• Art of War Chapter – 6.2

    March where the enemy cannot rush to defend; advance where he least expects you.To travel a thousand li without fatigue, move through unguarded lands.To conquer every target you attack, strike places the enemy fails to defend.To hold an impregnable defense, guard positions the enemy will not assault.

  • Art of War Chapter – 6.1

    Sun Tzu stresses seizing battlefield initiative: arrive early to stay rested. Skilled generals manipulate foes via lures and threats, exhausting, starving or unsettling the enemy instead of being controlled by them.

  • Chinese Character 家 (jiā)

    The Basics The Visual Structure This character is made of two clear parts: Put them together: a pig under a roof.At first glance, that might seem odd – why would a pig define “home”? But think like an ancient farmer: in early agricultural societies, pigs were the most valuable domestic animals. They provided meat,…

  • Chinese Character 国 (guó)

    The Basics The Visual Structure (How it’s built) To understand this character, you need to look at its two parts: Put them together: A “jade” (玉) inside a “border/wall” (囗).The visual logic is: “A precious treasure within a protected boundary.” It implies that a country is a sacred, valuable space that must be guarded…

  • Art of War Chapter – 5.5

    Skilled generals win by harnessing battlefield momentum instead of blaming troops, picking proper soldiers to build unstoppable force like rolling round boulders. The Battle of Hefei illustrates this idea via Cao Cao’s smart deployment of complementary generals.

  • Art of War Chapter – 5.4

    Armies can stay orderly amid chaos. Disorder, cowardice and weakness stem from organization, momentum and troop deployment. Skilled generals use false appearances and bait to lure enemies, then await them with solid forces.