Only by applying what you have learned can you achieve success. This sentence sounds simple, but it is not easy to actually put it into practice. In real life, we often meet people who know everything but can't apply what they have learned in real life. These people are like a dictionary that can only eat, and although it will not cause harm to the country's economic development, it will be of little use to the country after all.
There is a story about three ** in one temple. One day, the old monk asked the three ** to go out to practice, and after a while, the three monks returned to the temple. Among them, **A learned a lot of poetry in the capital, **B learned a lot of Jinglun with an elder, and only **C learned nothing. However, when **C helped the old monk wipe his back, he used his own experience to tell the truth of what he had learned under the monk. The old monk was very ashamed to hear this, and told ** the knowledge obtained on paper must be applied to practice.
This story tells us that learning is not just as simple as chanting. If he can only recite ** and does not know how to distinguish between right and wrong, then no matter how much he can memorize, he will never be able to become a qualified scholar. This is what the ancients said about "reading the Analects without knowing the Analects."
Now there are some people who spend huge sums of money to study, and after several years of hard work and study, it seems that they have also achieved success in Western studies. But if they are still unable to solve their own life problems, and cannot use the knowledge they have learned to solve practical problems in their work, then their knowledge is just learning that does not understand the current situation.