see through the vanity of life
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ī sh ē nm ǐ nzh ì, which means to get rid of all physical and mental troubles, to be the realm of Hinayana arohango. It comes from "jiaoguangangzong" by Zhixu of Ming Dynasty.
explain
Buddhist language. It refers to the state of Hinayana arohango, which is to eliminate all physical and mental troubles. It's the same as "lose one's body and destroy one's wisdom".
source
Zhixu of Ming Dynasty wrote in jiaoguangangzong: "if you lose your body and lose your wisdom, your name will be nirvana." Minh means to annihilate or disappear. After the second sage enters nirvana, the color body becomes grey, so it is called grey body. Since the seshen has become ashes, he no longer has the consciousness to rebirth, because they do not receive the afterlife; not receiving the afterlife means that they do not receive the life and accept the existence of the next life; since they do not receive the afterlife, they do not have the consciousness to rebirth in the next life, so it is impossible to have the wisdom to release the Tao for all living beings, so it is called Minzhi. Notes on Shengli Sutra
see through the vanity of life
lead a life of luxury and debauchery - huāng yín wú chǐ
there is not a single miss in a hundred tries - bǎi bù shī yī
price oneself out of the market - màn tiān jiào jià
lively and vigorous flourishes in calligraphy - lóng xiáng fèng yuè