I have passed the post-00s generation. But there is indeed a lot of knowledge in this area online. Let’s take a look~
The flavor of the New Year in the eyes of Zhao Ziming, a student born in 2000 who lives in Xuzhou, is “Spring Festival Couplets”. Classmate Zhao Ziming has a habit. Before leaving school during the winter vacation, he always carefully selects a Spring Festival couplet and sticks it on the door of his dormitory to add some "New Year flavor" to the "little nest" where he lives. After he returned to his hometown of Jiawang, Xuzhou, several "calligraphers" in the village whose calligraphy was praised by their neighbors also prepared pens, ink, paper and inkstones, and sent Spring Festival couplets to each family. The whole village was filled with a festive atmosphere, and people They are all excited for the new year. For him, it’s not a New Year without Spring Festival couplets.
The taste of the New Year in the eyes of Lu Hongjia, a student from Dalian, is “snow in his hometown.” Lu, who was unable to return home last year due to the epidemic, bought a train ticket to return to his hometown early this year, and finally arrived safely in his hometown after a bumpy 24 hours. It snowed almost every day in the Northeast two years ago, and the thick snow piled up to knee height. He would meet up with his childhood neighborhood friends and have a "battle" in the ice and snow. On the early morning of the first day of the Lunar New Year, his parents would wake him up early and take the whole family to clear the snow in the front yard. Although his hands and faces would be red from the cold, the family's happy New Year atmosphere would warm their hearts.
For Shang Zhenrui from Pizhou, the flavor of the New Year is the "tiger head shoes" made by his grandmother. Classmate Shang’s grandmother is 77 years old this year. Every year when the Spring Festival is approaching, she still picks up needlework and uses the bits and pieces of silk she saves from making clothes on weekdays to sew some little roosters to welcome the Spring Festival. Usually two little roosters are sewn together to form a pair and worn on the top of children's winter cotton hats or on the cuffs, which means "wishing you good luck in spring". They are red and green and very beautiful, embodying the feelings of the older generation. Beautiful traditional blessings. Even more exquisite are the tiger-head shoes that my grandmother embroidered stitch by stitch. They are only the size of a palm. The tiger face with a beard is lifelike and very cute.