Numbers           
  and Omens
          
            
              
 
   
     
       
     
     
       
           
        
          
Numbers play an important role in Chinese culture and the use of numbers can be          
found in almost every aspect of people’s lives. At weddings, at funerals, in daily          
life and even in business, numbers, auspicious or ominous, may influence people’s          
choice or decision.
    
        
          
        
        
          
 
  
  
  
        
   
     There is a set of famous streets in  in Taiwan, China, which all begin with numbers. They are  (Perfect Ten) Streets.          
  This sequence of auspicious street names gives people a warm feeling when they          
  hear it, and brings more than a little luck to the residents.  
          
    Many foreign visitors     
can't help but exclaim that the Chinese are really creative,          
  and can line numbers up so "auspiciously."    
          
         
    Chinese not only use numbers to appeal for good fortune, they also bring them          
  out to chew people out:     
"You          
  250 (fool), you do things neither three nor four (without any order or out of         
touch), and still you dare to say that I'm 13 points (stupid) and 3-8     
(scatterbrained)."         
        
    Although it isn't really possible to know where these came from, one thing          
  is for sure: numbers are intimately related to the daily life of Chinese!    
 
         
  
       
    Origins in the Book of Changes: In antiquity, people kept tallies by          
  tying knots in ropes, and only employed numbers and words later on.  
         
    From natural phenomena and life experience, people gradually came to recognize          
  the signs of change in a particular matter. For example, there was the     
ancients'          
  saying that "if the moon has a halo it will be windy, and a damp plinth foretells     
rain." It is inevitable that there will be misfortune in life, so people began          
  to adopt ways to attract the auspicious and expel the malicious. Add to this          
  that people have psychological activity and the ability to link things together          
  in their minds,  and a whole set of       
auspiciousness-attracting and evil-expelling          
  habits took shape. 
         
    The  is a compilation which records the experience          
  of people in ancient times with luck and .          
  In the Book of Changes, each number has some significance: one is the           
  or "great supreme," two is the "," three is for the "three powers," four for the ",   "five is for  six stands for the "six realms," seven for the "seven          
  rules of government," eight means the "  ,"nine is for the "nine chains," and ten is the "ten     
depictions."          
        
    We often say "three yang make good fortune" to describe the hope that misfortune          
  will be held at bay and good          
  luck will follow. It is a saying often used at the New Year and symbolizes a          
  new beginning and finds its origins in the Book of Changes. Yang          
  is the positive force in the universe, and there is enormous yang and very weak          
  yin (negative force) in the first, second, and third of the nine trigrams.          
  So the three yang are very positive.  
          
    Li Heng-li, chairman of the International           
  Scholarly Foundation, who feels that numbers have no connection with fortune          
  good or ill,  says that the only significance numbers have is what people       
ascribe          
  to them. Trying to say that a given number is either auspicious or ominous          
  is mere superstition.  
          
    Still, unlike the Western sensitivity to the number 13, Chinese have a whole           
  philosophy built up around numbers, which is spread or experienced in real life.    
           
          
          
        
    Gods can be alone, but people cannot: One is the number marking the           
  beginning, and also has the meaning of "independent" or "alone."  
         
    Tong Feng-wan, a professor of theology at Taiwan Theological Seminary, points          
  out that in Taiwan people prefer even numbers which symbolize "fortune comes          
  in pairs."   They are more wary of         
  one, three, five, seven, and nine. Because the character for "odd" in Chinese          
  ()          
  also means "alone," people are not very fond of it. But although people like          
  even numbers, the gods can be alone.  Thus in odd-numbered months holidays have          
  been stipulated          
  to help people get by, from          
  New Years (first day of the first month on the lunar calendar) and Tomb Sweeping          
  Day (third day of the third month) to Dragon Boat Festival (fifth of the fifth),          
  Chinese Valentine's Day (seventh of the seventh), and Old People's Day (ninth          
  day of the ninth month in the lunar calendar).  
          
    At weddings, when Chinese people give "red envelopes" with gifts of cash, they           
  only send even amounts, like 1 200 or 3 600. Because the pronunciation of "four"           
  is close to that of "death" in Taiwanese, if you send 4 400 to the bride and           
  groom, people won't be grateful and might even criticize you behind your back         
for failing to understand basic manners. At funerals, on the other hand, people           
  usually give offerings with the last digit being odd, so as to avoid ill fortune           
  not coming "alone."  
         
  
       
    Happiness comes in pairs: In the book Popular Chinese Customs Professor           
  Lou zhu-kuang notes that when people got married in ancient times, betrothal           
  gifts would include a document recording all the details of the accompanying           
  gifts. The writing style was rather meticulous. Thus, for example, chickens           
  or ducks would be written as "Four wings of poultry." Gold bracelets would be           
  written "Gold bracelets becoming a pair." Candles would be written as "Festive           
  candles with double glow." No place would odd numbers be allowed.     

          
    When inquiring into the     
other's name and the "eight          
  character horoscope" of the other party, it would be written for          
  instance: "The groom (or bride) is in the beginning of the sixth month of his         
(or her) twentieth year, having been born at such-and-such an hour..."       
The number          
  of characters in the Chinese text would always have to add         
  up to an even number; if they were short one then an "auspicious" character          
  would be added.  
          
