If you have an ideal, you must rely on actions to realize it. Everything depends on human effort. As long as you work hard, your ideal will come true one day.
The main point of this sentence is: concrete actions are very important, and there will be a way out if you dare to work hard, otherwise the ideal is fantasy and empty talk.
In fact, there is no road on the ground, and there are many people walking, which becomes the meaning of the road:
1. Don't covet comfort, don't blindly follow the footsteps of predecessors, as you can only go to the end by one road;
2. The road is made by people, so we should dare to be the first in the world, cut through thorns and be brave in pioneering and innovating;
3. Leaders should be strict with themselves. If leaders take the lead in doing bad things, the people below will follow suit. This is "the front is the footsteps, and the road is the road", and the upward movement is effective.
Lu Xun (September 25, 1881-October 19, 1936), once known as Zhou Zhangshou, later renamed Zhou Shuren, and later changed to Yucai. He studied in Sendai Medical College. "Lu Xun" is the pseudonym he used when he published Diary of a Madman in 1918, and it is also his most influential pseudonym, a native of Shaoxing, Zhejiang. A famous writer, thinker and democratic fighter, he was an important participant in the May 4th New Culture Movement and the founder of modern literature in China. Mao Zedong once commented: "Lu Xun's direction is the direction of the new culture of the Chinese nation."
Lu Xun has made great contributions in many fields such as literary creation, literary criticism, ideological research, literary history research, translation, introduction of art theory, introduction of basic science and collation and research of ancient books. He has a great influence on the development of China's social ideology and culture after the May 4th Movement, and is well-known in the world literary circles, especially in the fields of Korean and Japanese ideology and culture. He is known as "the writer who occupied the largest territory on the cultural map of East Asia in the 2th century".