The traditional Chinese characters for "The heart has something to rely on" are as shown in the picture.
It is basically the same as the simplified Chinese characters, except that the third stroke of the character "you" is now a vertical stroke, while the traditional Chinese characters are a single stroke.
[Traditional Chinese]
Traditional Chinese, also known as traditional Chinese, was called traditional Chinese in the "First Simplified Chinese Character List" in 1935, and was called traditional Chinese in European and American countries ( Traditional Chinese) generally refers to the Chinese characters that were replaced by simplified characters during the Chinese character simplification movement. Sometimes it also refers to the entire Chinese regular script and official script writing systems before the Chinese character simplification movement. Traditional Chinese has a history of more than three thousand years. Until the Chinese Civil War, it was the standard Chinese writing standard used by Chinese people everywhere.
The large-scale movement to simplify Chinese characters in modern times began in the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. In order to improve the literacy rate, simplified characters were written on the imperial seals and official documents. During the Republic of China, the Chinese government promoted the simplification of Chinese characters on a large scale, but it was later abolished after strong opposition from all walks of life. On January 28, 1956, the State Council issued the "Resolution on the Announcement of the "Chinese Character Simplification Plan", and mainland China began to comprehensively implement the simplified Chinese characters. In the 1970s, there were a batch of two simplified characters, which were later abolished.
The regions that still use traditional Chinese characters include China’s Taiwan region, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Macao Special Administrative Region. Countries in the Chinese character cultural circle, overseas Chinese communities such as Singapore and Malaysia mostly use traditional and simplified characters. In mainland China, traditional Chinese characters coexist. Traditional Chinese characters should be retained or used for cultural relics, surname variations, calligraphy and seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions, and special needs.
In January 2001, the "Law of the People's Republic of China on the Standard Spoken and Written Chinese Language" was implemented, which clearly stipulated that China should promote standardized Chinese characters and also clearly defined the scope of retaining or using traditional Chinese characters. On June 5, 2013, the State Council of China announced the "General Standard Chinese Character Table", including the appendix "Comparison Table of Standard Characters, Traditional Chinese Characters and Variant Characters". The use of Chinese characters in general application fields shall be subject to the standard table.