There is a saying in the countryside that "five trees enter the house, and the poor family is defeated". What does it mean? Which five trees do you mean?

Five trees enter the house, poor and defeated? It is the experience summed up and refined by our ancestors in production practice, and it is the matter that people in the past should pay attention to when guiding rural residents to plant trees. Below, I will share the meaning of this proverb with you in detail. I hope you will be encouraged!

The specific meaning of this proverb

Five trees enter the house, poor and defeated? Generally speaking, five kinds of trees must not be planted in front of and behind rural houses, otherwise your family's luck will be bad, and your geomantic omen will be affected, which will often lead to poverty, decline and decline of your family.

So specifically, which five trees can't be planted in front of and behind the house? Let me tell you, please record: 1. Mulberry; The second is willow; The third is poplar; The fourth is pine and cypress; Fifth, figs. Rural people have little education and little knowledge of science, so they believe in these idealized things very much. Why can't we plant these trees? This is exquisite!

As the old saying goes, we must attach importance to rural housing? Don't plant mulberry before, don't insert willow after? Because of mulberry trees? Sang? This word is unlucky, use it? Mourning? The word homophonic, rural filial piety sticks can only be made of willow, so willow is unlucky; Poplar trees collapse when it is windy at night because of their large size and wide leaves? Hey hey hey? That voice, it feels terrible, so it often screams? Clap your hands? I feel very bad; Figs are not liked because they don't bloom. Planting them in the courtyard dam not only takes up space, but also attracts mosquitoes and flies. Not to mention, pines and cypresses are special trees for graves and cannot be planted in front of or behind houses.

Accidental cases in rural areas conform to this statement. In fact, they are only accidental, not inevitable.

The world is full of miracles. In the vast world of the countryside, some bad things may have happened to some individual families. Planting one of these five trees in front of and behind his house will make people more convinced of the correctness of this rural proverb.

For example, a long time ago, a farmer planted a mulberry tree in his dam, and his family was really miserable. First, my old grandfather accidentally fell to death, then my daughter-in-law died of illness, and then the man at home was disabled by a car accident, right? It never rains but it pours? Ah.

But in fact, what happened to this family has nothing to do with the mulberry trees in front of the house. This is just an accidental phenomenon, and this proverb is not very scientific. Don't be superstitious, and don't take some accidental cases as inevitable phenomena.

This proverb is full of idealism and should not be passed down.

The reason why the ancients refined this proverb is because these five trees are homophonic or pictographic with some unlucky words, which basically has no scientific reason. So in the modern society with highly developed science and technology, we don't need to pay attention to it at all. When building a house or decorating a dam, we can choose tree species for planting at will according to our actual needs and hobbies.

Are you sure? Five trees enter the house, poor and defeated? This proverb also reflects the good wishes of people in the past to pursue a peaceful, safe and prosperous life. That's understandable. We only need to look at such proverbs critically, without too many taboos or deliberate conflicts. Let nature take its course!

Conclusion:

Five trees enter the house, poor and defeated? It is an idealized rural proverb, which has no scientific reason. We should treat it critically, not blindly, and not treat some accidental cases in rural areas as inevitable phenomena to correspond to this proverb. No plant planted in front of or behind the house can interpret your destiny.

Do you think what I said makes sense? Do you believe this proverb?