If life can be pure

Max 2022-04-23 07:01:30

This is a story about a dream, a girl dreams of reaching the best age of her life - 30 years old. 30, Flirty and Thriving.. A woman is thirty, when she is a mature and frivolous age, known as the most beautiful moment for a woman. The signals given in the magazines are so tempting to an adolescent child.

When the girl abandoned the purest friendship and lived the glitzy life she hoped for, the age of thirteen to thirty was as short as a dream, so short that all memories stayed before the age of thirteen. The 30-year-old wakes up like a dream, and doesn't even recognize himself. The thirteen-year-old's dream of being mature and frivolous at the age of thirteen is nothing more than that. What we want in our life is not expensive clothes and jewelry, lustful love, and the face of a powerful fashion editor. What we want is the warmth of family affection, pure first love and friendship. When we get everything we ever hoped for, we suddenly realize that the best things are also gone. Those innocent years are youth songs that are often hummed in the mouth, but I can't remember the lyrics and the tune before I know it.

Now I am far away from Thirteen, and Thirty is also far away. Those initial dreams are still pure as new. This movie and these words are just to remind me not to succumb to the trend, not to be trapped in reality, to follow my own firm path, and to be an ordinary but hard pearl under the sea, not Those flashy froth on the top of the waves.

13 going on 30 is the most beautiful adolescence irreplaceable.
(ps. The movie I watched a long time ago, and the stuff was written at that time.)

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Extended Reading

13 Going on 30 quotes

  • Pete Hansen: [Pete suddenly grabs her, and starts kissing her] What's wrong, Pookie?

    Jenna: [disgusted] Pookie? Uh... Pukie! You're married!

  • Lucy: [at a big party] Speaking of disasters, what is she doing here?

    Jenna: Who?

    Lucy: Sparkle's editor-in-chief, Trish Sackett. Twelve o'clock and headed our way.

    Trish Sackett: [smug] Hi, girls. Our J. Lo issue is selling like hotcakes. How's yours doing?

    Lucy: [sarcastic] My God, are things so bad you had to come to our party to eat free food? Put some crab in your purse for later.

    Trish Sackett: You might want to keep some of that biting wit for your magazine. Or you could change the name "Poise" to something more appropriate, like Poison, or Pitiful, whatever's more Pathetic.

    Jenna: You know what? You are rude, and mean, and sloppy, and frizzy -- and I don't like you at all.