It also refers to drinking drinks that I don't know if I can drink, which is a taboo for diet and health.
This sentence comes from the synopsis of the golden chamber written by Zhang Zhongjing, who was called a medical sage at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, but most modern people think that superstition is not desirable. This book is a remnant of Treatise on Febrile Diseases, which was accidentally discovered by Wang Zhu, Lin Bu, Sun Qi and others in the Song Dynasty, and the part about miscellaneous diseases was compiled into a separate volume.
Zhang Zhongjing attaches great importance to diet and health preservation, and synopsis of the golden chamber is also praised by ancient and modern doctors as the ancestor of prescription, the classic of medical prescription and the model of treating miscellaneous diseases. However, many methods of keeping in good health are not credible. After all, it was 1800 years ago. With his medical skills at that time, Zhang Zhongjing, a medical saint, could do nothing about many diseases. Therefore, it is necessary to make a rational judgment according to the current situation.