    The writer Xiao Min adds that because the character for "odd" also means     
"incomplete,"           
  when she was in her old home in Beijing, they would always make sure that the           
  number of steamed rolls made for New Year's was even in order to make a good           
  beginning.  
          
    Huang Bo-he, a scholar of folk traditions, argues that Chinese have always           
  been rather inclined to the number three. Just open up a Chinese dictionary           
  and there are sayings using three or multiples thereof sprinkled everywhere.           
  They are even more numerous in local sayings and slang.  
          
    He points out that one reason Chinese like three is that it stands for     
"many."           
  In  it is said that     
"Tao gave birth to the one, the one gave birth           
  to the two, two gave birth to three, and three gave birth to ten thousand     
things."           
  From nothing to something, or something to infinity, "three" plays a critical           
  role.  
          
  
        
    Elevators without fourth floors: The scholar Su Xue-lin has written           
  that in ancient China the numbers four and 72 were perhaps both mysterious numbers,           
  and moreover that "four" was a symbol for the great earth.  
          
    But in Taiwan four is not especially well looked-upon. Hospitals and hotels           
  normally have no fourth floor, and the numbers in the elevator just skip right           
  from three to five. It's probably only in places where Chinese people live that           
  this type of facility is necessary. Also, the price of an apartment on the fourth           
  floor is usually cheaper.  
          
    In general, Chinese assign little good or bad significance to     
"five."  
         
    "May the five fortunes approach your door" is a saying often seen at festive           
  occasions. The five fortunes are long life, wealth, health, an ethical life,           
  and a peaceful death.  
          
    Besides this,  provided           
  a framework for people at former times to classify natural phenomena. Confucianism           
  also says that five implies the concept of "."    
 
        
    The writer on           
  Zhen-zui points out that Confucians believe that five is very close to the path          
  of the golden mean of "adopting the middle between two extremes," and also promotes          
  the thought of the "five pathways." As a number, five has two at the front and          
  two behind, with one in the middle. "This middle figure has two assistants on          
  each side, and is unbiased in the middle.  Thus five fits         
  in well with the idea of the ‘mean’ always promoted by Confucian     
scholars,"          
  he has written.         
          
 
        
        
    One six eight, on the way to success: Where did "66 everything goes     
smoothly" come from? Lin Mao-Xiao, executive secretary of the Chinese Customs          
  and Handicrafts Foundation, contends that it might have something to do with          
  playing dice.  Six is the largest number on a die, so wouldn't one win by       
coming          
  up with two sixes?
          
    According to informal statistics, not many people take seven to be a lucky           
  number. According to the old text Yu Hsiao Ling Yin, when someone first dies           
  the mourning period should be seven days. "Doing the sevens" is the custom at           
  funerals in  areas. For the first seven days after someone passes           
  away, to the seventh seven days, there are appropriate rituals for each. Some           
  people, because the number seven can easily bring to mind "doing the sevens,"           
  plus the fact that the seventh month of the lunar year is "ghost month," don't           
  like it.  
          
    The fondness for "eight" comes, most people would say, from the Cantonese.           
  In Cantonese, eight and "success" are similar in sound. And in North China,           
  there is the saying that "if you want to succeed, don't stray from eight."    
 
         
    Hong Kong, where most of the population is Cantonese, is perhaps the place           
  where faith in numbers is strongest. Li Heng-li analyzes that it is a very crowded,           
  very competitive industrial metropolis. Businessmen are especially obsessed           
  with success or failure, so they have to include auspiciousness in consideration           
  of any affair like opening a factory or signing a contract. If they can choose           
  a day with eight in it, then they have a "successful" beginning. Nine symbolizes           
  smoothness and endurance, while six, as noted, is for "66 everything goes     
smoothly."           
         
    In the 1980's, lucky numbers went from Hong Kong into Guangdong Province in           
  mainland China, as this trend began to spread from south to north.  
          
    Liu Cheng-feng, columnist for the China Times, noted in one report that the           
  last digits of the phone number of the Canton Hotel are 8168, a homophone for "success and yet more     
success." Most of the shoe stores in the Lungfu Building           
  in Peking use "auspicious" prices on their tags. One of the fastest movers is           
  one whose tag is 168, which symbolizes "the road to success." And when businessmen           
  stay in hotels, they like to stay in rooms 518, 688, or 816. One hotel in Canton           
  even has a higher price on rooms with lucky numbers.  
          
  
         
    Believe it or not, it's up to you: Nine generally refers to a great           
  majority or large number. In former times people often used nine to say "a great     
many."  
         
    Because nine is an extreme number, Chinese have the saying that it is inauspicious           
  to run across nine. Especially for older men, the 69th and 79th birthdays are           
  celebrated as the 70th and 80th instead. Many people also believe that a young           
  man of 29 is at the decisive point in life.  
          
    When people use lucky numbers to symbolize wealth and fortune, or peace and           
  benevolence, any number can be explained in such a way as to make it fit. Aren't     
"everything starts with one and comes around again," "seven generations living     
together," and "wealth flowing across the four seas" all pleasing to the ears?    
           
          
    Although that's easy enough for us to say, there are still plenty of people           
  who play the lotteries or play the ponies, running near and far, burning incense           
  to the gods, looking for a lucky number that belongs only to them!  
          
    (1 986 words)