Does childhood have to be happy?

Sylvester 2022-03-24 09:01:49

About equality between men and women, about father-daughter love, and about the pursuit of dreams, this movie gave us a big bowl of delicious chicken soup, but what gave me more thinking was the following two questions: 1. Childhood must be happy Is it right? 2. Is it necessarily wrong for a father to let his children realize their dreams instead of him? In the film, as the father of a retired wrestler, he has always had a dream in his heart, that is, to fly the Indian flag on the international arena, win gold medals and win glory for the country. To this end, he forced and forced his two daughters to practice wrestling. The two daughters had a "revolutionary resistance", but later, when they attended a friend's wedding, they saw the helpless life of traditional Indian women without the autonomy of marriage. If you have the right to choose life in society, you must have a dream and make yourself good enough. As a result, the father's dream was transformed into the dream of the two daughters. In the end, they are fathers and realize their dreams for themselves. In their childhood, the two daughters did not wear good-looking clothes, eat good food, and have good-looking hair like other girls, and received high-intensity devil training amid the prejudice and ridicule of the villagers. But was their unhappy childhood worthless? Are their lives dark and painful? The beauty of human nature that they displayed in the process of chasing their dreams has already made them stand out from the secular society and the mediocre mortals. The so-called respect for children's nature and let children have a carefree childhood promoted by those fashionable educational concepts must be "political correctness" in the field of education? And the reason for such propaganda, is it to let the people at the bottom be content with the status quo and be content? Is it because they are afraid that the people at the bottom will change their fate through unremitting and tenacious struggle and become a member of the society of the upper class, thus threatening the vested interests of the vested interests of the upper class? I know it must be a conspiracy theory. above.

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Extended Reading

Dangal quotes

  • Mahavir's Brother: Our daughters will never win a gold without conditions.

    Mahavir Singh Phogat: Medalists do not grow on trees. You have to nurture them. With love, with hard work, with passion.

  • Mahavir Singh Phogat: Every thing that destructs their attention from wrestling, I'll destruct that damn.