I think I'm more of a mediocrity
Think about the decisions you make now, every step you take, and whether you can reconcile with your future self.
Fortunately, I've grown to the point where I don't care so much about whether other people can reconcile with me.
But just imagine that one day I will be able to talk to myself. The things that I am so sure about now, even if I am not sure, I have to force myself to be sure. It is absolutely right to feel that I have had a good time today, that I am happy and that I am satisfied. Can I agree with you in the future? .
Young Jenny was firm and determined, not to marry or to have children, and getting an A was the best thing that happened that day.
In the future, Jenny cleaned up all the imprints she left, and even the evidence that questioned her lost her imprint.
Selective amnesia is probably the best way to redeem yourself. Forget all your unforgivable past. Use your non-existence to meet your new self. Probably spend his whole life exploring right and wrong, suitable or unsuitable, and it will be fruitless. Being able to face oneself calmly is already a great thing, and what you say about being willing to take on all the choices you make is just a rhetoric for yourself when you are blind and brave.
Jenny said she was in a relationship at the time, she said I was just a kid. She said Bill must have loved her. If you can live in peace after lying, what is more important?
Don't depend on anyone. When that person leaves, does your world collapse? Is it so important that Mrs G is someone who is worthy of reliance? Looking at the results at this time, even if he has relied on it psychologically, he still abandons it, right? It would be great if the people we chose to turn our back on and the people we chose to rely on disappeared and disappeared. If people can walk away with memories, if they are no longer burdened with memories that cannot be parted, how easy it will be for us to move forward.
Reconcile with yourself, or settle with yourself.
In "Love Letter", there is a scene in which the young girl Fujii Shu ran in the corridor, suddenly stopped in front of the camera, and then the camera zoomed out. It looks like a young Jenny holding an A in the hallway. When we look at ourselves again, no matter the distance, let's forgive ourselves once again.
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