Faceless Eyes Divine Driving Time My Lives Skin Mask Vanilla Sky (Open your eyes) Face-changing Others is hell, the harshness of looks, the sin of love. Loss of self, inner self-confidence, painful and bumpy heart. The world is so big, who cares if you have a face or not. His mask, like a newborn, looks in the mirror like a newborn, observes his appearance, and studies what his face is. He couldn't be sure that the one in front of the mirror was himself. He took pictures over and over again, laughed and cried, and used various behaviors to determine his existence. As if in the mirror image, he lost forever the one he once was, or the stranger. The mask gradually merges with the real, regardless of each other. It is more likely to say that the id, the ego, the superego, he gradually let the ego lose his morality, and let the id occupy his dominant position (no one knows who he is, no one has moral constraints on him), He may be revealing his truest id, or, as Jacques Lacan said, without the existence of the id, he is born to be influenced by others. Love is a sin, and when we love others, others are also a sin. And we as others in the eyes of others are more of a sin. There is never an escape from seeing and being seen.
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