Wear iron shoes
Wearing iron shoes, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ó Chu ā NTI ě Xi é, which means to describe a long journey and hardships. It's from wolf in the middle.
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of Ming · Kanghai's zhongshanlang: "I go to the end of the world, wear iron shoes, cry for poverty, the west wind tears, beg for nothing, two temples decline."
Idiom usage
It means a long journey.
Chinese PinYin : mó chuān tiě xié
Wear iron shoes
raise children to provide against old age. yǎng ér fáng lǎo
use every means to have an innocent person pronounced guilty. shēn wén zhōu nà
no hatred or grievance against. bù cún jiè dì
see how one behaves in the future. yǐ guān hòu xiào