• Mirrors: According to
Li Shizhen's medical book
Bencao Gangmu, "A mirror is the essence of liquid metal. It is dark on the outside but bright inside." () Jiangshi are also said to be terrified of their own reflections. • Items made from the wood of a
peach tree: According to the ), "Peach is the essence of the
Five Elements. It can subjugate evil auras and deter evil spirits." () • A rooster's call: According to
Yuan Mei's book
Zi Bu Yu, "Evil spirits withdraw when they hear a rooster's call" (), because the rooster's call usually occurs with the rise of the sun. •
Jujube seeds: According to
Zi Bu Yu, "Nail seven jujube seeds into the
acupuncture points on the back of a corpse." () • Fire: According to
Zi Bu Yu, "When set on fire, the sound of crackling flames, blood rushes forth and bones cry." () • Hooves of a black donkey: Mentioned in Zhang Muye's fantasy novel
Ghost Blows Out the Light • Vinegar: Mentioned by coroners in eastern
Fujian. •
Fulu (Taoist talisman), stuck on the forehead to immobilise them. With a unique spell, it can be used to transport the creatures with the handbell. • Holding one's breath, which makes the jiangshi unable to find you as they are blind, though this contradicts the earlier statement that they are afraid of their own reflection. •
Bagua symbols • The
I Ching • The
Tong Shu •
Glutinous rice, rice chaff •
Adzuki beans •
Handbell • Thread stained with a concoction of black ink, chicken blood and burnt talisman • Blood of a black dog • Stonemason's awl • Axe • Broom • Dropping a bag of coins can cause the jiangshi to count the coins.
Architectural features It is also the conventional belief of
feng shui practitioners in Chinese architecture that a
threshold (), a piece of wood approximately 15 cm (6 in) high, be installed along the width of the door at the bottom to prevent a jiangshi from entering the household. ==Origin stories==