proceed without hesitation
"Let go on a precipice" is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Xu á NY á s ā sh ǒ u, which means that when a person is in a desperate situation, he can only make another choice without turning back. It also means that in an emergency, he leaves everything behind. It comes from the biography of Jingde, the true Zen master of Suzhou yongguangyuan.
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Shi Daoyuan's biography of Jingde, the true Zen master of Suzhou yongguangyuan said, "you must let go on a precipice, and you are willing to take it."
Idiom usage
Yu Xiaohua's return to youth: "what a nice girl, she had time to retreat, but she didn't have it."
Chinese PinYin : xuán yá sā shǒu
proceed without hesitation
not to breathe a word about a single word. zhī zì bù tí
A bird knows the ambition of a swan. yàn què ān zhī hóng hú zhī zhì