waking from a dream
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is d à m è NGF à NGX à ng, which refers to waking up from long-term mistakes, blinding or confusion. It's from Ding Zhongjiang's the history of the Northern Warlords: Russia's invasion of Outer Mongolia and Britain's invasion of Tibet.
The idiom comes from Ding Zhongjiang's "the history of the Northern Warlords: Russia's invasion of Outer Mongolia and Britain's invasion of Tibet": "kneel down and read it, and ambush it. Now the situation is so, and the living Buddha's instructions are detailed. For example, when you wake up from a big dream, you can't help but feel happy."
Chinese PinYin : dà mèng fāng xǐng
waking from a dream
all sorts of feelings well up in one 's mind. gǎn kǎi wàn duān
beat the swords into ploughshares. zhù jiàn wéi lí
bringing up a tiger to injure oneself. yǎng hǔ shāng shēn
Insects, sand, ape and crane. chóng shā yuán hè