It originated from the poem of Cangyang Gyatso, the sixth Dalai Lama: "I was once worried and sentimental, damaging Brahma, and I was afraid to leave the whole city when I entered the mountains." (Also known as fear of sentimental damage to Sanskrit, fear of falling into the mountain and the city by mistake) If there is peace in the world, you will live up to the Tathagata.
Author: The 6th Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso Dynasty: Ming Dynasty's name "Affection damages Sanskrit".
Extended data:
Related words are: time flies, fleeting, fleeting, fleeting, fleeting, stars moving, time flies, years like songs, meteors chasing the moon.
Appreciation: Time flies, time goes by bit by bit, and it will be fleeting before you know it, just like the blink of an eye. Time flies, as if yesterday was a cold winter with layers of snowflakes, and today is a hot summer day. Time flies, and we must cherish it. The rain and dew are clear and diligent.
The first sentence of this sentence is: if you have nothing to do, you will be able to take care of the east and live up to the spring. This sentence comes from the Three Kingdoms, which roughly means that people like me can be appreciated by beautiful women. I will not live up to this beautiful spring, nor will I live up to the best of you. 、
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Cangyang Jiacuo (the 6th Dalai Lama, a folk poet)