Day 1: Life is short; The next day: sick and troubled; The third day: becoming a rich family; The fourth day: broaden your career and look good; Day 5: increase your wealth; Day 6: You look bad; The seventh day: it is easy to attract gossip and trouble; Day 8: Longevity; Easy to meet young women (never becoming a monk); Day 10: the joy of growing up; Increase the world, the world; Day 12: Causing illness and putting life in danger. Lucky Sixteen: Illness Seventeen: Blindness, Green Skin Eighteen: Loss of Property Nineteen: Longevity Twenty: Hunger, Illness Twenty-one: Susceptibility to Infectious Diseases, Madness Twenty-two: Illness Twenty-three: Wealth Twenty-four: Suffering from Infectious Diseases Twenty-five: Trachoma, Tears in the Wind Twenty-six: Happiness Twenty-seven: Auspiciousness Twenty-eight: Easy to Fight Twenty-nine: Loss of Soul, Mute Thirty: Predicted.
After cutting your hair, you must take good care of it. For example, if you get sick, throw your hair into the river to increase your life. The poor, burning their hair, can increase their blessings and develop their wisdom; A weak person's hair on a thorny tree will become a strong and brave person; Throwing the hair of a sick and disaster-prone person in the toilet will eliminate the disaster. An unstable person's hair will become a stable person if it is placed on the edge of a big stone or in a rock. Tibetans usually have their hair cut on the eighth day of each month, and their hair is thrown into the river or burned. Few people throw their hair in the toilet, on the edge of a stone or on a thorny tree. These are special circumstances, and you can't just throw your hair away. There are some monks and great virtues in Tibet who burn their hair after cutting it and finally bury it in places with good feng shui. These are not superstitions, but have profound reasons.