China Naming Network - Eight-character query< - As the saying goes, "The sky can't afford a house, and the earth can't afford a grave." Does our ancestors' values ​​make sense?

As the saying goes, "The sky can't afford a house, and the earth can't afford a grave." Does our ancestors' values ​​make sense?

In ancient China, most of the population was rural. Rural areas were also very particular about building houses and burying people. Feng shui was often referred to to determine whether the place was suitable for building a house or for burial. The habit formed in this way has become a common saying that has been passed down to this day. There is such a saying that "the sky cannot afford a house, and the ground cannot afford a grave", which is also a saying about building a house and burying it. So what does this proverb mean? Does what our ancestors often say make sense?

In fact, most of the proverbs are easy for everyone to understand. However, this proverb is a bit difficult to understand at first glance. The sky is empty but there are no graves. It is a little easier to understand. So what does the sky mean? In fact, the "sky" and "empty earth" in the proverb "The sky cannot build a house, and the earth cannot bury a grave" refer to a specific time period, not the literal blue sky and white clouds and the collapse of the ground.

Explain the meaning of "sky" and "earth" in detail. In ancient times, our ancestors still respected God. The crops of the year depended on rainfall from the sky. Only with good weather and good weather would there be a good harvest. For gods who avoid natural disasters and fear God, they pray for peaceful development and good weather in the coming year through horoscope divination. There are four "empties" in the Ziwei constellation: heaven, earth, interception and ten days. Avoid building a house when the "sky" is in the "earth" and being buried in the "earth is empty" period.

The "sky" and "earth" are the two most sinister and sinister time periods in the sky. Therefore, in ancient times, it was believed that these two time periods were extremely unlucky for building houses and burials. Although the study of Feng Shui and hexagrams in ancient times is somewhat superstitious now, the emphasis on building houses and burials is not so detailed today.