I've always known that every second is being spent in 7 billion ways.
I lost sight of the fact that someone outside the operating room might be reading the seconds anxiously as the time passed.
I looked at the desk calendar, hoping that when these boring days pass quickly, someone may be looking at the desk calendar, and I don't want the separation in a few days to come so soon.
As I shut myself in the dark, holding my breath in frustration and disappointment, someone might have just put on a ring and announced to cheers that it was the best day of their lives.
I also know that I wanted cake, I wanted Transformers, I wanted an acceptance letter, I wanted an offer, I wanted her kiss... I always say this is what I want the most...and I want more .
So there's nothing great about this film, it just reminds me -- I knew it before -- that every second is being spent in seven billion ways.
But thanks for this film, it reminds me that I am trapped in what I want: there are still many things worth caring about and pursuing in this world. Some prayed to come home alive and some hoped to get out of bed. Someone crosses thousands of mountains and rivers, just to take a look at the intersection you pass by every day. Some people say that he was afraid of his wife getting cancer, and then he got it, and he was afraid of the cancer coming back, and then it came back, so now he has nothing to fear.
Remind me to go forward and experience those 7 billion per second.
View more about Life in a Day reviews