We all grow up in panic

Margret 2022-12-25 10:43:04

This is also the key word of my comment. We all grow up in panic. The little kid is just a kid who hopes that his parents can love him wholeheartedly. The love for him is unique, so he does a series of things with his partners to stop the unwarranted things in his heart. idea.
I am unique, and the love I get should be the same. They are just a group of people who yearn for love and want their parents to pay more attention to them. They have not grown up yet, but they have the panic in their hearts. If parents have a younger brother, panic is true. If you don't, you will forget him, if you will abandon him, will you no longer love him.
The little boy is still very young, his world is mainly centered on the home, and the home is his world, so the love of the family, the love of the parents, is his world, but if the parents share the love with others, then he will The world will be broken, so he tried his best to save it with his own method, thus making a series of jokes, but we are deeply touched.
We have all been young, we have all been jealous of our parents for giving love to others, he is just the psychology of all of us. It's just the imprint of when we haven't grown up yet.

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Extended Reading

Diary of a Wimpy Kid quotes

  • Greg Heffley: [smugly] You're way too smart for me Patty Ferrell...

  • Greg Heffley: We'll hide here for the rest of class because I'm not playing that game! It's not fair. He's got all the neanderthals on the same team. It's barbaric!

    Angie Steadman: It's completely barbaric. This place is an intellectual wasteland. But it's nice to meet a person more interested in his mind than his body.

    Rowley Jefferson: You girls get to jump rope. What are you doing hiding?

    Angie Steadman: Avoiding the pain. It all starts in middle school, you know? You're not a kid anymore. The coddling has stopped. Kids are now separated by intelligence. The weak are picked on and girls that you've known since kindergarten won't even talk to you anymore.

    Greg Heffley: Well, it sounds like you've got it all figured out so go back to your book.

    [laughs]

    Angie Steadman: This place is a glorified holding pen. It's where adults put you as you make that awkward transition between child and teenager so they don't even have to look at you.

    [pauses]

    Angie Steadman: Hi. I'm Angie.

    Greg Heffley: [Pulls Rowley's hand away] Great Story! We're going to go now.

    Rowley Jefferson: Why? This is a good spot.

    Angie Steadman: It's a perfect spot. I survived all of the sixth grade here and I would enjoy some like-minded company to get me through the seventh.

    Greg Heffley: Is that the whistle? I think I hear the whistle.

    [laughs]

    Greg Heffley: We need to go!