The Yi people eat pig liver raw during the Chinese New Year.
Daily life habits of the Yi people:
The Yi people have the characteristics of large scattered and small settlements, so the Yi people's residences in different places are not very the same. However, most houses have a fire pit, which stays on all year round. In addition to being used for heating, lighting, stewing or baking food, it is also a center for gathering friends and guests. Do not step on the Guozhuang stones or tripods in the fire pit with your feet, and it is strictly forbidden to spit into the fire pit. Barbecuing unclean things and being naked near the fire pit is prohibited.
The Yi people have strict etiquette and customs between elders and children, men and women, host and guest. When meeting elders on the way, the younger ones must stand on one side and let the elders go first; when the elders enter the room, they must let them take the seat, and the rest will sit in turn; when eating, the elders sit at the top (called the "upper seat" in custom), and the younger generations sit on both sides and below in sequence. , and serve the elders, providing them with rice, vegetables and soup. Adults and the elderly cannot be touched on their heads.
Brothers can joke with their sisters-in-law, but older brothers cannot joke with their sisters-in-law. When a guest enters the room, the guest will be seated. The host will sit on the left side of the guest, and the junior will sit opposite the guest.
It is forbidden to wear straw sandals to catch fire
On the kang bed; take off your shoes when going upstairs; naked or semi-naked adults are not allowed to enter the house; you are not allowed to step on the threshold with your feet or sit on the threshold; you are not allowed to knock the table and table with chopsticks bowl; whistling, singing folk songs, and swearing are prohibited at home; women's clothes and underwear
cannot be dried in passing places or next to honeycombs; it is prohibited to defecate facing the sun