I don't believe anything anyway. I thought there were several situations when I got married. The wedding car I invited that day broke down before it reached the woman's house, so I had to find another one. The next morning, my wife poured me boiling water, and the bottom of the glass I took broke evenly and fell to the ground. Look how bad this is.
But my husband and wife have lived for more than ten years. Compared with other couples of the same age in the village, our feelings are much better. All the neighbors in the village envy us. What I said is absolutely true.
Ye Huang, or Wang Ye, means withering and depravity, so they can't be combined. Ye's predecessor was Shen, the so-called Shen Yejia. The first person surnamed Ye in the idiom story is that it is said that the dragon is the embodiment of the emperor (Huang and Wang), so it is ok for people surnamed Ye to be friends with people surnamed Huang, but if they get married, one person will usually die. Don't take science as everything. This does not mean that I am opposed to science pushing feudal superstition. When you meet many special things, you will know that what the ancients said is often not superstition. Communicate with the elderly more, and you will understand a lot. My point is that science should be understood, but we should not deny geomantic theology.