What was I thinking about Jackson telling Maeve it was Otis who revealed her preferences?

Dorcas 2022-09-21 07:23:22

Before this scene appeared, Maeve was mentioned many times as a feminist in the play. The specific plot included that Maeve had read books written by many feminist writers, and he resolutely chose to control his own body in the face of the propaganda of anti-abortion people at the door of the abortion clinic. Sovereignty, but the feminst behavior that struck me the most was the cause of the rift in the relationship between Maeve and Otis.

When Jackson happily told Maeve about what Otis told him about the music and books she liked, Otis had begun to look uneasy. He had always respected Maeve and reminded Jackson because of Jackson's unintentional objectification of Maeve, and now he knew him. Maeve's behavior annoys Maeve, and has foreseen that their relationship is about to fall apart. When I saw Jackson say how much Otis knew about Maeve, the fantasy of the next plot in my mind, in addition to Maeve's anger, there was another possibility that Maeve found that Otis knew him very well, and was moved by this silent caring, And decided to open up with Otis. Of course, this is a kind of positive and outrageous self-moving plot that I was poisoned by East Asian TV dramas and substituted into Sex Eduaction. When Maeve got angry in the play, I knew that I was very narrow-minded. Men objectified women, women objectified women, and women objectified themselves. We are often wary of the harm that the word "materialization" brings to us, but we unknowingly use a ruler to measure ourselves. Learn from Maeve and Otis, love yourself!

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