I once thought that mothers in Europe and the United States are the top three. They are still beautiful with a few babies. They can occasionally drink coffee and chat with friends, especially when I see some Chinese who have given birth to two or three children. Mom, if there is no one to help take care of the child, you will already look exhausted and overwhelmed by life. I wonder if Chinese mothers have invested too much energy in their children, as if they have pinned their entire lives on It is too time-consuming and labor-intensive for children, or the Chinese way of raising children. Only after watching this movie did I realize how one-sided I was. I took the life presented by the foreign movies and TV series I had watched as their real daily life. All the love and hard work will be violent when the children make trouble without reason, and will be on the verge of collapse when the same housework is repeated every day without the help and understanding of the husband. . . When we were young, we imagined life too beautifully, as if we were so intolerant of others that we would definitely not live such a life of firewood, rice, oil, and salt that repeats every day. Even if we have children, we can still be in shape, look good, and live a life away from fireworks. Hip living. But reality will always pull us out of the bubble of fantasy. One day we have to learn to live in the life of firewood, rice, oil and salt, and learn to regain our love and passion for life in the monotonous days we once dismissed.
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