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Laws of Life

Quote of the Day

A moment of patience can prevent huge disaster. A moment of impatience can ruin an entire life.

Daily self-motivation

At the self-banquet, everyone leaves hungry.

Daily Essay? Laws of Life

Harrison's Law of Action: Actors are often not as smart as commentators, but commentators often fail to act.

James’s Law of History: History itself does not repeat itself, repetition only occurs among historians.

Robert’s food rule: People who love sausages should never understand the production process of sausages.

Jackson’s Law of Hypocrisy: If others cannot see your hypocrisy, you are not hypocritical.

Johnson’s rule of reading newspapers: in order to discover all kinds of human errors, including printing errors in the newspaper itself.

Jeffrey's Law of Success: When someone talks about you not being as good as him, then you must be more successful than him in some aspects.

Cornwell’s Law of Organization: There will be someone in every organization who clearly knows the details of the organization, and this person should be fired.

Green’s Law of Debate: When you start talking nonsense, the truth is often in the hands of the other party.

Stewart’s Law of Reaction: It’s much easier to get forgiveness than permission.

Wallace's Law of Humility: Debase yourself to nothing in order to encourage others to recognize your excellence for themselves.

Olini's housekeeping rule: The kitchen can never be cleaned.

Mike’s Rule of Respect: Never reveal your true feelings in order to win the favor of others.

Daily Digest? Past and Present Life

She is an elf waiting in front of the Buddha. One day when she was looking at the world in the mirror, she saw a man, wearing a long dark blue coat, standing calmly in the street, lonely and proud. The elf was immediately moved. She pointed to the man and said to Buddha, Buddha, can you grant me a wish? Buddha smiled, looked at the flowers in his hands, and said to her, what do you want? The elf said, I am going to accompany that man.

The Buddha still smiled and asked the elf, do you know what companionship is? The elf was a little confused. The Buddha went on to say that companionship means integrating your life into that person's life forever. The elf seemed to understand. However, the Buddha said that you are an elf and he is a human being. He only has a life span of 100 years, but you are immortal. The elf was a little panicked and asked the Buddha, how can I have the same life as him? Buddha said, you have to become a human being and experience the world of mortals.

The elf said, then, you can put me into the world of mortals. The Buddha said that the world of mortals is bitter. The elf said, but the mortal world has him.

The Buddha said that the world of mortals is like the sea, and you don’t know the nature of water. The elf said, I will cling to my faith.

The Buddha knew the elf's determination, so he said to her, "The mortal world is bitter. I can give you three things, one is beauty, one is wealth, and the other is wisdom." You can only choose one of three things. For the first time, what do you want? The elf looked at the mirror and said, I want to be beautiful. Buddha waved his sleeves and said to the elf, go ahead.

The elf turned into a beautiful woman. But apart from beauty, she has nothing. She became a miserable prostitute in a brothel, playing the piano every day, sitting in front of people and staring into those eyes. The man still had nothing. He had no money, so he could only sit far away and listen to the woman's piano. The woman stubbornly threw the black hair on her head to him, and he held it in his hand.

A woman was spotted by a high-ranking official and wanted to take her as a concubine, but she refused. The woman looked at the man sadly and stabbed a pair of scissors into her heart.

The woman turned into an elf again, and the Buddha asked her, what do you want for the second time? The elf said, I want wealth. Buddha still waved his sleeves.

The elf then became a rich man’s daughter, with everything she wanted, but no love. The woman still loves the man stubbornly and even shares everything she has with him. But she found that the man's eyes were always cold when he looked at her. In his eyes, the woman was just a member of the opposite sex who was bathed in the smell of money. He squandered her money and her feelings.

A man says to a woman, you have too much money, so you are destined to be unable to lose it, and you will not be able to have feelings. The woman cried bitterly and stabbed a knife into her chest. The woman becomes an elf again. This time, she said to Buddha, I want to be smart. The Buddha then turned her into a very smart woman and the man who accompanied her in the mortal world again. The woman is so smart, everything is calculated with precise equations. She uses her intelligence to get close to that man, to possess that man, and even to plot against that man. But the woman found that the man's eyes were always frozen when he looked at her, even with hatred.

The woman cried and asked him why. He said, you are too smart. I am just a number in your hand, and you can drag me into any equation. You only possess me and have no feelings for me.

Later, the man joined the war and was stabbed by an enemy, bleeding all over the ground. The heartbroken woman chose to follow him to death, and she became an elf again. This time, before the Buddha could speak, the elf was already in tears. Buddha was surprised to find that the elf had feelings. The Buddha said, you can no longer escape from the world of mortals. The Buddha can only give you one last thing. What do you want? The elf flashed with tears and said to the Buddha, I don't want anything, I just want him to love me and love me forever.

The Buddha was silent and waved his sleeves. This time the woman watched the man gently hold her in his arms and kiss her tearful eyes tenderly. The woman was surprised to find that she had become that man's daughter and was loved by him all her life. /P