US

Bulah 2022-10-10 19:31:05

Think about it. Would all this happen without the kids' two-month summer camp?
What does all this mean? The couple has no time to separate? Couples have no distance to consider problems in their marriage?

At the end of the film, the wife says there's more good than bad and you don't just give up! And it's not for the sake of the children.
This is the good ending, in this story, the good ending brought by the idle period of the summer camp.

It's the words of my wife's last confession. These two sentences are the true meaning of marriage:
And I'll try to relax, let's face it, anybody is going to have traits that get on your nerves, I mean, why shouldn't it be your forget traits.

That girl in the pin helmet is still here 'bee boo bee boo' I didn't even know she existed until you and I'm afraid if you leave I may never see her again, even though I said at times you beat her out of me.

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Extended Reading

The Story of Us quotes

  • Rachel: It's not an affair. Theresa never had sex with him, they just kissed.

    Katie Jordan: A kiss is an affair.

    Liza: You think so?

    Katie Jordan: Absolutely. Once you establish anything truly intimate with another person, even talking, it has to affect the person you're supposed to be the most intimate with.

    Liza: But the crazy thing is that Theresa could fuck her husband. She just couldn't kiss him, I mean really kiss him.

    Rachel: It's not so crazy. There have been times when I'm so angry at Stan that I could fuck him but I don't want that count on anyone near me.

    Katie Jordan: A kiss can be so much more intimate than sex.

    Liza: Yeah. Why is that?

    Rachel: Because fucking means "yeah, yeah, I love you" but a kiss, a kiss means "I like you".

  • Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: You're writing a book about your grandmother?

    Ben: Yeah, she was an extraordinary woman.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: Oh, um, I'm sure she was. Did she fuck a president?

    Ben: No.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: No. Did she discover uranium?

    Ben: No.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: A cure for cancer?

    Ben: No.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: Nothing like that?

    Ben: No.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: Why, why would anybody wanna read a book about her?

    Ben: 'Cause, Dave, she was four-foot-nine, she emigrated from Europe when she was a little girl, she worked in a sweatshop making buttonholes fourteen hours a day, and yet somehow managed to raise five kids and stay married to the same man for fifty-seven years. I'm telling you, Dave, this is gonna be the greatest love story ever told.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: Let me explain something to you, not as your agent, this is as a friend. C'mere.

    [Dave leads Ben over to his office window]

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: C'mere. Alright, you see all these people out here, huh? You see they're getting into buildings, they're, they're driving in cars, they're crossing the street there, they're walking around. Every single one of these people is going to die someday, and they all know it, which is why they tend to regard the time that they have on this planet as precious. Now, there, there are a lot of things that take up a lot of that time, even if they don't enjoy it. They have to go to work, they have to get dressed, they have to wait in lines, they have to clean yards, they gotta get batteries, they have to, they have to visit the eye doctors, they're doing all these things. Now, add that to the time they spend sleeping, and eating, and, and, and, and washing up, and voting, and, and, and, and buying gifts for people they don't even like, and you can see why they're so choosy about how they spend whatever leisure time they do have. And you can understand why, unless she went down on somebody really interesting, why they're not going to waste their valuable time reading a book about your fucking grandmother.

    Ben: So, if I'm reading you right, you don't like the idea.

    Dave, Ben's Literary Agent: It's not that.