Does digging a hole around my ancestral grave affect future generations?

Have an impact on feng shui. But it won't be big. A person's blessings are not all given by his ancestral graves. Although he can benefit from the protection of his ancestors, future generations still have to cultivate themselves. There is a feng shui story. It is said that a Feng Shui gentleman was very thirsty because of the hot weather. He went to a peasant woman's house to ask for water. Hardly had the peasant woman boiled water when she poured a bowl of rice bran and sprinkled it on the boiling water. Mr. Feng Shui was very angry and blew for a long time before drinking. During the conversation, he learned that the peasant woman needed a haunted house, that is, a cemetery. He said he was Mr. Feng Shui and could help. Mr. Feng Shui was angry because the peasant woman scattered chaff on the water and wanted to ruin the peasant woman's family, so he found a pattern of five tigers coming to the door. And left. After many years, one day Mr. Feng Shui went to the peasant woman's house again and saw that her house was much better than last time, and the house was very big. Ask the farmers why. The peasant woman said that the cemetery you are looking for has been getting better and better since it was buried. Mr. Feng Shui was surprised, so he went to the cemetery and found that the original five tigers in that place had become five dragons playing pearls. "I don't remember, either the five dragons hit pearls or what the five dragons hit." Just tell the truth, the peasant woman said that she was too thirsty to see you at that time, and she was afraid that you would get sick after drinking too much, so she sprinkled rice bran and let you drink slowly while blowing. Mr. Feng Shui suddenly realized.

What you can realize. . . . . . .