61. Thick weeds have destroyed the path, making it deserted and lonely. A gust of wind sweeps through the wheat waves; on the ridges, farmers carry their burdens, toiling through bumpy and rugged paths. One looks back, and everyone is in a hurry. The elderly grow thin as the river flows steadily eastward. Such days—quiet with cold tea, climbing mountains and entering valleys, sweating profusely—all gather into a river and roll toward the great ocean!
62. Can suffering and sorrow change anything or hold back the past? Stepping quietly off someone else's stage, wandering amidst the neon lights and losing oneself in the superficiality, perhaps only this feeling allows me to cast aside all worries and vent my emotions. Carrying your words through a spring and summer, I eventually begin to disdain this sensation.
63. In the early morning, I pull aside the gauze window, and warm sunlight shines upon my face. The sun brings warmth and fragrance, comforting my heart. Ah! I love the sun; she is embedded in my heart, making me intoxicated and opening my soul... The sun has truly moved into my heart; I feel so bright and filled with sunshine now!
64. No one can claim to be flawless, and no one can prove they are a permanent victor. However, there are those who can confidently tell everyone they are successful, that they are strong and unbreakable in life. Their brilliance is dazzling and enviable. They are confident because they hold hope in their hearts, and because their "winning formula" is constantly refined through life's tests. Their IQ or EQ might not be the highest, but their mindset is undoubtedly healthy, enabling them to strike back quickly amidst the wind and rain.
65. Life's many frustrations and so-called happy moments always follow closely. Frustration exists to some extent in everyone's life, though its content and meaning vary. We may avoid discussing our unfortunate encounters, but we lack the strength to push away the bitterness of being unable to explain or voice them. Life is perhaps just like this: everyone carries their own irreconcilable regrets, which allow human emotions to interweave like day and night, through joys and sorrows, with myriad flavors.
66. Life itself is a process of tempering. Since we do not expect our lives to be a blank slate, there is no need to reject the trials and tribulations. Grow through experience, become strong through pain; no one's path can avoid the vicissitudes of time.
67. What people fear most is: deception after trust, indifference after initiative, heartbreak after giving, and estrangement after intimacy; it is boredom after familiarity, perfunctoriness after deep affection, separation after understanding, and loss after cherishing. The intimacy and heart-to-heart words you share today may become the arrows that pierce you tomorrow.
68. The best standard for measuring success is not how much money you earn, but whether you can live the life you desire.
69. Choice is the compass on the road to success; learn how to use it so you do not lose your way.
70. Only when one is free of dust can they break through the densest nets.
71. For a salesperson, time is the most valuable asset. Understanding and selecting customers means focusing time and energy on those most likely to purchase, rather than wasting it on those who cannot.
72. Many people live their entire lives in mediocrity because they never understood how to conduct themselves or how to act.
73. In life, without wise brothers or fathers, and without strict teachers or friends, few can achieve success.
74. Life is a grand dream; how many times has the chill returned? The scent of spilled tea during book gambling was thought to be ordinary at the time; like a dream, ephemeral and elusive. Call for the finest wine to drown the eternal sorrows, for joys and sorrows come and go without pattern, leaving only the sound of dripping rain until dawn.
75. The most important thing in life is not the result, but the process. Life is like riding a train; The past scenery may be beautiful and leave you longing, but you must keep moving forward. You tell yourself, "I will definitely come back to see it again," but often, you never do. The receding scenery and the people encountered will eventually drift further and further away.