I wanted to make a dish for Yanleeks' distant sister, so I thought it was not very mature and did not do well enough, and I would welcome more valuable advice. There's a map of the return of the birds to their nests on the slopes of Suu Dong, and it's a poem by Renwen, the genius of the Ming Dynasty, born one after the other, three, four, six, seven, eight. The phoenix is too small to peck millions of stones. It's a mathematical poem with a strong meaning: "Be born one by one," it's 1 + 1 = 2. "3 x 4 x 12, 5 x 6 = 30, 7 x 8 = 56. The sum of the four sets is exactly 100. It coincides with the "hundreds" of the title "Hong Kong." It is an amazing reflection of the point of the poem. The phoenix of poems also refers to people with real talent, while birds mean people who have no knowledge but are high. So this seemingly plain and simple poem became a metaphor for sarcasm about the status quo in the official arena. The return of the birds to the nest is a blessing and a symbol of peace in the world. It is also to be hoped that the children and grandchildren who leave the country will be able to retain the traditional Chinese attitude, not to forget their native lands, and that they will be left behind. No matter spring, fall or summer, no matter what snow and snow, the home is the last home of life. It says here, "It may be that tomorrow, when the weary bird returns to the west of the sun, you will be on your way back..."