కొండ మీద నుంచి పడ్డవానికి గాయాలెన్ని

konda mida nunchi paddavaniki gayalenni

Translation

How many are the wounds of a man who has fallen from the top of a hill? A man inured to difficulties.

Meaning

This proverb is used to describe a situation where someone has already suffered a massive, catastrophic loss or failure, making smaller additional problems irrelevant or uncountable. It implies that when a person is already in a state of total ruin, minor setbacks no longer matter.

Related Phrases

Like rolling a boulder down a hill. It is easy to bowl down hill.

This expression is used to describe a task that, once started, progresses rapidly and uncontrollably with great force, or to describe the immense relief one feels after being unburdened by a heavy responsibility or a long-standing problem.

Will a man that swallows a mountain care for a Gôpuram?

This proverb is used to describe a person who has already accomplished a massive, difficult task or possesses immense power. For such a person, a much smaller problem or obstacle is insignificant. It is similar to the English idea of 'if someone can handle the big things, the small things are trivial.'

Gôpuram is the tower over the gate of a Hindu temple.

The Reddi has come, begin your song again. A person being continually asked to recommence his song or story on the arrival of every person of consequence.

This expression is used to describe a situation where someone is asked to restart a task or process from the very beginning just because a latecomer or an influential person has arrived, disregarding the progress already made. It highlights the frustration of unnecessary repetition and the inconvenience caused by late arrivals.

Like asking how many wounds a person has who fell from the top of a mountain.

This expression is used when someone has suffered a massive, total loss or a catastrophic failure, making it pointless or redundant to count the minor details of the damage. It suggests that when a disaster is all-encompassing, individual small losses no longer matter.

To him who has fallen into a river how many thoughts [ do not arise ? ] Said of one in utter despair.

This proverb refers to a person in a desperate or critical situation who starts thinking of numerous solutions or regrets all at once. It is used to describe how someone's mind races with many possibilities or worries only when they are already in deep trouble, rather than planning beforehand.

Like falling from the frying pan into the fire

This expression is used to describe a situation where someone tries to escape a difficult or bad situation, only to end up in an even worse one. It is equivalent to the English idiom 'out of the frying pan and into the fire.'

When one went up the hill for sweets, they lost the pudding they already had.

This proverb describes a situation where someone's greed or pursuit of more results in the loss of what they already possessed. It is used to caution against abandoning a sure thing in favor of an uncertain, potentially better gain, only to end up with nothing.

At a Sannyâsi's wedding every thing is on loan from his top-lock downwards.

This proverb is used to describe a situation where someone attempts to do something they are completely unprepared for, resulting in a total reliance on others for every single resource. Just as a monk (who has a shaved head) would need to borrow hair/a wig to look like a groom, some people try to execute projects with zero personal means.

Like rolling a boulder down from a hill

This expression is used to describe a task that, once started or triggered, happens with great speed, force, and ease without needing further effort. It is often used to describe someone speaking fluently and uncontrollably without a pause, or an event gaining unstoppable momentum.

Why count the injuries of a man who fell from a tree?

This proverb is used to describe a situation where someone is already in a state of utter ruin or massive loss, making smaller additional losses or specific details of the damage irrelevant. It suggests that when a catastrophic event occurs, worrying about minor consequences is pointless.