survival strategy

  • The Execution of Wang Hou [Three Kingdoms]

    In the chaos of war, when survival hangs by a thread, morality often yields to necessity. One of the most chilling and revealing moments in Romance of the Three Kingdoms captures this truth in the story of Cao Cao’s execution of Wang Hou, the grain administrator (granary officer). Far from a mere act of…

  • Strategist Jia Xu [Three Kingdoms]

    When discussing the greatest strategists of the Three Kingdoms, names like Zhuge Liang, Xun Yu, Guo Jia, Sima Yi, and Jia Xu often rise to the top. While intellectual brilliance was common among them, Jia Xu stands out as the undisputed master of emotional intelligence (EQ)—a skill that allowed him not only to survive…

  • The master of calculated cunning – Jia Xu [Three Kingdoms]

    In the treacherous world of the Three Kingdoms, where brilliant minds often met tragic ends, Jia Xu stands as a singular anomaly—a strategist famed not for grand visions of empire, but for ruthless pragmatism and cold calculation, yet he emerged as one of the very few who lived to a ripe old age and…

  • Cultural encounter in “Yaksha Kingdom”

    Strange Tales from Liaozhai: Yaksha Kingdom (The Land of Demons) narrates merchant Xu’s extraordinary odyssey. Shipwrecked during a storm, he washes ashore in a valley inhabited by Yaksha (savage humanoid demons). Initially terrified, Xu gradually wins their trust by teaching them cooked food, eventually marrying a female Yaksha.

  • Behind Yingning’s laughter

    The story “Yingning” from Strange Tales from Liaozhai is a classic short story written by Pu Songling, a writer from the Qing Dynasty. This tale centers around the romantic relationship between the protagonist, Scholar Wang, and Yingning, and is filled with elements of fantasy and profound social commentary.

  • The cuttlefish’s fatal ink

    The cuttlefish has four pairs of legs which it can draw into its beak, and it can hide its beak under its belly.