Beat the whip and the stirrup
Beating the whip and hammering the stirrup, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī Bi ā NCHU í D è ng, which means driving the horse fast and marching in a hurry. From "how to save sheep".
The origin of Idioms
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in "save sheep in naihetian" that "if you burn a boat, you should not be afraid of the cold wind and snow."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attribute; used on horseback, etc.
Beat the whip and the stirrup
live at the mercy of the elements - kào tiān chī fàn
insidious slander which gradually soaks into the mind - jìn rùn zhī zèn