Giving away bowls, chopsticks, and spoons to others can have serious consequences

Giving away bowls, chopsticks, and spoons to others can have serious consequences

11 Video Views·Oct 23, 2024

HitPrint the pot and bowl on an A4 paper, wrap it with a dragon ticket and burn it, and then say: Disciple XXX once gave the bowl to XXX, please return it. This is not true. Pictures are just a substitute. Doing so is at least to get back the loss of blessings. If you want to buy new tableware for others, it's nothing. It's not good if it's a gift that has been used.
We Han Chinese have a custom. Every Spring Festival, we buy new dishes and chopsticks, which implies a prosperous and auspicious new year.

Writer Huang said: In Chaoshan, we attach the most importance to rice buckets and bamboo tubes for scooping rice. None of these can be given to anyone. These guys (tools for eating), the older generation and the guys (tools for plowing the field), these can't be touched casually, otherwise they will have to be done.

.When offering to Buddha and Bodhisattva, it must not be an empty bowl, but an offering, which is an auspicious fate. Qizhu Rinpoche has mentioned this. I have discussed with some seniors who have practiced for a long time that different ethnic groups have different traditional customs. For example, Hui people also have the habit of not giving pots to others, Tibetans have the custom of not giving empty bowls, and Manchus also have the habit of not giving empty bowls.

A senior said that when he bought a house in the past, the owner said that the furniture could be left for him, but the cutting board could not be kept. The picture is as follows:
Pots, bowls and chopsticks are not only the origin of food and clothing, but also can naturally be used to cultivate and increase the use of food and clothing.