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Idioms describing Laozi
The idioms about Laozi and their explanations are as follows:

Great achievers: success, achievement. In the old society, Zhuangzi used to call Lao Zi.

Purple gas from the East: According to legend, before Lao Tzu passed Hangu Pass, Guan Yinxi saw purple gas coming from the East and knew that saints would pass by. Sure enough, I came riding a green cow. This old metaphor is a symbol of good luck. With "purple gas coming from the east".

One of Laozi's three strategies for governing the country. It means recommending saints and implementing the rule of law, that is, replacing "governing by doing nothing" with "governing by doing nothing". Corresponding to "abandoning wisdom".

Despair: abandon, abandon: give up. It refers to giving up the benevolence advocated by the secular and returning to human nature. This is Lao Tzu's thought of governing by doing nothing.

Take the tree as the surname: It is said that Lao Zi took Li as the surname, so he was born under the tree.

Purple gas came from the east: according to legend, before Lao Tzu passed Hangu Pass, Guan Yinxi saw purple gas coming from the east and knew that saints would pass by. Sure enough, I came riding a green cow. This old metaphor is a symbol of good luck.