Being a fugitive can be explained as: a kind and upright person, leaving society, living in the jungle and becoming a thief.
but
Go to Greenwood/Shinan Road ―― Become a fugitive
Manchu called the birth of a baby "becoming an outlaw". When a woman is in labor, she sweeps up the kang, puts a stone on the sweep, takes some grass to make the bed on the kang, and gives birth to the child on the grass, so it is called "becoming an outlaw". This custom has a strong primitive and rough tradition of hunting nations. Hay can protect against moisture and cold.
If the baby is a boy, a wooden bow and arrow will be hung at the front door of the house, commonly known as "childe arrow". This is not a real bow and arrow, but a bow made of branches wrapped in red cloth and three arrows. I wish the child to become a warrior when he grows up and becomes famous. If the baby is a girl, a red cloth is hung on the right side of the gate to symbolize good luck. Hanging red cloth strips gradually evolved into the symbol of delivery room. No one is allowed to break into the delivery room, because strangers will take the milk away. This is called "milk collection".
On the third day after the child was born, please ask a prestigious old lady to bathe the child. Bathing is carried out in a big copper basin, with Sophora branches, mugwort leaves and hot water. The old lady held the child in one hand and bathed the child in the other. Singing while washing: "Wash your hair and be a prince; Wash your waist, each generation is taller than the next; Wash your face, be a magistrate, wash your ditch and be a magistrate. Finally, the old lady hit the baby three times with an onion and said, "One dozen is clever, two dozen are clever, and three dozen are bright. "After the fight, the father threw the onion into the room and celebrated with friends and family.
After the full moon, the child will take back the "Childe Arrow" and the red cloth hanging on the door, tie them on the child's rope, and put them in the child's schoolbag on the north side of the middle of the Western Wall, next to which the "Buddha Mother" is enshrined, which is the god of keeping babies. Every spring and autumn, Manchu families will offer sacrifices to the Buddha's mother for blessing. During the sacrifice, the children and grandchildren were pulled from the shrine to the willow branches in the yard, and the unknown men and women at home and women with children ran to pay homage to the case, and everyone bowed. Shaman dipped willow branches in water and sprinkled it on the child's head. He also asked the children to smoke in front of coriander in order to exorcise evil spirits. Then he took off the colored thread from the offspring's rope and put it around the child's neck. Three days later, take the colorful thread back and store it in the child's schoolbag. Because multicolored thread is called "sewing thread", this custom is called "changing lock".
Riding leisurely after the full moon is a traditional way for Manchu people. The recreational vehicle is made of thin wooden boards, with a length of 2 meters and a width of 1.5 meters, with round ends and a bottom, and the style is like a boat. Tie the child to the beam with four ropes, at a certain distance from the ground, and put the child in the recreational vehicle. It is very light for a baby to cry and shake if he doesn't cry. Mother can also do some housework. The Manchu family gave birth to the first boy, and the leisure car was given by grandma's family.
In order to prevent the child from falling off the recreational vehicle, and considering that the archery arm is straight and the position of the riding leg is correct when the child grows up, the child's elbow, leg knee and ankle are tied with a belt, so that the child can only lie on his back. Therefore, Manchu teenagers are physically strong and rarely bend over. Manchu people regard flat head as beauty, so they usually put millet or sorghum as pillows under their children's heads, commonly known as "sleeping flat head".
Traditional Chinese medicine dictionary explanation:
Become an outlaw: See "Secret Stories from Outside Taiwan", Volume 33. Pictures of the baby's birth.