First, it is best not to meet each other, so you can not fall in love.
Second, it is best not to know each other, so that you can not miss each other.
Third, it's best not to accompany you, so you don't owe each other.
Fourth, it is best not to cherish each other, so that you can not remember each other.
Fifth, it is best not to fall in love, so as not to dislike each other.
Sixth, it is best not to face each other, so there is no need to meet.
Seventh, it is best not to make mistakes, so as to make mistakes.
Eighth, it is best not to promise each other, so you can not continue.
Ninth, it's best not to depend on each other, so you don't have to lean together.
Tenth, it's best not to meet each other, so we don't have to be together.
But we met as soon as we met, but we never met when we met.
Andrew and Jun are absolutely in harmony, so they won't teach life and death to be lovesick.
Extended data
The original Ten Commandments poem is a love poem of the 6th Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso. Ten Commandments Poems are the comments of online readers Jiao Yue Qingfeng and Bai Yi Youlan. "Feeling" was added to "Walking on Thin Ice".
The book "Walking on Thin Ice" published in 2006 has two sentences at the end, which are quoted from Cangyang Jiacuo: First, it is best not to meet each other, so you can not fall in love. Second, it's best not to know each other, so you don't have to miss each other. (The original text is Tibetan without a poem title, translated by Yu Daoquan. The translation of Walking on Thin Ice was made by Tonghua according to a version of Qinghai People's Publishing House. )
Later, Jiao Yueqingfeng, a reader of "Walking on Thin Ice", continued to understand the third and fourth place in the best ending. EULAN SPA01, a reader of "Walking on Thin Ice", is commenting on the article "Holding hands to see the soul for sale _ _ Reading"
Probably everyone likes this poem very much, and the communication effect is amazing. China netizens don't like to indicate the source when reprinting quotations. Later, it became a whole poem written by Cangyang Jiacuo.
Finally, today, almost everyone thinks that this tenth book was written by Cangyang Jiacuo, and even appeared in the officially published book, misleading readers again.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-ten commandments