Sometimes also simplified It is , an anonymous symbol similar to the shape of a lotus, There are quite a lot of them, and there are three main attachments in folk paper-cutting, namely: lotus top, melon heart, and lotus head. These three objects are all image units with the function of giving birth in folk customs. Therefore, we believe that this kind of petal pattern is also a symbol of the vulva and is another manifestation of human beings' worship of female reproduction. According to folklore and ethnological survey materials, the Manchus in Northeast China once used willow leaves as a symbol of the vulva and willow branches as a symbol of the first goddess. (Read more: A complete collection of Chinese folk paper-cut patterns, each of which is a metaphorical form).
In the Chinese Ming Dynasty novel "Monk Yueming Saves Liu Cui", the red lotus is also used as a metaphor for the female yin. The shell of the symbol is exactly like a lotus petal, with a ※ shape filled in the middle. We found that ※The composition of the symbol is completely consistent with the Yang Jing Yin dynamic diagram in "Luo Shu", except that nine numbers are omitted, achieving abstraction again and again. "The X shape in the middle extends to the four corners, pointing to the four corners.There are even numbers (yin numbers); the four dots in between represent the four odd numbers (yang numbers) 1, 3, 9, and 7 respectively. There are three numbers on each of the two intersecting lines, which add up to fifteen. Starting from the negative number 2, rotate counterclockwise, and you will see that all negative numbers are multiplied... The mantissas of all products appear in the circle, and the same thing will happen if you turn again, and it will continue to be the same for billions of times. "(Other reading: Imagery symbols in traditional paper-cut patterns)
It seems that within this symbol, there is a lot of vitality. This symbol that contains vitality is filled in with the symbol representing the female vagina, forming a complete negative symbol, mutually reinforcing the function of expressing vitality. When folk women create paper-cuts, they ingeniously cut the four points into the shape of melon seeds and embed them in the four spaces of the character "X". The seeds are homophones (子), further strengthening the image of praying for life.