Don't look at it in the dark
In Chinese, the Pinyin is y ī m í NGB ù sh ì, which means death. It's from Chu CE I, Warring States strategy.
Idiom explanation
Close your eyes and never open them again. Of death.
The origin of Idioms
In the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Xiang's "Warring States strategy - Chu strategy 1", it is said that "there are people who break their belly and do not see the world at dusk. They do not know what they are doing and worry about the country." In the notes of Yuewei thatched cottage written by Ji Yun of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "the heaven and the earth should meet each other, and it must be the one who is not."
Chinese PinYin : yī míng bù shì
Don't look at it in the dark
A thousand push and ten thousand resistance. qiān tuī wàn zǔ
feel dizzy and with one 's eyesight dimmed. tóu hūn yǎn àn
provide each other with assistance. gòng wéi chún chǐ