When someone is held dear in one's heart, we can find peace reading and writing alone in a quiet classroom, strolling leisurely through bustling streets, smiling through work pressures, and falling into sweet dreams.
I have my bitternesses, my obsessions, and my complexities, yet I remain silent. It is not because I am playing naive, nor is it because I do not see or understand; It is simply that I choose not to speak.
The sunrise does not occur because the rooster crows.
Yet, standing in a city of millions, feeling the rain of loneliness, listening to a song, drinking a glass of wine, and counting one's own solitude—who can truly understand such bitterness?
Success is getting what you want, but happiness is liking what you have.
The moon has its waxing and waning, flowers have their blooming and withering, and life has its joys and sorrows. Let us face it all with composure.
It is not about refusing consumption, but refusing waste; not about tightening our belts, but about using wisdom to choose better consumption methods, following the principle of "buying what is right, not what is expensive." By learning to analyze value and practicality, we aim to achieve a better quality of life with less expenditure.