Their husbands can’t understand, let alone other people? All other people who have contact with them can only be summed up in two words: passers-by. They love each other, so be it, it's already very good, just like this for a lifetime. But it turned out that their sons also internalized their love into a part of themselves during the time they were together. They fell in love with each other's son, prolonging this unspeakable love. is it right to do so? Isn't it right? They thought: Honestly, we just feel happy.
Yes, as long as you can spend your entire life with someone who makes you feel happy, then nothing else matters.
Ian roared to his favorite person, Roz, who is also his mother’s best friend, and said, "The most wrong person is you!" Unbearable. The four of them would have been the best cooperation, OK? ! Why does his favorite person want to separate them abruptly! ? Is it just because that stupid Tom did stupid things? ! ! !
In the end, it turned out that Tom couldn't leave her either-lovely Lil, and what he silently endured was always the quiet Lil who left first. It turned out that they couldn't leave each other at all.
Is she wrong? Roz probably hated himself to death. Free people are the happiest and the closest to God, so they have to be cast aside by others of their kind. Their daughter-in-law could not bear the love between them. It's hard for me not to think that this is a human problem. Falling in love-it is a very private thing in itself, it is something that can only be shared between sensitive people, and the daughter-in-law is not such a person, no.
there is none left. That's all.
Ian, Roz, Lil, Tom, the four are still in love with each other like that, in a way that others cannot understand, deeply in love, yet so natural and so peaceful.
It was the sea that contained them, and they fell in love with the sea.
Maybe occasionally there will be an intersection with the secular. But only those who have true freedom and truly know how to love can share their happiness.
I believe they will be happy. lifetime.
View more about Adore reviews