The three arrows lesson: A Japanese Warring States Daimyo was educating his three sons. He held three arrows in his hand and told his sons that one arrow is easy to break, two arrows are difficult to break, and three arrows break continuously, which symbolizes the unity of his sons. It is strength. Brothers must not fight among themselves and allow the enemy to take advantage of it. In Japanese history, this story is called the Three Arrows Lesson, which means using three arrows to educate children's family motto. FHD, Rich in details, masterpiece, realistic style, canon 5D4
mutated hands and fingers, deformed, bad anatomy, disfigured, poorly drawn face, mutated, extra limb, ugly, poorly drawn hands, missing limb, floating limbs, disconnected limbs, malformed hands, out of focus, long neck, long body
