Everyone gets old one day. It would be great if they could be treated well like Sister Tao in the movie "Sister Tao", and enjoy their old age happily and without regret.
Meizi, the heroine of "Poetry", can't enjoy it: she is
old, and her life is still poor;
she still has to work busy;
she suffers from Alzheimer's disease;
her daughter is not around, she is raising her grandson
;
Qian rescued the grandson and was forced to sell his body; the
grandson was eventually taken away by the police (should be the last report of the old man)
. . . . . .
In her twilight years, under great pressure, Miko pursues kindness and beauty firmly:
she likes to wear beautiful clothes;
she likes to sing karaoke;
she tries to learn to write poetry, but does not like vulgar lines;
she likes flowers and trees, likes nature;
she could feel the pain of the victim girl's mother, and was the only one among the parents of the boys who went to church to pay homage to the victim girl;
she once gave her grandson a chance, and she put the girl's portrait in front of him, hoping to Aroused his active repentance;
she painfully reported her grandson and chose spiritual repentance.
"How are you there? Is it still so beautiful? Is the sunset still glowing red? Are the birds still singing in the woods? Can you receive the letter I didn't send? Can I convey the confession I dare not confess? Time will tell. Will it pass? Will the rose wither? Now is the time to say goodbye, like the wind that comes and goes, like a shadow that promises never to be fulfilled until the end."
"Apricot fell to the ground, willing to be trampled on for the sake of rebirth." Female The protagonist, like Kyoko, was slammed to the ground by life, willing to be trampled on by his body, for the rebirth of goodness and beauty.
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