It's hard to be complacent
It's hard to be dedicated. Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhu ā NY ù n á NCH é ng, which means that things can't be done by one's own will. It comes from Zuozhuan, the tenth year of Xianggong.
Idiom explanation
Lust: personal selfishness and desire.
Idiom interpretation: it is difficult to do things by one's own will.
The origin of Idioms
In the tenth year of Xianggong in Zuozhuan, it is said that "it is hard to be angry, but it is hard to be obsessed with one's own desires; it is hard to be united, and it is also dangerous." It means that it is difficult to resist the anger of the masses, and it is difficult to accomplish things only by one's will; it is difficult to run the country in peace when the two things are combined, which is a dangerous way to run the country.
Idiom usage
It means that wishful thinking is hard to accomplish.
Examples
The ancients said, "it's hard to offend when people are angry." The strike in Shanghai is the end of the story. The 108 chapters of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xianfu
Chinese PinYin : zhuān yù nán chéng
It's hard to be complacent
cause-and-effect relationship. yuán qīng liú qīng
to do things that are beyond his power. qiǎng rén suǒ nán
maintain one 's original pure character. yī chén bù dào