Serena, who has a hangover every Thanksgiving, finally spends the holiday with a sober attitude this year. And Dan, the boy who dragged her out of her life of intoxication, was actually dating the goddess who was shy when she said more than one word last year. A good relationship is always mutually successful.
In contrast, Blair is not so lucky. Last year's holiday she had a daddy, a best friend, a childhood sweetheart boyfriend, and this year's Thanksgiving she only had an authoritarian mother. Happiness makes people intoxicated, but pain makes people grow. In a predicament, Blair has instead reached a reconciliation between her and the world. Her mother's tyranny may just be to cover up her weakness, and her father's departure is an irreversible fact.
Also struggling is Blair's ex-boyfriend Nate. After the aristocratic veil was lifted, the face was devastated, and behind the self-indulgent father, was it not the invisible pressure from the mother's side. The two parents turned life into a dead end, but instead promoted his growth. He can no longer just be the teenager celebrating Thanksgiving at his girlfriend's house, and has more things that he needs to take on.
It takes many words to cover up a lie, but only a few words to break it. That's why Rufue's dining table is so awkward. But for many things, honesty will make a turnaround.
"If life is good, it is wonderful, and if it is bad, it is experience." Therefore, we should still be grateful.
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