The hardest thing is always to persevere

Sven 2022-04-21 09:02:02

I really didn't expect my dad and my mom to be attracted to the movies I watched... all thanks to the amazing performances of all the actors in the movie, and the three of us enjoyed a great, if a little too long, movie night. Cough, cough, I still have to talk about the duration. If I watched the uncensored version, I would definitely not be able to get up and go to the toilet...
After India exposed their "rape culture" on a large scale in the country, I had an extreme fear of this country. . And I got all kinds of "legends" about India's "dirty, messy" around, and I really didn't have any interest in Indian movies. I haven't even watched the famous "Three Silly Troubles in Bollywood" before. But today, more than ten days have passed since the release, and I still can't hold back. I was attracted to watch it by the praise, and urged to watch it by the controversy. As a result, this film is really not comparable to some of our films released in the same period.
Feminism, sports, family affection, these elements make up this somewhat long story, starting from my father's wrestling dream. On the way, I kept laughing at the pictures of my two daughters starting to exercise... Not laughing at them, but laughing at myself. When we were young, weren't we also urged by our parents to do things with a sad face? I always remember that my mother told me to wash the dishes, I was so angry that I smashed a bowl and pretended to be slippery hahahaha. When you grow up and face similar scenes from memory again, there is always a smile. But there are always too many temptations and choices in this world, people who are good to you and people who are not good to you. The two little sisters made it through, what about me? I have no idea.
The hardest thing in the world is perseverance. When you can't persevere, those who persevere will always laugh at you. Do you choose to survive or persevere? Once I was caught in the irrational "blindness" of feminism. Maybe it makes sense to "shout out", but in the end I went in another direction: use your grades to prove that you are a woman like a man, instead of clamoring for me to be weak and reasonable. Someone has to use strength to prove that women's rights are human rights, not the moral resistance of the weak against the strong. Dad's two daughters in the movie did it, can you?
In philosophy, we talk about people, but in life, when we talk about people, we always have to distinguish between men and women. I also found that in reality, or in the reality I recognize, it is women who oppress women. A man will praise you when he sees your strength. And a woman, when she talks about you, starts from being critical of your appearance, to how old you are when you marry your husband. As if the lipstick shade was more important than everything else. But what about the facts? There are always some girls who don't like makeup and don't like dressing up, they are required. Maybe you would say that these are requested by men. No, when a person chooses his partner, it may be natural to choose the beautiful one, but it is more about the running-in of each other. The social evaluation is that your strength and achievements are piled up so that others are in awe of you. The only thing that is unfair to women is probably those young and beautiful girls who become rich wives by virtue of their beauty. In order to affirm themselves, they strive to shape the social evaluation of women into a woman who must be beautiful, eat bird's nest maintenance, and wear XX brand, can live better. These people, for their own benefit, set other women against each other, and the glory of those hard-working women has been dimmed in the long river of history.
How to change it? It is that more and more women choose to be vicissitudes rather than nihilistic beauty. I believe that as long as there are more and more people, women will not be the role of the history teacher in the movie carrying the basket with emotion, but the girls in the movie who won gold medals for their father and the country!

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Extended Reading

Dangal quotes

  • Mahavir's Brother: Our daughters will never win a gold without conditions.

    Mahavir Singh Phogat: Medalists do not grow on trees. You have to nurture them. With love, with hard work, with passion.

  • Mahavir Singh Phogat: Every thing that destructs their attention from wrestling, I'll destruct that damn.