regardless of one's own safety
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ě sh ē NGW à ngs ǐ. From crying for filial piety.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of Guan Hanqing's "crying for filial piety" in Yuan Dynasty: "it is said that a combative fan Guan who can fight with me will give up his life and forget his death."
Idiom usage
I don't care about my personal safety.
Examples
Yuan · anonymous's "lock mirror" the second fold: "you have to sacrifice your life and death, to establish meritorious deeds."
Today's prosperity comes from the sacrifice of the revolutionary martyrs.
At the command of the marshal, the generals gave up their lives to attack the three passes. The 135 chapters of Dangkou Zhi by Yu Wanchun in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
Xue Rengui, a farmer of Longmen dahuangzhuang village in Yizhou, loved martial arts when he was young. He learned 18 kinds of martial arts when he was 20 years old. His parents encouraged him to sacrifice his life for his country. He said to his parents, "when the country is employing people, we should wipe out the barbarians and pacify the border areas. We should rely on your children to learn martial arts and have both wisdom and courage. If you are between the two battles, you will not succeed."
regardless of one's own safety
The morning hears the way, the night dies may carry on - zhāo wén dào,xī sǐ kě yǐ
Deep-rooted habits are hard to give up. - jī xí nán chú