Simple movie, ordinary moving

Kirk 2022-04-22 07:01:46

In fact, when watching movies, I have been thinking about a few questions from different angles: Did fathers give us this kind of education, support, and love for their daughters?

If I become a father in the future, can I be like the father in the movie?

After you grow up and start a family, do your parents feel the same as when a father lets his daughter fly alone in the end?

When the focus of our lives is entirely on the next generation, how do we face that our children will also fly away?

When I was about 30 years old, I left my hometown alone, and I didn't have a family, and I didn't have a stable relationship... Every time I went home on holidays, I had a deeper understanding of family love. I used to be able to stay at home and live a stable life, neither good nor bad. Maybe it was rebellious, and it was also unwilling to live. I resolutely came out and gave up the life I saw at the age of 50. Although there were some obstacles, my parents still chose to support. Some.

In the process of growing up in one's life, there are parents and relatives, classmates and friends, colleagues and lovers, and descendants. They accompany you at different stages, but they will not always be by your side. You have to go down bravely, and also Give them love without hesitation.

A lot of things have happened recently, and my thoughts are very confusing.

But it's a really good movie

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Extended Reading

Fly Away Home quotes

  • [watching Amy lead the geese around]

    Thomas Alden: It's amazing, isn't it, how they, uh, follow her around like that?

    DNR Officer: Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's, uh, called imprinting. The first living thing a goose sees when it's born, it automatically assume is its mother.

    Thomas Alden: Huh.

    DNR Officer: They'll follow her anywhere.

  • Thomas Alden: GET OFF OF MY LAND!