People live on the earth, and they rotate with the earth every day, ushering in the sunrise and sunset, sending away the day, and welcoming the night; as the earth revolves around the sun, spring, summer, autumn, and winter begin again and again. No one is worried about whether the earth is unstable and will fall into an unfathomable cosmic trap. If you have such an idea, it is unfounded. When the astronaut climbed out of the space station more than 300 kilometers away and was conducting scientific experiments, he looked at the earth and said, "Wow, it's so beautiful!" Then, he subconsciously widened his vision and looked at the earth again in the vast space. I can't help but worry: The universe is so vast and the earth is so small. If you are fooling around, you will fall into the vast abyss. This feeling can only be experienced by astronauts hundreds of kilometers away. It is impossible for those of us on the earth to express such emotions. “I don’t know the true face of Mount Lu because I am in this mountain.” After listening to astronaut Zhai Zhigang’s emotion, I further deepened my understanding of Su Shi’s famous poem. To understand the whole picture of a huge thing, it is impossible to do it while being in it. Only by stepping out, standing far away, standing on a high place, observing three-dimensionally from multiple angles and thinking holistically can we have a comprehensive and objective view. Describe this thing. In a complicated and contradictory incident, the parties with closely related interests often cannot figure out the ins and outs, a clue, and a solution. When you struggle out of the narrow cobweb and look back at the troubled things from a macro perspective, the problem may become much simpler, "So that's what happened!" "The authorities are confused, but the bystanders know clearly." Go out and stand tall. Come on, look forward and look far away! At this time, no matter how big things are, they are no longer big, and no matter how difficult things are, they are not difficult either.