
My Monastic Life
by Little Saint
About This Novel
For me, who is a Buddhist, time is the most unnecessary thing. I have been very bored recently. I was browsing online and found an article called "Post-80s, our generation!" ", I was very surprised after reading it. In fact, I am also a member of the post-80s generation, but: I am an out-and-out ascetic. When I was in elementary school, I didn't know what money was; when I was in college, I had already achieved some success in my spiritual practice, and money was something extraneous to me. Every once in a while, I made some money and donated it to the elementary school in my hometown. After I graduated from college, while my classmates struggled to find a job that would make them hungry, I was traveling around and felt so uncomfortable. When housing prices in the city are rising step by step, I live in the sky. When the people around me had no cars or houses and couldn't find wives, I was hiding around in despair. There were so many close girls who wanted to marry me... Hey...! I sighed, we are people of the same era, why are our lives so different? Think about it, it's better to practice Taoism!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(19)Scraped 11d ago
Why does the preface not match the postscript? The connection cannot be made. The ratings are seriously inconsistent. The maximum is 5 points.
The books are incoherent, and it's not like rabbits, who keep jumping around while writing.
The book is very poor
To cultivate Taoism, you must first cultivate virtue. If you do not cultivate virtue, you will only die.
I couldn't stand it when I saw it was in first person.
Why does the author use first person? Looking for a sense of presence?
Is this book copied?
The first chapter looks basically the same as a book I read ten years ago, and the key points are similar to the title in my memory.
That's just 20 chapters, later...
Poisonous weed........................
The author may not have considered the reader's habits. When you are used to reading in the third person, if you suddenly change it to the first person, I will not be used to it. It will feel a little awkward.
Is the author a practitioner? If you have any insights from practice, please pass them on.
Didn't you know money was a thing when you were a kid? Then do you still know about those born in the 80s?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(19)Scraped 11d ago
Why does the preface not match the postscript? The connection cannot be made. The ratings are seriously inconsistent. The maximum is 5 points.
The books are incoherent, and it's not like rabbits, who keep jumping around while writing.
The book is very poor
To cultivate Taoism, you must first cultivate virtue. If you do not cultivate virtue, you will only die.
I couldn't stand it when I saw it was in first person.
Why does the author use first person? Looking for a sense of presence?
Is this book copied?
The first chapter looks basically the same as a book I read ten years ago, and the key points are similar to the title in my memory.
That's just 20 chapters, later...
Poisonous weed........................
The author may not have considered the reader's habits. When you are used to reading in the third person, if you suddenly change it to the first person, I will not be used to it. It will feel a little awkward.
Is the author a practitioner? If you have any insights from practice, please pass them on.
Didn't you know money was a thing when you were a kid? Then do you still know about those born in the 80s?
Featured in 10 Booklists
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Classical Taoist texts: Cultivation requires cultivating the mind; ordinary people see the truth; it should not be buried




This book is in the same genre as the following "The Last Monk". There are not many books in the entire online literature world, and this book also fell into the cliché at the end, a little inferior to that one. However, this book is finished. Those who like cultivating books can read it.




Representative works of Xiao Xiao Sheng's classics and sacred books, similar ones include those born in the 1980s and those born in the 1980s and those born in the Dharma Ending Age.




Practicing Qigong and Taoism Classics















