Four seasons on the tile, life under the eaves, mottled years, calm. What do you mean?

"Four seasons on the tile, life under the eaves, mottled years, calm" means:

The four seasons on the tiles, the life under the eaves, and the mottled years under the shadows of trees are as quiet as before.

A person's life is always influenced by his heart. When your heart is sidelined, you are indifferent to the pain and fame of life, have a positive and balanced attitude, want but don't want, do something but don't do it, don't deliberately hide yourself, don't cater to others, just be a simple and true self. In this way, even if you are frustrated, you will be indifferent to gains and losses, honest, true, calm and happy.

Extended data:

"Four seasons on the tile, life under the eaves, mottled years, happy-go-lucky", pronounced as ā n zh and ru ò si, means indifference to abnormal phenomena or unsatisfactory situations.

Explanation: It means that you are indifferent to abnormal phenomena or unsatisfactory situations. Now it also means turning a blind eye to the wrong words or things and letting them go.

From Qing Fan Yin's Le Yan Attached to Poverty.

Yue Yan is a language document reflecting China's Yue dialects and ballads in Qing Dynasty, which was compiled by Fan Yin, a native of Huiji (Shaoxing). Yue Yan is divided into three volumes: upper, middle and lower. The collected materials are divided into three categories: language, name, sound and meaning, and each category has a small preface at the beginning.

The second volume is accompanied by five short articles, which discuss philology, the feelings of the people of the whole country and natural changes, such as On Elegant and Popular People and On Poverty. There are two volumes of Yue Yan Yu at the back of the book as a supplement to the unpublished materials being compiled.