Can I give away the word Fu? How about giving blessings to others?

On New Year's Eve, we should prepare for the Spring Festival. Every household will paste the word "Fu" and pray for happiness. In order to bless others, some people also give the word "Fu". So, how about a "blessing"?

Can I give away the word Fu?

Sure, give it to Fonagy. Good luck.

Why not give it away? The tradition in China is to send blessings on behalf of the Chinese New Year, and those who receive them are equal to those who receive them.

The word "Fu" is a very auspicious pattern, which can be given to anyone, regardless of age or sex. Those who send "blessings" and those who receive "blessings" are all looking forward to it. In short, this kind of blessing is very acceptable.

Will you lose your blessing if you give it to yourself?

Recommended answer: this is a way to express blessings, which is very good. Blessed are friends. I must be happy. The meaning of the word "Fu" is not only a word, but also a history, which records and interprets the relationship between man and heaven and declares the will of heaven to man. The word "Fu" is a vivid record of Chinese ancestors' unique written records and blessings, and it is a "show" word. Shuo Wen Jie Zi explains: "The host is also a god." In other words, all the words represented by "sign" are related to "God". Is that so? It is right that we can understand it by opening a dictionary. The word "one" means quantity, and it also means "first" or "beginning". The quantifier "kou" is often used to refer to people. "Field", the land takes the tiller as the field, that is, the land where farming grows.

Giving roses will also increase your happiness and feelings. It's not that if you give a blessing, you will lose it, and there is still a fragrance in your hand, but a way to understand it and enhance your feelings. Blessing others is just a blessing, so that you can have more sincere friends.

The origin of the word "paste blessing"

Think carefully, the word "Fu" is actually a form between New Year pictures and Spring Festival couplets. The tradition of sticking the word "Fu" on the Spring Festival can be traced back to ancient Fu Tao and Yichun stickers.

The Classic of Mountains and Seas quoted by Wang Chong in Lun Heng Ding Gui in the Eastern Han Dynasty said: There is a crescent mountain in the sea and a huge peach tree on it. There is a ghost gate in the northeast branch of the peach tree, which is haunted and guarded by two gods, shēn shū and Lei Yu, which are harmful to people. Based on this, the Yellow Emperor created the custom of exorcising ghosts: "Set up peach people, draw Shen Tu, Lei Yu and tigers at the portal, and hang reeds to ward off evil spirits." This is also recorded in Ying Shao's "Custom Yi Tong Sacrifice Code" in the Eastern Han Dynasty. It can be seen that in the Han Dynasty, every New Year's Eve, people would put up a peach blossom picture in front of their house, draw Shen Tu, Lei Yu and tiger on the door, and hang a reed rope to play the role of "resisting evil spirits".

Because the production of Ren Tao is more complicated, it was gradually replaced by mahogany boards after the Han Dynasty. For example, in the Chronicle of Jingchu in Zonggu of the Southern Dynasties, it was recorded: "On the first day of the first month, a household-made mahogany board was named Xianmu." Writing a prayer for disaster on the mahogany board, or painting the gods of Shen Tu and Lei Yu, has become a symbol of peaches. This symbol of peach was still popular in Song Dynasty. For example, in the Song Dynasty, Chen's "Guang Ji at the Age of Years" quoted "Miscellaneous Notes at the Age of Years", saying: "The shape of a peach symbol is a thin board, two or three feet long and four or five inches wide. I painted Bai Ze and the like, and the book was written by Shen Tu left, Lei Yu right, or a spring poem. " At the end of the Tang Dynasty, literati began to inscribe poems on peach symbols, which gradually evolved into later Spring Festival couplets. Song people changed the door gods painted on peach symbols into paper seals, which evolved into door gods paintings and New Year pictures. The earliest existing woodcut New Year picture "Sui Dynasty is graceful and luxurious" is a work of the Song Dynasty. Writing and printing on red paper instead of writing "auspicious words" on peach symbols is the predecessor of "auspicious words" (including blessings).