Mia's relationship with her mother is only fragile by blood, so Connor's careful attraction to her is fatal:
when they first met, he broke into the kitchen generously, half-naked, and intimately soaked Made three cups of tea, skillfully adding sugar and milk. When he was about to leave, he was playing wild with Taylor, and she met him.
When she was drunk in her mother's room, he carried her to the room and helped her take off her shoes and pants. Glancing at the man through her arm, she began to accept him.
When the family went out, he reached out and encouraged her to go down the river to catch fish. Her foot was hurt, and he bent over to bandage her and let her jump on his back, and she began to trust him.
When she took the initiative to go to his work place, she told him her plans and dreams that she didn't want to tell her mother. She started to depend on him for the man who supported her both materially and spiritually.
So, she couldn't help falling into the trap of love:
when she saw the half-naked man again through the camera, when he leaned over to let her smell cologne, when he slapped her for a joke At that time, she began to love him.
When she saw him and her mother making out late at night, she slammed the door twice, and she was full of jealousy and began to want to possess him.
She began to test him when she brought her so-called "hot boyfriend" to meet him and told him that she was not a child.
When she heard her mother call him to call him "the real one", her eyes were full of impossibility, and she began to fear losing him.
When they finally took the opportunity to be together under irrational circumstances, she finally had him.
When he left without saying goodbye and she worked so hard to find him, she was ready to face the problem with him, and she began to care about him.
When she learned that he had a family, the anger and betrayal made her want to vent, and she began to resent him.
When he slapped her hard with reality, it woke up her innocence and shattered her true love, and she decided to cut him off.
Compared with her peers, Mia's unusual calm and rationality prevented me from commenting on her ethically. Maybe she knew very well her mother's attitude towards relationships, and maybe she felt that she was more worthy of this man. So in front of true love, she can't help it. Connor, I'm at a loss as to why Mia's mother is attracted to her - an irresponsible, bad-tempered, foul-mouthed, and low-key woman. But maybe it's this warm man who, even if he does the worst things, we don't accuse him aggressively, but instead say "Mia, this is life."
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