Do what you want to do
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǐ x í NGM ó m í ng, which refers to honing virtue and virtue. It comes from Baoyang Xishu written by Zhou Lang of the Southern Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the book "Baoyang Xishu" written by Zhou Lang in the Southern Dynasty of Song Dynasty, it is said that "the scholars under my husband, who are good at doing things, will be good at destroying them if they want not to humiliate their ambition, carry out strange and store different things."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate; used in writing.
Do what you want to do
Win without pride, lose without despair - shèng bù jiāo,bài bù něi
summon up one 's courage for a task - chuō lì jùn fā
If you are the first, you will be caught - pián shǒu jiù dǎi