Do what you want
Gan Ge Zai Ji, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā ng ē Z à ij í, which means no longer resort to force. From the book of songs · Zhou Song · Shi Mai.
Idiom explanation
Gange: ancient weapons, by means of fighting, using force; Zai Ji: shipping and gathering.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Zhou Song · Shi Mai" said: "carry the original fighting, carry the bow and arrow."
Idiom usage
A truce is a truce. example I am full of Qi and exhausted. Please make peace with the chief inspector. In Song Dynasty, Chen Liang's "shangguangzong emperor's admonition" and "baopuzi · Shizhi", it is said that "the dry and the weak carry the source, and the complex and the weak are both Taos."
Do what you want
It's a thousand miles to lose - shī zhī qiān lǐ,chà ruò háo lí
quick flow of writer 's thoughts and imagination - tù qǐ hú luò