What do you mean two stops?

"Stop twice" is an idiom, which comes from China's ancient novel Water Margin. It means that a person stops suddenly in the process of walking, neither advancing nor retreating, as if he were trapped in the same place and unable to move.

The story background of this idiom is a story in Water Margin. In this story, there is a hero named Li Kui JY. When he was besieged by the enemy, he tried his best to kill him, but he got into trouble in the battle. While killing the enemy, his legs were trapped by the enemy's trap and could not advance or retreat, and they were in a stalemate.

Therefore, the idiom "kill two stops" is used to describe a person who is in trouble, stuck, deadlocked and unable to get rid of it.

This idiom can also be used to mean that under certain circumstances, a person is caught in an unavoidable dilemma or contradiction and cannot make further actions or decisions.