The discussion here is mainly about the very strange wife and husband in the play when they want to have a baby for the first time.
The husband emphasized that neither he nor his wife had any physical problems, but the child was still born.
The wife emphasized that the last two pregnancies and stillbirths were "in here" in this house, which means that they had been here before, lived, and had children.
There is no need to mention the health of the two here. It is straightforward to say that one of the problems does not affect their wish to have a baby. What is even more strange is that the wife emphasized that the last two pregnancies were in this house. . . This means that they have been here before, but the male protagonist has acted like he has come for the first time from the beginning. . .
So let's look at this with a little suspense. Why do the children of two healthy people die twice? Is this related to the setting of the script to go out? If the child conceived by the heroine is a creation, then she cannot go out unless the creator dies. The creator is obviously the male lead and the female lead. The male lead seems to have come to this house for the first time. What if the male lead is the female lead’s creation? The fetus is equivalent to the creation of a creation, and it will die after leaving the door of the room. The male protagonist is also a creation, so the world was created by the female protagonist or someone at the beginning. There is no problem with the male protagonist walking in the created world as a creation, but Their children are creatures of creation but cannot leave the room.
After listening to the phone, the hostess was very sad and shocked. Perhaps what made her so emotional was not only the survival of the child of the creation, but also the two fetuses she had killed when she walked out of the room before.
The hostess knew that she could not conceive or give birth to a child with the creator husband or the creator child outside the house, so she was very horrified to see the pregnancy in the ending. She knew it meant she was still in the room. . .
I don’t know if you still remember the two older brothers who traveled back to the dead fetus in the "Butterfly Effect". . .
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