unable to bear the misfortune
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù sh è ngq í K ǔ, which means you can't bear the pain. From the biography of Li wa.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Li WA, a bamboo slips written by Bai Xing of Tang Dynasty, it is said that "he went out in vain to the east of Xingyuan in Jiangxi Province. He took off his clothes and used hundreds of horsewhip to kill him."
Idiom usage
To be in great pain.
unable to bear the misfortune
one 's high morality reaching up to the clouds - gāo yì bó yún
Slander in the stomach and slander in the heart - fù fěi xīn bàng
The bell tolls at the end of the day - dǐng shí míng zhōng