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What are the implications and stories of Flowers on the Other Side?
I looked up some information about the flowers on the other side.

In Buddhism, it is called Manzhu Shahua, which belongs to Lycoris. Flowers have no leaves, leaves have no leaves, and flowers and leaves don't meet, which means "heartless"

It is considered unlucky in Japan and is generally used as a funeral flower, but it also means rebirth.

Japanese flower language: "sad memories"; Korean flower language: "Missing each other" sounds quite non-mainstream.

The flower on the other side is blooming in Huang Quan Road, which means the flower of death and sadness.

However, in Hongguanren, Prague, the other person's flowers are regarded as a curse and punishment, which will not take the other person's life or harm any part of the body. Anyone who punishes will have a tattoo on his body, which will get deeper and deeper as time goes by. This tattoo will curse that the punished person can never be with his beloved, just like the flowers and leaves on the other side. When the flowers bloom, the leaves have fallen off, and when the leaves grow out, the flowers have withered. Even if they are born from the same root, they can never be together forever.

Personally, I think it's no big deal. Flower meaning is the guardian of eternal life or eternal life (every country is different), but almost all of them are red flowers blooming on the other side of death. I like this flower very much.