I don't want to be complacent
As a Chinese idiom, Xi é B ù zh ā nx í in pinyin means that Buddhists practice hard. It comes from jiantuoluo, a record of the western regions in the Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The story of Bo Li's wet binding of the venerable (the coerced venerable) practising asceticism diligently, and finally not being coerced to the throne. See Tang Xuanzang's records of the western regions of the Tang Dynasty, jiantuoluo kingdom.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : xié bù zhān xí
I don't want to be complacent
make the enemy yield and the different nation submit to the authority. huái dí fù yuǎn
Heavy responsibility and light talent. rèn zhòng cái qīng
treacherous ministers and traitors. luàn chén zéi zǐ