It's hard to be a master if you don't suffer hardships
You can be a master only if you eat hardships
Adversity reveals genius; Fortune concerts it. (Horace, ancient Roman poet)
Adversity shows talent, while good luck hides talent. (Horace, an ancient Roman poet)
Although the world is full of suffering, it is full of it. (Hellen Keller, American writer)
Although the world is full of suffering, But suffering can always be overcome (Helen Keller, American writer)
As fruit needs are not only sunshine but cold nights and chilling showers to ripenit, So character needs not only joy but trial and difference to mellow it. (Hugh black, American writer)
Fruits need not only sunshine, but also cool nights. Cold rain can ripen it. The cultivation of a person's character requires not only joy, but also trials and difficulties. (Blake H, American writer)
If you want to live your whole life free from pain. You must be a god or else a coupes
If you want to get rid of suffering all your life, you have to be a god or a dead body
It is not true suffocating ennobles the character; Happiness does that some times, but suffocating, for the most part, makes men pettity and literary. (William Somerset Maugham, British novelist)
It is not accurate to say that suffering can sublimate personality; Happiness can do this sometimes, but suffering often makes people narrow-minded and have revenge. (Mao Mu W S, British novelist)
rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation. (John Kennedy, American President)
Get joy from hope, and remain tenacious in suffering. (American President Kennedy J)
The more you fight something, the more anxious you become-the more you're involved in a bad pattern, The more difficult it is to escape. (Seebohm Caroline, British physician)
The more you struggle to solve the problem, the more impatient you become-the deeper you get into the wrong thinking, the harder it is to get rid of the pain. (Caroline S, British doctor)
The tragedy of life is not so much what men feel, but what they miss. (Thomas Carlyle, British essay and historian)
The tragedy of life lies not in how much people suffer, but in what people miss. (Thomas Carlyle, British essayist and historian)