@Peng
These are some of them(got them on twitter)
Sigh, Tushan Jing is really wonderful. Moreover, his goodness never boasts of itself; he always feels that he hasn't done enough...
He speaks gently and caringly to the maidservants.
He patiently teaches the child obtained through deceitful means.
He visits everyone at Rejuvenation Hall every few years.
He goes out of his way to ease the worries of his close friend, Fenglong.
He understands the loyalty of the Chenrong army and provides them with supplies not merely as a transaction; he doesn't want to see loyal men in dire straits.
He respects XY’s choices. Even though the little fox spirit worries about XY choosing someone else, TSJ is willing to grant her freedom.
But he never thinks that what he does is extraordinary, nor has he ever planned to tell anyone. He just feels that this is what he should do, and among the few things he can do.
Supporting the Tushan clan, accompanying close friends, and protecting his beloved.
TSJ tries to take care of everything and everyone, yet he leaves himself out of consideration.
This is the sense of duty and great love engraved in his bones, but he is so accustomed to it that he doesn't think much of it... This is Tushan Jing.”
“He understands everyone. He understands his grandmother's hardship of losing her husband when she was young, losing her son in middle age, and struggling to support the Tu Shan clan. He understands Tu Shan Hou's suffering of being unfairly treated and rejected by other clan members as a child. He understands FFYY’s helplessness in being looked down upon by other clans and wanting to cling to the Tu Shan clan. He understands Feng Long's ambition to achieve great things. He understands XY’s lack of security and inner turmoil from experiencing constant separation and chaos since childhood. He even understands CX, who killed him for XY. But no one understands him. No one sees his pain of being shattered and reborn again and again. No one sees the white hair he grew after losing XY. No one sees his increasingly fragile heart in the later stages. How could your simple word "suitable" possibly summarize all this injustice?”