The very real Hannah didn't care about hopeless's helplessness in the end. She experienced too many things that could not be easily digested, and she told her that she couldn't talk about it. Unless someone is willing to get to the bottom of it, or she is willing to let herself go, how will she face it, how can she tell others that she is not what they think she is. Only good people feel that everything they do is wrong. In reality, there are a few people who died of suicide, and they prepared to leave 13 messages for so long before they died. There shouldn't be many. Most of them are desperate and don't care about anything. As Hannah said in the play, they just want to Stop everything. I wonder if she had any happy and moving emotions while she was making 13 recordings. In an avalanche, no snowflake is innocent. But every ordinary person is pitiful and miserable at the same time as having sins. Thinking of the warmth that these people may have brought, it may have been enough to resist the reason for resentment, except for the terrible encounter of Rape. I think the parents in the show are very open-minded, and they also express their love, it seems too harsh to ask people who have been through so much to think about it. Maybe she thought that her death would not let anything go wrong again, and would bring peace to those around her. How many people who died by suicide have a friend like Clay beside him who believes and loves without caring about anything, but unfortunately she has no chance to know that he is willing to accompany her in the end. In the whole play, it seems that the only person who is not worthy of sympathy is Bryce. He has a wealthy family and is daring and violent. He never cares about the feelings of the victims or even feels guilty. He is like a person who has no reason to be sad, but was chosen by God to have All things, regardless of people who hurt other souls. It's not fair. Everyone has bad experiences or lingering feelings of guilt, only Bryce has never been responsible and never has the slightest thought of being responsible, and the family is happy and prosperous. If this is what happens, it doesn't fair. What I didn't understand in the whole first season is that when everyone listened to the recording of Clay, they thought that he would shut up when he heard his own area and would not want to do anything anymore, but after listening to the recording of Clay's area, I don't think there is anything wrong with him at all. Clay can blame himself for not being by Hannah's side, causing the tragedy to happen, but no one else can, not even Hannah? Clay just wasn't helpful, and he offered, was rejected outright in anger. It is true that she made the decision for her own life, and it is true that no one is innocent, but I don't think people can feel that Clay killed her . Compared with other people involved, his speech and lack of company are simply worthless, and he seems to have a noble character. All in all, it's very exciting and heavy to watch, but American high schools, not just American high schools, do have a lot of unknown and strange things happening, maybe not like the blatant bully in the play, but the heart How many lives could have been created by the wounds left intentionally or unintentionally by those around them. Those who are confident and arrogant and can fully immerse themselves as kings in their own world, they cannot take other people's sorrows seriously, and may add to it, leaving those souls who don't know how to speak and cry because they feel the whole world. I'm sorry, I fought and struggled alone in the dark, until I failed, I didn't hear the world say sorry to her
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