Is this another story of self-salvation? It seems like this, the heroine, like many old routines before, has gradually moved from the original decadence to an active life step by step. But in my opinion, this is more like a story of a child's growth. Just like most children on the first day of kindergarten, they have to cry, but it’s really painful. Just like Hope, peeling off one’s long-standing dependence is like peeling off the muscles from the bones, but you If you want to grow, you have to face this kind of pain. In the film, Hope became famous at a young age, but because of the incomparable satisfaction brought by being famous, he fell into disrepair after losing this sense of accomplishment when he encountered a foot injury. When she became famous, the cheers of her family let her know where she came from, and more importantly, she also had a family to shelter her from the wind and rain after her failure. It's like a child making a fuss. No matter how I mess around at home, no matter how I lose my temper, I know that someone is petting and loving me, so I can play with my temper like this. Just like my sister said: I’m at home, and I knew that even if I fell and had blood on my face, someone would come to help me clean it, and whoever cares about you outside. This feeling is exactly the feeling of home.
Everyone enjoys the feeling of home and family, but growing up means that you have to partly separate from this feeling. You have to understand, it's time for me to bring this feeling to others instead of just asking for it. This is the difference between adults and children. This process is undoubtedly painful, like a child weaning, but we have to go through this process sooner or later, and sooner or later we have to become the source of the feelings of other people's homes, which means that we have to take responsibility in a timely manner and know how to pay for others. As Hope said: Sometimes we are so immersed in our own problems that we hurt others. When she understood this, she herself completed the transformation from a child to an adult, from a taker to a giver.
We must not only understand where we came from, but also why we came from.
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