Happiness has no role models. As Liang Shiqiu once said, "Happiness and joy are in the heart, not sought from without. Seeking often leads to nothing." A distant niece once lived a very happy life. However, at a class reunion, seeing a former classmate who had become a department head, living in a luxury mansion and driving a premium car, she began to feel envious and even complained that her own husband only knew how to teach and not how to make money. Her original joy vanished as she sought after 'role models' for happiness.
1. When facing the turbulent world again, one becomes indifferent to all things. To pursue the life you desire, you must be brave enough to let go. The world is not always just, and you will never achieve a perfect balance. No matter how many times you surpass yourself, realize your dreams, or gain what you once desired, you will never feel satisfied if you lack contentment.
2. To stop drifting, we must accumulate and grow every day. Talent is like pregnancy; it becomes evident over time. We are all waiting for that day when we are no longer ordinary, but possess and strengthen our unique characteristics. Our brief drifting is merely to gather strength for a deeper rooting in the future.
3. Reward follows effort. Only by understanding giving can one view harvest correctly and maintain inner peace. The more you give, the more you receive. There is no free lunch; everyone should abandon the idea of getting something for nothing, for only diligence can change one's destiny.
4. The greatest wisdom I have learned over these years is silence. When faced with insults or doubts, I know they cannot truly take anything away from me. Neither my family, friends, nor my work will be shaken by the outside world. Therefore, even if I could argue to defend myself, I ultimately choose silence, trusting that time will bring its own cause and effect. This is not a divine judgment, but the consequence we must bear when making our own choices between good and evil.
5. If we cannot be lovers, let us maintain a pure friendship. I do not wish for those I have loved to become enemies; even if we cannot be together, sincere friendship remains precious.
6. In the misty rain of the mortal world, tears fall for those who have departed. Love is hard to reclaim, and one grows thin in solitude; who can understand the sorrow that flows with the rain and water? A few words cannot express the many worries; looking back, only memories remain, filled with longing and grief. Love is like a flower—has a devoted heart ever been misplaced?
7. As the old saying goes, "If one does not work hard in youth, one will regret in old age." Another proverb says, "Only by enduring the bitterest hardships can one rise above others." Joy and pain are like two sides of a single sheet of paper; no matter how much they are torn, they cannot be separated. Learning to endure hardship leads to harvest, while seeking only pleasure leads to failure. We must endure hardships within our duties, avoiding being 'giants in thought but dwarfs in action.' Moreover, one must know how to endure hardship: when in love, hardship is joy; when in dislike, joy becomes hardship.
8. A person possesses thickness, length, and width: thickness through accumulation, length through persistence, and width through breadth of mind. We cannot choose our families, but we can learn to interact with all kinds of people. To be broad-minded toward others and strict with oneself, allowing others to err and correct their mistakes, is the essence of tolerance and wisdom.
9. The mistakes of both the gentleman and the small person are visible to everyone. Therefore, once a mistake is made, it is best to admit it frankly, find the cause, correct it, and avoid repeating it. This is the best attitude toward error.
10. One person paves the road, and ten thousand people walk safely.
11. An individual can be unique, but they must not be eccentric.
12. There are many things in life that cannot be spoken. Some joys may not be understood by others; some sorrows may not be felt by others. Some exhaustion is physical, while some tears are from the heart. Love follows destiny, and kindred spirits may leave one speechless. It turns out that invisible wounds hurt the most, and unshed tears are the coldest.
13. Misfortune brings us trials, which forge a strong character; failure brings us inspiration, which opens the first door to success.