Little Frank ran away from home because he could not accept the fact that his parents were divorced, and forced his livelihood to embark on the road of making fake checks and cheating money. His father has an allusion that two mice fell into the bucket of butter. The first one quickly gave up and was drowned, and the second one kept running and running until the cream was stirred into butter and ran away. come out. His father wanted to be the second mouse. This is his philosophy of survival. Frank looks like his dad. He never admits defeat. There are many examples of his dad's influence on him. For example, he picked those young and beautiful tellers in the bank and bribed them with necklaces. The first suit he rented was his dad. Obtained by this method.
I have read such a passage that maybe a person’s growth trajectory is really indelible. What I want to say is that you will never escape your childhood. The place where you grew up is like a mole, which grows somewhere in your body. The hidden corner is a lifelong brand.
All Frank did was to hope that his parents would get back together. He was 17 years old, and he was just a child. He thought it was more comfortable to live in a lie. He fantasizes that the lies that bring him wealth are also gracious that what brings him is the reconciliation of his parents. Time and time again, when he saw his father, he always wanted to use his "remarkable" results to get his father back to regain his mother's favor. He didn't want to face it, and no one told him, "It's not your fault."
Watching "Mind Catcher" two days ago, it was also about a gifted child, because as an orphan, he was abused in his foster parents' childhood and turned a blind eye to his talents and even shut down to protect himself until one day , The psychology teacher slowly approached him and told him, "It's not your fault."
Human beings have no innate concepts, and all human knowledge comes from experience. How much influence a person's childhood has on his life is more or less reflected in everyone. People who have the same experience are more likely to develop feelings of sympathy and see advantages in the other person. Like Carl, the policeman in "Getting Out of the Law" and the psychology professor Shane in "The Mind Catcher", the patience and tolerance of the two children may be because of the two children, but what they see is their own shadow.
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