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Blessings and misfortunes can be mutually transformed.
Learn a lesson from the disaster and never do it again in the future, so that you can be happy; If we lose our vigilance in happiness, we may lurk with calamity.
This teaches us to be prepared for danger in times of peace.
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For example, if you have two horses and you lose one of them, it's not necessarily a curse, because he might bring back another horse, and when you're happy that you've picked up one more horse, it's not necessarily a blessing, because it might take both of your horses with you, which means that when you feel happy, sadness may follow, and happiness may follow when you feel loved.
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Nothing is certain, just do what you think is right, the blessing and misfortune will change due to the change of standards, nothing is necessarily a blessing, and there is no curse either.
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The place where the blessing of misfortune depends is a sentence from the traditional Chinese classic "Lao Tzu: Eighteen Chapters of the Five Si Imitation Spine". The whole sentence is "where misfortune and blessing rest, and where blessing and misfortune lie", which means that misfortune and blessing are interdependent and can be transformed into each other. Metaphorically bad things can lead to good results, and good things can also lead to bad results.
That is to say, under certain conditions, blessings can turn into disasters, and disasters can become blessings.
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Lean: Lean; Volt: Hidden. There are blessings in disguise, and blessings and curses. The metaphor is that bad things can lead to good results, and good things can lead to bad results.
Idiom source: Chapter 58 of "Lao Tzu": "Where misfortune and fortune rest, where blessing and misfortune lie." "Shenchun traditional Chinese writing: Misfortune and blessing rely on, and blessing and misfortune lurk.
Synonyms of misfortune and blessing and blessing lurking: Misfortune and fortune go hand in hand to give birth to a combination of misfortune and happiness It means that woe and happiness are mutually transformed and interdependent.
Idiom grammar: as an object, a clause; It refers to the coexistence of good and evil.
Affection. Color: Unisex idiom.
Idiom structure: Complex sentence idiom broad branch resistance.
Year of generation: Ancient idiom.
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Lean: Lean; Volt: Hidden. There are blessings in disguise, and blessings and curses. The metaphor is that bad things can lead to good results, and good things can lead to bad results.
Source of the idiom: Chapter 58 of "Lao Tzu": "Misfortune and blessing rely on, and blessing and loss serve misfortune." ”
Traditional Chinese writing: Misfortune and blessing are relied upon, and fortune and misfortune are lurking.
Synonyms of misfortune and blessing are depressed, and blessing and misfortune lurk: Misfortune and happiness are mutually transformed and interdependent.
Idiom grammar: as an object, a clause; It refers to the coexistence of good and evil.
Affection. Color: Unisex idiom.
Idiom Structure: Complex sentence idioms.
Year of generation: Ancient idiom.