
Girls born on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month have a strong fate?
Girls born on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month generally have a strong fate in terms of their birth chart.Girls born on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month are usually strong and dominant in both personality and appearance; they have a strong aura. Their lives are often difficult, encountering many obstacles, but they are unwilling to show weakness in front of others, and they impose strict self-expectations on themselves.
Girls born on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month typically experience unsatisfactory love luck, especially because their strong personalities tend to overly restrict their partners, leading to increased conflicts between them. Moreover, their husbands usually have poor health conditions.
Girls born on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month are unable to maintain a positive and good mental attitude. They often face many setbacks before marriage, which can negatively affect their marital fortune, leaving them constantly busy yet achieving little.
Are people born on the Dragon Boat Festival considered to have bad fate?
In ancient times, the fifth lunar month was called the "evil month" and the "poisonous month," while the fifth day of the fifth lunar month was known as the "evil day" and the "poisonous day." Many places had the custom of "not raising children born in the fifth month," considering it bad to be born on the Dragon Boat Festival.Ancients believed that infants born on the Dragon Boat Festival, whether male or female, could not be raised to adulthood. If raised, they would harm their fathers if male or their mothers if female. In Wang Chong's "Lunheng" from the Eastern Han Dynasty, there is an explanation for "not raising children born on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month": "In January, the year begins, but in May, the yang energy is at its peak. A child born in this month has intense and fierce vitality, which can overwhelm and defeat the parents, who cannot bear such suffering." This custom was believed to have been popular since the Warring States period. It is recorded in the "Lunheng" by Wang Chong, the "Fengsu Tongyi" by Ying Shao, and the "Book of the Later Han."
However, looking at the lunar month and date, people born on the Dragon Boat Festival do not necessarily have a bad fate. There are also many great individuals throughout history who were born on the Dragon Boat Festival, so these negative beliefs are not absolute.
















