Untie oneself
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ī J ī NJI ě D à I, which means open mind, Frank heart. It comes from a new account of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing's Shishuo Xinyu in the Southern Dynasty of Song Dynasty said, "so I had no choice but to leave."
Idiom usage
It is also used as a predicate, an object, and an attribute. It is used as a written example. (Chen Zilong, Ming Dynasty)
Idiom story
During the Jin Dynasty, when Wang Xizhi was the internal history of Kuaiji, sun Xinggong recommended Zhi Daolin, saying that he looked at problems and drew on new ideas. Wang Xizhi was proud and didn't want to see him. Later, when Wang Xizhi went out to do business, he met the eminent monk Zhi Daolin and talked with him about Zhuangzi xiaoyaoyou. Unexpectedly, Zhi Daolin's exposition was very incisive and novel. Wang Xizhi was open-minded and attentive.
Untie oneself
inspiring confidence without words - bù yán ér xìn
The wolf leaps and the gall flies - láng tū chī zhāng