We must nurture dreams in children, helping them understand that dreams are attainable; dreams provide the motivation and direction for life, allowing children to bridge the gap between aspiration and reality.
Life is like coffee with a cube of sugar; only by savoring it slowly can one taste the sweetness that follows the bitterness. The rings of life are etched with joy, sorrow, bitterness, and sweetness, and these emotions serve as the very anchors of our existence in this world. Regret is an inevitable part of life; it is only through regret that space is left for new possibilities. The spirit of courage and fearlessness is a profound advantage of youth; being relatively inexperienced and free from heavy mental constraints, young people act with boldness, and it is this drive to explore and face challenges head-on that keeps life vibrant and full of energy. One should learn to be adaptable, rather than meeting obstacles head-on like an egg against a stone, which leads to inevitable failure. We must nurture dreams in children, helping them understand that dreams are attainable; dreams provide the motivation and direction for life, allowing children to bridge the gap between aspiration and reality. Sometimes, a coincidence becomes a habit, a habit leads to expectation, and expectation brings disappointment; however, new expectations can prompt us to break bad habits and turn the accidental back into the intentional. By understanding these patterns and shedding old habits, one can move past disappointment toward a state of true freedom. Simplicity is the tranquility of the soul—not demanding too much from life. Life is a cycle of reunions and partings, successes and failures; no one is truly perfect. A mature person faces imperfection with composure, neither forcing nor obsessing, doing their best and then accepting fate. While pursuing perfection is an ideal, accepting imperfection is a beautiful state of mind.