bear bitter hardships
Ru Ku Han Xin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin R ú K ǔ h á nx ī n, describes suffering from hardship or suffering from hardship.
Pinyin
rúkǔhánxīn
explain
It is used to describe suffering or suffering from hardship.
Classics
Song Sushi's Zhonghe Shengxiang Yuanji: it's omnipresent, full of bitterness and bitterness. There is frost on the top, but there is no rest on the bottom. ——On the volume of hutianlu written by Baiyi Jushi in Huaiyin of Qing Dynasty
Discrimination
Usage: used as predicate, attributive and adverbial to describe suffering. synonym: hardships, such as a cow's burden, suffering contains acid antonym: like a solution
allusion
It is said that in the Song Dynasty, when people cultivated their Buddha nature, they often went to the mountains and walked naked in the frost and snow on thorns and snakes. Even some people cut off their own meat and cooked it to feed tigers and other small animals. These people thought that they would become Buddhists. People lamented that "the way of Buddhism is hard to achieve.".
bear bitter hardships
psychological offense is the best of tactics - gōng xīn wèi shàng
dust has covered kitchen utensils and fish has spawned in cooking vessels because of long disuse - zēng chén fǔ yú
die without fulfilling one 's ambitions - jī zhì ér mò
set up a home and establish a business - ān jiā lì yè