If it came for the "name", I would probably be disappointed.
Although there are occasional exposures in the story, it is definitely not the point.
At the beginning of the story, Emma began to be "lewd." I have to say that the foreign "hotline" is quite powerful, and the staff is very dedicated. Of course, the phone bill is also very valuable.
So Emma covered it up at first, and finally exposed it completely in front of the phone bill.
The confusion of adolescence is common to anyone. Except, maybe Emma is a little bit more.
The school’s buddies, the seemingly indestructible friendship, fell apart because of a boy.
However, given that Emma had fantasies about too many characters, taking all men and women and all the young and old, when Emma began to say it, it was really unclear whether what Emma was saying was true.
Coupled with the boy's stubborn denial, it makes people think whether Emma is having a fantasy attack.
This incident, coupled with the antagonism of the best friends, caused an uproar in the school.
Emma was deeply affected, as if she was a victim of "school bullying".
During this puberty, when “seeing nothing is pleasing to the eye”, how did Emma deal with these troubles?
Perhaps there are too many social problems hidden behind this.
Adolescent children, thinking about growing up crazily, thinking that they understand all of the world, and urgently need to express their views, and more urgently need to brush up on a wave of existence in front of the world. This delicate and sensitive psychological state requires a channel. the process of. But too much neglect has led to a greater rebound in adolescent children.
The Emma in the story can't find an exit in this depressed environment.
But the problem always needs to be solved.
No one thought that the solution to the matter was so "clean".
In the eyes of "high school students", the troubles that are too great are not a problem in the eyes of "college students". After running away from home, Emma personally experienced the "university" life, and she suddenly became completely enlightened.
This may explain why there are too many "problem children" whose parents can't say anything with great pains, but all the problems are solved by one sentence of their peers.
The parents in the story have the same confusion.
So, how exactly is the "barrier" between parents and children formed?
In this regard, parents have to compromise the environment step by step, which probably accounts for a big reason.
Parents who "grow up" learn to weigh the pros and cons, which is a strong confrontation with the child's desperate youth.
And the saddest thing is that when the child upholds the dismissal of "I dream, therefore I am", the parents have nothing to do.
The ending of the story is still very positive.
Emma "suddenly realized" that the confusion of adolescence was wiped out. From that moment on, she decided to be a positive girl.
And the boy who made her "confused" no longer confused her, even in the end, the boy finally did a thing that made Emma "suffer from the injustice" under "all eyes".
However, all of this is no longer important to Emma.
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