Couplet: "If you want to get rid of your troubles, you will have no self-nature". Who wrote it?

If you want to get rid of your troubles, you must have no me.

Go through all the difficulties to be a good person.

-This couplet is a poem by Peng Yulin, a strategist and poet in the Qing Dynasty. Many writers or copywriters mistake this couplet for Yu Yue's title couplet, but it is actually a poem used in Peng Xueqin's letter to Yu Yue. Yu Yue said in "Talking about Life with His Second Daughter Embroidered Sun": "Yesterday, Assistant Minister Peng Xueqin wrote a poem saying,' If you want to get rid of your troubles, you must go through all difficulties to be a good person'. This sentence has a taste, I will recite it for you. "

As the saying goes, don't worry, worry makes people old. Everyone has troubles, but the content of troubles varies from person to person. However, the source of trouble comes from the word "I". Without me, it is selfless, and my heart is selfless. Is there any trouble? So "no self" is a good medicine to eradicate troubles. "If you want to get rid of troubles, you will have no self-nature", which is really a philosophical and profound life experience. Similarly, in the voyage of life, it will not always be smooth sailing. "Difficulties and hardships, Yucheng." "Being a hard-working good man" has been proved by a lot of facts. The couplets give pertinent advice in the tone of "experienced people" and are enlightening. 1On April 22nd, 924, Feng, the only son of patriotic general Feng Yuxiang, wanted to study abroad. Before he left, he also wrote this book to teach his son. He said affectionately, "I wrote this to you and to myself." Without me, we can serve the people and everyone. I have no complaints. I am willing to serve the people. You are too young to know the difficulties of being a man. Being a good person must be tempered. "