In life, besides focusing on one's own existence, one should also care about the existence of others. All people are equal; never impose upon others what you would not want for yourself.
A word of comfort may not solve practical problems, but it provides solace; if a person refuses to accept any comfort, their distress will be hard to alleviate.
Happy people often tell themselves, "I feel happy, and I will perform better and become even happier." Repeatedly practicing positive affirmations, such as "I am relaxed" or "I am calm," will eventually embed these thoughts into your subconscious.
In life, it is inevitable to feel sorrow or distress due to unpleasant events. In such moments, we should not accumulate negative emotions but instead find appropriate ways to release them to maintain psychological balance.
After long periods of solitude, one often reminisces about the beauties of the past, realizing they missed people they shouldn't have. Loneliness teaches us who truly cared for us, but the past is like smoke, drifting away with the wind, impossible to grasp again. Wandering in the world for too long can make one increasingly silent, as they see through the falsity of the world, the warmth and coldness of human nature, and the indifference in people's eyes.
Persuading oneself is a victory of reason; moving oneself is a sublimation of the soul; conquering oneself is the mark of maturity.
Those who dare not take risks will gain nothing; worse than failure is never trying. There are two types of failure: one is all talk and no action, and the other is acting without thinking.
Adversity is a strict teacher of life, and only the strong can become its star pupils.