The title of the film is Human Planet, and the narration is also from the perspective of God, but the ancient ways of survival recorded make people feel that no matter how smart humans are, they are still very small in front of nature. In the barrage, people always say, why is it so hard, is it worth it to exchange your life for money, why not do something else... I thought so at first, until I saw the episode of Gaoshan, in which one leaned into the volcano and picked it up Brimstone's breadwinner said, "Some people say that working here will shorten my life, but I have to do it to support my wife and children." It's so realistic, there's no choice. There are also those teenagers who only rely on plastic pipes and air compressors to dive tens of meters naked, those women and children who walk for three days to find a well, those tribal people who risk their lives to approach the lions just for a corbel...they Why not this why not that, how can there be so many whys. If they can choose, they also want to be able to get fish from the freezer, they also want to get water from the tap, and they also want to go to the supermarket to buy beef shank. However, there are always people who say that people's pain is that they have too many choices, and they can't bury their heads in hard work and move forward. So, is it more painful to have no choice, or more painful to have a choice. If today I can only choose to die and work hard to cure the disease, will it be less painful?
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