A must-read Buddhist classic for life.

1. Life is not long, so why bother. The past has been buried by floating clouds. After death, there are still green hills to meet you. But after all these years, I've lived a chic life.

People are born lonely, don't expect to rely on anyone, even the one you love. The more noisy, the more lonely. Life is full of practice, so that you can be calm as water in loneliness and be safe and sound in the disturbance.

3. How much I have seen year after year, how much I have put down day after day, how much I have gained by hook or by crook, how much I have carefully lost, how much I have worried, how much I have resented, how much I have done evil after greed, how much I enjoyed when I was alive, and how much I took away when I died.

There is no real despair in life. Trees put down their fallen leaves in autumn, which hurts their hearts, but all winter, they let their hearts accumulate strength in peace. Spring has come, and youth is still there. As long as life is in your palm, there is no despair in life. A moment's success or failure is just a lifetime's little cold. Let the heart rest when it is tired, and the repair of the soul is the hope that life will never be exhausted.

The seemingly most accidental event is saturated with the taste of fate. What makes you stop is for today and tomorrow, even for a long time to come, so that what really belongs to you will belong to you after all. Sometimes, the destination you think is actually just a transition; The transition you think is actually home.

6. It doesn't matter who hurt you in life, what matters is whether you can resolve your anger as soon as possible. Forgive, forget, or remain silent. The heart is quiet, so there is no need to look outside. Practice in the heart, not greedy or angry.