This is based on a true story that happened in Japan.
Hachiko is an Akita dog that wandered around the train station and was taken in by a university professor. Since then, Hachiko will pick up and drop off his master at the train station every day. The professor's Japanese friend Ken once said something to the professor: Akita dogs will choose their own owners, and they will never pick up the ball unless something important is going to happen. One day, Hachiko caught the ball, he felt it, and sure enough, the professor died of a heart attack during the class that day. But Hachiko didn't know the news and was waiting for the master's return.
This wait is ten years. Ten years may be just a short period of life for human beings, ten years may be short or long for us, ten years will happen to us a lot, and in ten years, as time goes by It will dilute our attachment to people, things and things, we will slowly let go, or even forget... It is hard to imagine that we will wait ten years for one person, no matter whether it is spring, summer, autumn or winter, whether it is wind, frost, rain or snow, silently. waiting. However, it is such an ordinary dog that deduces this true and touching story. But for a dog, that's a lifetime. Hachiko waits every day with hope, even if hope fails again and again. However, in Hachiko's eyes, there is no disappointment, all it has to do is wait, whether the master will come or not, it has to wait, because this is its loyalty to the master and the silent love for the master.
When the hero's wife came back one day, she found Hachiko still there, watching the direction of the master's return. She cried, and so did I. How could anyone else be moved by such warmth? When Hachiko knew that his time was short, he still insisted and lay down silently in the place waiting for his master. Maybe he would have such a dream: when he woke up, the master would tell him, go, we are going home.
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