sixteen people put out the lights.