Society

Get a lucky haircut on Er Yue Er for good luck

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-03-17 15:35
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Get a lucky haircut on <EM>Er Yue Er</EM> for good luck
A child gets a haircut at a barbershop in Hefei, Anhui province March 17, 2010. It is believed to bring luck when one gets a haircut during the second day of the second Chinese lunar month, which falls on March 17 this year.[Photo/Xinhua]



BEIJING - Just a month after the Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations, here comes another tradition, to have a haircut on the second day of the second month, or Er Yue Er, to hope for good luck for the whole year.

China's barber shops are seeing one of their busiest days of the year Wednesday, Er Yue Er, also known as Longtaitou (dragon raises head) day on the lunar calendar this year.

Many Chinese hold the superstitious belief that getting a haircut when the "dragon also raises its head" means they will have a vigorous start to the new year, but if a person has a haircut during the first month of the lunar year, his maternal uncle will die.

As a result, barbershops stay open almost 18 hours a day in the pre-Lunar New Year rush for haircuts that lasts for at least two weeks.

While women like to spruce up for the holiday, even men with short hair like to get a trim up before the new year begins lest their hair grows too long before their next haircut, scheduled on the second day of the second lunar month.

A Chinese legend goes that a poor barber loved his uncle dearly but could not afford a decent new year's gift for him. So he gave his uncle a nice haircut that made the old man look many years younger. His uncle said it was the best gift he had ever had and wished to get a haircut every year from him.

After his uncle died, the barber missed him very much and cried every new year. Over the years, his "thinking of his uncle" (si jiu) was interpreted as "death of uncle" because in Chinese, their pronunciations are almost the same.

Cao Baoming, deputy chief of China Society for the Study of Folk Literature and Art, says the lucky haircut tradition comes from the Chinese's worship of the dragon, as people believe it symbolizes luck.

"The lucky tradition which goes back thousands of years reflects people's wish to have a happy life," Cao said.