What I see more is actually people's excessive interpretation of Dylan's songs and people. People label you all kinds of things, impose their own interpretations of your actions and songs, and brag and brag about it as if you wrote it yourself. And you can only reluctantly accept. Reminds me of the middle school, when we questioned to our language teacher that reading comprehension writer's thoughts and answers were very different, the teacher shouted "appreciation and writing are two different things". Literary works of art have their own feelings of course, but imposing their own feelings on the author will always cause all kinds of discomfort. And when you change, the things you like change, the things you want to do change, the zealots feel like they've been betrayed. But people change, don't they? Why can't people accept this fact and change their stereotypes? Once again, I felt the contradiction between the boundaries of music and people. The reporters interviewed include devout believers, post-it notes fooled by their own questions, nts who let themselves stick to themselves knowing that people don’t like stickers, and even thorns who haven’t even listened to songs just to complete their work. . How incredible.
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