why a name

Heath 2022-03-22 09:02:25

Just like the title, Boy A, a symbol, a symbolic existence that is common enough to be forgotten, but is forever labeled as a sin. It seems that the people around them want to find a support, so that they can feel that they can shoot more accurately and feel at ease when facing a target. They didn't give Boy A a chance. In the end, the reality is still like a dumping, with the sin of nature pressing down on "human nature". A community mentor who seeks fulfillment in his own experiment is helpless in the face of his unmotivated son; and the kid who smiles sincerely at him when he receives his sneakers gives him a hug at the beginning of the story , at the end of the story, or his own life, gave him another love. How desolate he is, he is humble, he is sincere, he sincerely hopes to be accepted by the people around him, he regrets the past, and returns to the old days in countless nights, his soul experiences countless whippings and tortures, and he eats it unintentionally. Angry for the "Angel Movie", he feels guilty for his impulsive violence, and he feels guilty for his well-intentioned deceit. He, as told to good friends, doesn't tell them the truth, but it doesn't mean cheating. In fact, from the beginning of his life, he was a pure and driven existence. His attachment to Philips is also a manifestation of instinct to seek refuge. In the eyes of his child, it was an adult majesty that kept him from being bullied, from a school and a family that made him feel so lost and helpless. Philips was his godfather, and in a sense, their experiences had something in common, but Philips' strength allowed him to see the sadness under his head and the self-salvation above him. Maybe it's self-deception, maybe it's numbness, but every time he looks up, he sees sunshine without shadows.
"Are names all that important? Why does everyone need a name?" "Because that's what the world is like." Jack, gave him a new name, but didn't bring him new life. When he sat down the rails to the end of his life, he seemed to have come to a heavenly world. Because people here have no names, no symbols, some just exist. A well-meaning woman reminds him that the journey is over, because in her eyes he is a boy asleep on a train, and she even worries for a moment that he is a life that has passed. A little boy smiled and kicked the ball and ran past him, because in his eyes, he was just a passer-by wandering along the coastline, a strange existence that did not need to be far away. Evil, however, is the reading of his past and the indictment of his present by those who seek justice. Everyone who cared about Jack disappeared in an instant, and everyone who was on guard against Eric was avoiding his calls for help. He felt hopeless, but he understood the cruelty of these people, and he sincerely thanked them for helping him, even if it was for a real but non-existent self. "It's like, like a deception." When he saw "Jack" on the gift Michelle gave, when he heard "Jack" in his ear, there were probably many, many times, Eric wanted to face it your own past and try to get others to accept you as you are. But -
no but, so he came to the end, telling the dazzling "Michelle" in the sun at the end that his love would remain the same, because he "never imagined that he could still speak love and be loved. ". He opened an envelope and it was the little girl, the little girl he saved, who used her color to paint the most touching self-the self that he wanted others to see, the most ordinary angel , a most common hero.

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Boy A quotes

  • Michelle: [showing her breasts posing for Jack's photograph] What?

    Jack Burridge: [laughing] You're fucking nuts. Carry on. Keep going! Keep going! Keep going!

  • Michelle: [about Jack's local hero news in the paper] Hey hero! Look what I've got!

    Jack Burridge: [embarrassed] Horrible, horrible.