20. As long as you dare to take the first step, the path ahead will surely clear.
21. If one becomes complacent after tasting a little success and spends hard-earned wealth on trivial matters, that fortune will vanish like an ephemeral flower.
22. While the husband traveling for business failed to return, the young wife's repeated hopes turned into repeated disappointments. Her resentment and loneliness grew heavier, leading her to utter the foolish words, "to marry a wave-rider." Though foolish, they were bitter words, expressing the extreme melancholy of a longing wife.
23. However, excessive loftiness can evolve into arrogance, becoming the thorns and vines that obstruct our journey through life.
24. As time passes and age increases, we gain wisdom and see through more, yet joy seems to diminish. Learn to let go; time will eventually wash everything away. When encountering hardships, view temporary difficulties as the darkness before dawn. With a positive mindset, you will find that reality is far less dire than imagined. The bitterest thing in life is being unable to control partings and reunions; the hardest thing is trying to return after love has faded. Life is ever-changing, yet fate seems constant, but the path we take is our own choice. Persevere on your chosen path, and you will find the scenery beautiful and life improving unexpectedly.
25. Talent is like a spark; it can either be extinguished or ignited. The only way to make it burn into a roaring fire is through continuous labor and practice.
26. If people will laugh whether we act or not, and whether we succeed or fail, then let us simply do better and give them something to laugh about!
27. Intelligence is more important than knowledge, quality is more important than intelligence, and awareness is more important than quality. Direction outweighs method, motivation outweighs ability, and character outweighs achievement.
28. Our worries stem from an inability to let go of past beauty: clinging to someone who has gone, a withered romance, or a long-sealed memory.
29. Acting spoiled is sometimes a higher level of being unreasonable.
30. Losing confidence turns one into a coward. Doubt is the beginning of pain, while sincerity is the beginning of happiness.
31. Education is not merely to teach young people how to make a living, but to teach them how to create a life.
32. Life requires precipitation and time for reflection to reach perfection; it requires accumulation, where looking back allows us to sublimate through the tasting of gains and losses. Looking forward is about dreams and goals; looking back is about results and corrections. Many things could have been done better if we had looked back; many people could have found what they desired if they had turned around. The path ahead is often reflected in what lies behind.
33. In this materialistic world, what is truly lacking is not money, but love. True poverty is not a lack of wealth, but the loss of love, leaving the soul without a home.
34. We have long heard of "beautiful lies," which are not mere deceptions but a way to harvest hope. Even when we know something is impossible, it does not diminish our gratitude for that love.
35. Life is like a story, in which we constantly reenact our own joys and sorrows within the stories of others.
36. Time is like a river: the left bank holds unforgettable memories, the right bank holds precious youth, and flowing swiftly in the middle is the subtle sadness of young years. Though much in the world is beautiful, very little truly belongs to us. Watching flowers bloom and fall in the courtyard, remain unmoved by honor or disgrace; watching clouds roll and unroll in the sky, remain indifferent to staying or leaving. In this complex secular world, learning to treat everything with a calm heart is a true state of being.
37. Mutual respect leads to mutual understanding. If you wish to see more clearly, simply change your perspective.
38. The night sky through the eyes of the rain is slightly intoxicated; the falling rain through the eyes of the night is slightly cool.