If a person truly wants to achieve great success, they must venture into the world. Absolutely cannot stay in their hometown. Look at all successful people—they all leave their hometowns. The farther they go into the outside world, the bigger their world becomes, and their growth and development also become greater. This is almost a law.
In "The Mortal Cultivator," Han Li's experience perfectly proves the principle that "venturing into the world leads to great success, staying in the hometown makes it difficult to become a great figure."
Han Li was originally an ordinary young boy from Qingniu Town, Jingzhou, Yue Kingdom in Tiannan. If he had stayed in his hometown, he could only make a living in the small town, limited by the pattern of heaven and earth for his entire life. But in pursuit of immortal cultivation and eternal life, he resolutely left his hometown and embarked on the path of immortality.
First, he left Qingniu Town and went to the capital of Yue Kingdom, where he saw the existence of immortal cultivation sects; then he left Yue Kingdom to explore Tiannan's vast territory, experiencing life and death in places like the Blood Forbidden Land and the Chaotic Star Sea, gaining numerous opportunities, and continuously improving his cultivation; later, he even left Tiannan and went to the Spirit Realm, where in a broader world, he competed with stronger opponents and ultimately achieved the Great Dao.
If Han Li had stayed in Qingniu Town all along, he probably wouldn’t have achieved eternal cultivation, let alone foundation building, and certainly wouldn’t have become a prominent figure in the immortal cultivation world later on. Every time he left his familiar environment and ventured into a broader world, his world, growth, and development advanced to a new level. This perfectly illustrates the law that "the farther you go outside, the bigger the world, and the greater your growth and development."
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If a person truly wants to achieve great success, they must venture into the world. Absolutely cannot stay in their hometown. Look at all successful people—they all leave their hometowns. The farther they go into the outside world, the bigger their world becomes, and their growth and development also become greater. This is almost a law.
In "The Mortal Cultivator," Han Li's experience perfectly proves the principle that "venturing into the world leads to great success, staying in the hometown makes it difficult to become a great figure."
Han Li was originally an ordinary young boy from Qingniu Town, Jingzhou, Yue Kingdom in Tiannan. If he had stayed in his hometown, he could only make a living in the small town, limited by the pattern of heaven and earth for his entire life. But in pursuit of immortal cultivation and eternal life, he resolutely left his hometown and embarked on the path of immortality.
First, he left Qingniu Town and went to the capital of Yue Kingdom, where he saw the existence of immortal cultivation sects; then he left Yue Kingdom to explore Tiannan's vast territory, experiencing life and death in places like the Blood Forbidden Land and the Chaotic Star Sea, gaining numerous opportunities, and continuously improving his cultivation; later, he even left Tiannan and went to the Spirit Realm, where in a broader world, he competed with stronger opponents and ultimately achieved the Great Dao.
If Han Li had stayed in Qingniu Town all along, he probably wouldn’t have achieved eternal cultivation, let alone foundation building, and certainly wouldn’t have become a prominent figure in the immortal cultivation world later on. Every time he left his familiar environment and ventured into a broader world, his world, growth, and development advanced to a new level. This perfectly illustrates the law that "the farther you go outside, the bigger the world, and the greater your growth and development."