What ordinary people consider dangerous: a neighborhood rampant with crime, full of robbery, clandestine theft, and assault.
No, to the superiors, that's just daily routine. Real danger is being on the front line, caught in a hail of bullets, with planes bombing overhead and artillery fire roaring in the distance.
So, in the eyes of a superior's secretary, what is considered dangerous?
Lacking dozens of bodyguards, the entire street not being cleared, a certain manhole cover not being welded shut, someone trespassing in the area, or even a car honking near the hotel where one sleeps at night, disturbing the quality of sleep.
That is danger, and all these issues need to be addressed.
Then, can Meng Yu be considered a superior of the Immortal Sect?
So, are the dangers Meng Yu might encounter in the eyes of the Immortal Sect the same as those he feels himself?
Meng Yu made up his mind to go to the Central Plains because he truly didn't want to look down on himself.