In each reincarnation, some of the previous fragments can always be made up completely. Some of the front details, such as the "sorry" that the hostess didn't take her child with her friends at the beginning, the room number that appeared halfway, some details or places that were puzzled at the time, all pave the way for the back. At the end of the whole, there was a feeling of piece by piece, finally pieced together.
A futile struggle made by a soul who does not want to admit that she has died, she wants to go against the laws of nature to restore the lost life, restore the lost love, and make up for the harm she once brought to her son. And all this is destined that she will fall into the purgatory created by her own heart, an endless cycle. Jess actually has no choice, because desperate maternal love is an eternal catastrophe. The pain of falling into endless reincarnation.
A topic that can never escape, in a certain time and space, I met the other me, and then I killed her, and then I fell into the reincarnation, unable to get out, and kept repeating.
View more about Triangle reviews