The first feeling is that what it wants to express is a little full. It talks about people relying on virtual worlds and material possessions to fill the spiritual void, talking about the crisis of personal privacy in the era of big data, and talking about minimalism. Most people do have a wake-up call, but I personally have a different view. I also spend on unnecessary things, but not excessively. The satisfaction of material desires makes me happy, so since I can obtain happiness through material things and fill the void in my heart, why not satisfy myself within a moderate range? I don't mean to completely rely on material things and ignore the filling of the spiritual world, but on the "main road" that enriches the spiritual world, why bother to care about the consequences of the satisfaction of material desires. In other words, I think it is not worthwhile or necessary to spend energy to restrain unnecessary consumption. In me, the spirit has always been placed before the material, but spiritual satisfaction is not easy. It is a long-term, life-long pursuit that cannot be truly achieved by walking forever on the road. In the face of spiritual gratification, short-lived, easily accessible material gratification is to me a relaxation, a "break", and the effort to cut back on this is putting the cart before the horse. In addition, the male protagonist abandons material things to gain feelings, but how much more reliable are feelings than materials?
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