This movie was recommended by a friend, and she said it was a small fresh romance. Maybe it's because I'm not so small and fresh now, I'm even a little dark.
Jamie meets another Parkinson's family member at a mutual aid meeting, and the man persuades him to leave her and start a normal life. If asked to choose again, he would do it. Because the sick person will eventually lose her memory, and the beauty about her will also disappear. Instead, you should clean up her excrement that she can't take care of herself.
Seeing Jamie's thoughtful look and Maggie's overwhelmed look when he said he loved him, I think he must have made up his mind to leave her. Although he also took her to see various doctors.
I was thinking that if people could live backwards, or know how much time was left, they might be able to live more happily. For example, for a dying person, in addition to being good at her words, she should use the little time she has left to do what she is most willing to do, right? Instead of being "tangled" like I am now.
In the end, Jamie gave up on Chicago, and he chose to spend the rest of his life with Maggie, or rather, the rest of Maggie's life. Whether Maggie will have a medical miracle and be cured by Jamie, who is re-reading medicine, is beyond our consideration. The writers didn't want to discuss this, did they?
I don't know why, but the questions I read recently often remind me of the rest of my life, love and so on. Maybe I didn't realize it before. In fact, my daily idleness is overdrawing tomorrow, that is, wasting the rest of my life. And "love" runs through life. There are many kinds of love, some of which I may not have discovered. Maybe I won't even find it when it arrives, but that love existed after all.
As Jamie said at the end of the movie, I meet thousands of people every day, but none of them touch my heart. The rest of my life changed until I met you.
Everyone who has no clear goals for life and the future expects to meet that person, right? At that time, she can walk around with him without hesitation or stay in place. For all this, she doesn't have to do anything, just in the name of "love".
But, in my opinion, this is unscientific! If there is no independent personality and joys and sorrows, how can we intervene in the lives of others? Jamie fell in love with Maggie, not only because she was special but because she saw through him and made no demands on him. The premise is that Maggie understands herself. If she doesn't even understand herself, how can she love others.
Confused thoughts, more long-winded two sentences, don't mind.
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