Many Hannah, the only Hannah

Herbert 2022-09-15 21:38:21

For the heroine Hannah, I am very familiar, so familiar as to watch a friend die, like watching a parallel space die by himself.

Hannahs are a handful of a handful of the desert world, basically they are cautiously hiding their drama and sensitivity from the outside world. Some people passed their lives smoothly, but she was relatively unlucky in the play. The chain reaction of a series of events caused her immature mind to be ruthlessly destroyed by the violence and cruelty that the outside world deserves.

Death has always been an amazing topic, especially the self-defeating of young people, as if it is always worth everyone to sigh and chew repeatedly. (For example, after the recent incident of Lin Yihan was fermented, she was surprised that she had some similarities with Hannah.) However, I think in the eyes of Hannah or Lin, death is already an old person who often meets each other, and it cannot be bypassed by thinking about self-existence. One of the core. The viewer pointed out the better choice they "should" have made, but we don't know that we are standing at the ends of life and death, and it is likely that each other will think that each other is the "unthinkable" person.

In addition, the spectator smiled and commented, "It seems that there are too few high school homework in the United States." "People who commit suicide are because they are not strong, and elimination is a clean gene that deserves to be eliminated." This attracted some appreciative approval and pursuit... on this point. I have to admit the greatness of the spectators-everything in their mouths has been dispelled from its original meaning, and any seriousness, tragedy, nobleness, and vigilance in their hands have been turned into jokes.

I don't think this drama is ridiculous at all. Nor will it judge that anyone who chooses to die in real life is "stupid" or even "deserving it." After all, even Camus would say that only suicide is the only serious philosophical proposition. I don't even think that death can be avoided by some "better option"-it seems as meaningless as Clay's crying regret in the show. For example, the seemingly chicken soup ending of the series tells us: Do the right thing! But this so-called correct choice is completely incalculable in actual operation and difficult to practice. What's more, when Clay was tasting chicken soup, Tyler had already picked up his gun and was about to kill all of them.

So maybe everyone should be less arrogant. The life we ​​face is not a problem with the best solution, the only answer that already exists is. We are now alive not because of our superiority, but just because we happen not to be the sad, lonely and particularly unlucky Hannah, because we are fortunate not to be a suffering person.

Empathy is even more non-existent. Courtney and Ryan, who were defined as exquisite egoists, were not really shaken by Hannah's complaint, but they were worried that college might be affected.

The schoolmaster Bryce probably wouldn't care much, at most he was angry for a while because of the trouble. After all, power is so beautiful. People who are at the top of the food chain are usually not very empathetic. They cannot be said to be evil in character (after all, they will carefully help friend Justin), just because of the smooth life experience under the aura of power. The morality to restrain the "inferior" is just a joke to him.

Perhaps it is the popcorn novel film and television aimed at teenagers that have created too many images of high school students who talk about love and save the world by the way. Sometimes we will have momentary memory blanks about the true face of the "high school" stage in human society. In fact, excess self-awareness and hormones, blindly unknown, distinct class and circle division are the main theme-even in the seemingly dreamy high school system of the US.

Hannah can never be a light person, she can never say easily: "The moral sense in human nature is an obligation, and we must give the soul a sense of beauty." She is the ordinary girl without superior conditions, natural Cynical caused her to always doubt the world she was in, just like a philosopher who was melancholy but not smart enough. She tried to write something, but she is not a shrewd Ryan, and no one can guide her to increase her "bargaining chips" in college-the ending is also obvious. According to this trend, it is Ryan that can enter high-quality education, not the real The gifted Hannah.

Ryan ruined Hannah's original dependence on literature and hopes of "quality education", cruelly making her discover that her hard work is no more than a stepping stone for exquisite egoists and reduced to the laughing stock of everyone. In the end, her experience of being raped bears witness to Bryce doing whatever he wants. In this class society, high school is just a microcosm, a rehearsal. This near-perfect "democracy" will eventually screen her out so "fairly" that Bryce and others will have the last laugh.

It was not the loneliness without peers, the sense of wrongful guilt that caused Hannah in the end, the helplessness of being given up by the loved ones, or even the pain and humiliation caused by rape. It was this series of events superimposed on her thoughtful but overwhelmed heart, which made her think that she had seen "the back of the world".

She believes that she has penetrated a certain cruel law-this is naturally also incomprehensible to bystanders, powerless, without any hope... We can't empathize with any adjective. The accident of losing banknotes pushed her, so Hannah gave herself the last choice-in fact, at that juncture, it was better to say that she wanted to verify her judgment again-she went to MR, the guardian of the rules in her eyes. Porter asked for help. In fact, she didn't want to ask for help, she was just looking for a final support point for her decision. She has never been blind, drama, but has been deliberate, hesitating between life and death.

We outsiders will never know what will happen in this delicate moment. This straw may be the loss of a whole bag of banknotes, or it may be a vigorous rescue...

However, she is the only unfortunate Hannah. No miracle happened. She has a self-consistent philosophy and logic of death, and suicide is her only choice.

Just like Lin Yihan's writing, there is no cure in Hannah's tapes, just one sentence after another self-testing of her death philosophy, exposing the sins she was unable to accuse when she was alive. Her final ceremony.

But when it comes to an avalanche, every snowflake will not know that it is responsible.

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Extended Reading

13 Reasons Why quotes

  • Hannah: I'm glad you're still listening. Having fun?

  • [repeated line]

    Hannah: Hey, Helmet.