Take care of one's life
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī ngsh ē nzh ò ngy ì, meaning despise life and attach importance to just cause. From baopuzi Mingben.
The origin of Idioms
The Ming edition of baopuzi written by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty: "the art of attacking and defending interest, the festival of valuing one's life and righteousness."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; used of people. Example: Volume 29 of guanghongmingji of shidaoxuan in Tang Dynasty: "Weiwu scriptures are light-weight and attach great importance to righteousness. The state is not to be expected, and the heaven is not to be expected."
Take care of one's life
rapid advancement in one's career - zhí shàng qīng yún
take on an altogether new aspect - huàn rán yī xīn
messengers of the gods and spirits - shén chāi guǐ shǐ
new clothes and delicious food -- extravagant living - chǐ yī měi shí
gathering clouds and rolling mists - chóu yún cǎn wù