If you wear the mask for too long, it will grow on your face, and if you want to take it off again, you will have to break your muscles and bones to peel off the skin. --Lu Xun
People say that eating a little makes you wiser. Every time you get hurt, you put on a mask. After pretending for a long time, you will not be able to tell whether your actions are true or false, but you want to get back. To the original self, unless you want to expose all the unknown things about yourself to your emotions. It was like I had never experienced it before.
Author: Lu Xun
Lu Xun (1881~1936) was a Chinese writer, thinker, revolutionist and educator. His original name was Zhou Shuren, with the courtesy name Hencai and a native of Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province. He was born on September 25, 1881. Born into a run-down feudal family. In his youth, he was influenced by the theory of evolution, Nietzsche's philosophy of the Superman and Tolstoy's thought of philanthropy. In 1902, he went to Japan to study. He originally studied medicine at Sendai Medical College and later engaged in literary and artistic work, hoping to change the national spirit. From 1905 to 1907, he participated in the activities of the revolutionary party and published papers such as "On the Power of Moro Poetry" and "On Cultural Partiality". During this period, he returned to China and married his wife Zhu An at the order of his mother. In 1909, together with his brother Zhou Zuoren, he co-translated "Collection of Foreign Novels" to introduce foreign literature. He returned to China in the same year and taught in Hangzhou and Shaoxing.