Allusion: During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, a father and son went out to fight. The father became a general and the son was just a pawn. Another horn sounded, the drums roared, and my father solemnly raised an quiver with an arrow in it. The father solemnly said to his son, "This is the treasure arrow at home. It is extremely powerful when you carry it with you, but you must never take it out. " This is an extremely delicate quiver, made of thick cowhide, inlaid with faint shiny copper edges, and look at the arrow's exposed tail. You can tell at a glance that it is made of fine peacock feathers. The son was beaming and greedily speculated about the appearance of the arrow, as if the sound of the arrow whizzed past his ear, and the enemy commander fell off his horse and died. Sure enough, the son with the treasure arrow is heroic and invincible. When the trumpet sounded, the son could no longer resist the heroic spirit of victory and completely abandoned his father's words. A strong desire drove him to shout and pull out his treasure arrow, trying to find out. Suddenly he was shocked. A broken arrow, there is a broken arrow in the quiver.
I have been fighting with a broken arrow! My son broke out in a cold sweat, as if the house had lost its pillar in an instant and collapsed.
The result is self-evident, and my son died tragically in the disorderly army.
What is willpower? Will can't control the outcome of the battlefield. The real meaning of victory is that once you are at war with the enemy, you can concentrate. Win without arrogance, lose with grace, and you can worship the general. This is a great will and a great spirit. In fact, it is not the "heirloom" that matters. Veterans use the essence of "going to the general" to discipline their sons, while sons use the minds of soldiers to speculate on success or failure. The reason why my son died in battle was that he didn't know the secret of Baojian at all.