How similar these scenes are without adding a totalitarian background.
From birth, we rarely have the opportunity to touch the world independently and are protected as minors until the age of 18. Adults have always educated us with the so-called highest standards, and we believe it. I don't know how many "laughs" caused by doing what I thought was the right action, and now I think about it, it is as absurd as the family in the movie learning to bark. Even if you are exposed to more and more things as you grow older, how many conclusions are drawn with real thinking, and a little development of a conventional theory seems to cause a revolution. In the film, the eldest sister did not forget to break her teeth when she fled, because her parents said that her feet could not step on the ground outside, so she chose how long to stay in your father's car. The father ran out of the courtyard in a hurry. The son and the little daughter watched the scene indifferently, as if admitting that the father had privileges that they did not have. How much of our indifference is inherently irrational, and even finding it difficult.
But only doubt can do nothing.
The eldest sister suspected that what her parents told her was not the real world. She escaped and died in her father's car in the end, or was locked at home forever. Even if we want to resist, without real skills, we can only drown in living despair, with faint ripples swaying in a pool of stagnant water.
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