Reading on a Winter Night and Showing Children is a seven-character quatrain written by Lu You, a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty, in his later years. This poem is full of the poet's profound educational thoughts, and it also places the poet's ardent expectations for his children.
"What you get on paper is difficult to learn, but you have to learn if you don't know anything", in which it is particularly emphasized that learning kung fu should be based on practice, which is also the secret of learning. Learning can't be satisfied with literal understanding, but should be practiced, because the knowledge gained from books is superficial after all. In the end, if you want to know the essence of things or things, you still have to rely on personal practice and profound understanding. Only in this way can we turn the knowledge in books into our practical skills.
In daily life, no matter studying or doing things, you can't talk on paper. You need to explore and experience yourself to know the true meaning of life and integrate practice with knowledge.