Can the married daughter go back to her parents house to set up a Buddhist hall?

Updated on society 2024-07-22
14 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    You can only set up a Buddhist hall in your husband's house. I can't stand in my mother's house. Because I got married. So. Something. It's inconvenient.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    A daughter who marries out cannot go back to her parents' house to set up a Buddhist hall. As the saying goes, the water spilled by the daughter who marries out. When a daughter gets married, she is someone else's family.

    She went back to her parents' home, which was a family walk. But after all, he is married, not for a long time, and lives in his mother's house, it is not appropriate for her to leave Futang in her mother's house, because her mother's family may still have brothers and sisters, and they will not agree. After all, if you don't live together, your mother's house will affect the daily life of your mother's family, and they will feel inconvenient.

    The married daughter set up a Buddhist hall in her mother's house, which is unreasonable.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Married daughters can set up Buddhist halls in their own small homes. If the parents and brothers believe in Buddhism and have a Buddhist shrine, the daughter can use the Buddhist shrine there when she returns to her parents' home or her brother's house. If the daughter has her own property in her mother's house, she can also set up a Buddhist shrine in the house that belongs to her own property.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Can a married daughter go back to her parents' house to set up a Buddhist hall? In the rural customs, the daughter who marries is not allowed to go back to her mother's house to set up a Buddhist hall, and the daughter who marries out is a member of her mother-in-law's family, and gives birth to children in her mother-in-law's house, that is, the mother-in-law's family, and cannot go back to her mother's house to set up a Buddhist hall.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Why can't it, Buddhism is full of emptiness and all over the Dharma realm, full of wisdom and philosophical beliefs in life, everything is completely okay.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The daughter who gets married can't go back to her mother's house to set up a Buddhist hall, because when she gets married, she follows her mother-in-law's surname, and he can't go back to her mother's house to talk about him.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    There are two reasons why a married daughter cannot go back to her parents' home for the New Year: first, if the married daughter goes back to her parents' house for the New Year, her mother's family will be poor; During the Chinese New Year, the mother's family should ask God to send God (God refers to the ancestors of the family)! The daughter who marries out is someone else's family, and she can't spend the New Year at home, which is not good for the family and will affect the fortune of the year.

    Therefore, the married daughter cannot go back to her parents' house for the New Year, especially if it is not good for her mother's brother and brother, and it will make her mother's family ruined. The second is that the daughter who marries out is someone else's family, and she can't eat back again, especially on the first day of the New Year, she can't eat at her mother's house. "The daughter who marries out, the water that spills out", has the meaning of "it is difficult to collect the water"; It is also necessary to let the daughter be "cold-hearted" to her mother's family, no longer homesick, take root in her husband's family with all her heart, and build her new home wholeheartedly.

    Some people may not think so, but there are some taboos that must be paid attention to. Modern people must pay attention to traditional etiquette.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    If she believes in Buddhism. There is no need to stand. People often say that the Buddha is in the heart, what does it matter if the Buddha is not established?

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    It depends on whether the mother's family is willing to do this.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Try not to go back to your parents' house! Because it's better to stand in your own home! It's also more convenient to incense!

    Besides, it's not in line with the rules in my mother's house! The daughter who marries out is someone else's family! It is obviously inappropriate to put the entrance of the hall in the mother's house!

    And the next generation of my mother's family, if no one picks up, it will be very troublesome!

    It is better to set up a church in your own home!

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    First of all, Buddhism is all over the country, you know? Whether you are in your mother's house or your mother-in-law's house, you can set up a small Buddha hall by yourself, and you can offer a Bodhisattva of your own faith at home.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Summary. Hello, I'm glad to answer for you: "For the daughter who marries out, you can take care of your mother's affairs, and don't care if it's not your turn, if your parents are sick and have no place to live, of course you have to take care of your daughter, but if like Ms. Su, your mother's relatives ask you to borrow money, and your own financial ability is average, then don't agree, otherwise not only can you not help others, but also will affect the relationship between husband and wife."

    There are also daughters who start to manage their mother's brothers and sisters after getting married, and they can't get used to meddling in some problems, and finally end up being not human inside and out, so it is better to correspond to their mother-in-law's attitude towards their mother-in-law's family. Then do your part."

    Can a married daughter still take care of her mother's affairs?

    Hello, I'm glad to answer for you: "For the daughter who marries out, you can take care of your mother's affairs, and don't care if it's not your turn, if your parents are sick and have no place to live, of course you have to take care of your daughter, but if like Ms. Su, your mother's relatives ask you to borrow money, and your own financial ability is average, then don't agree, otherwise not only can you not help others, but also will affect the relationship between husband and wife." There are also daughters who start to manage their mother's brothers and sisters after getting married, and they can't get used to meddling in some problems, and finally end up being not human inside and out, so it is better to correspond to their mother-in-law's attitude towards their mother-in-law's family.

    Then do your part."

    Father's land, he doesn't do it himself, as a daughter.

    It's okay to do it.

    I have a very busy family, and my father's land has grass and says no, if you don't do it, why should you do it for him.

    It depends on what you have to do, and you can't do it if you don't have time.

    I have my own shop, and my sister instructed me to ask.

    If you can't be busy, don't ask yourself, if your sister asks.

  13. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Summary. Hello dear. Yes, you can. But every family's relationship is different.

    Hello. Hello dear. Yes, you can. But every family's relationship is different.

    The specific situation depends on the situation at home. All for the purpose of peace.

    I want to ask, if I have a son at home, does my daughter who marries out need to support the elderly?

    Legally, there is an obligation to support them. It is better to negotiate the specific implementation.

    So what about leaving everything to the son? I don't have anything?

    There's no need to put in too much effort. For example, if my son scores 9 points, we can score 1 point.

    I got married, and my parents never cared about me.

    This kind of less effort will do. It's also not appropriate to ignore it at all. For example, you can occasionally bring some fruit to your door and see them.

    She also told me that it was good that she had a son.

    I'm only in my forties now, and I want to make offerings.

    In this case, less effort is enough. The son does 9 points, and we give 1 point.

    It's not necessary to make offerings, just refuse directly.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    It's hard to talk about this kind of thing.

    It mainly depends on who is stronger, then who has the right to speak.

    And not so absolutely.

    The old rules are subject to change.

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This is not true. The daughter who marries out is actually equivalent to having one more family. Because I have a mother's family, and I have an in-law's family.