Junior high school preparatory class~

Remington 2022-11-21 23:25:28

While watching the movie, I have been thinking about my junior high school~ Although the cultural background is different, many details of growing up are the same.
Greg~Like most children, he is a little smart, always thinking about doing something that others admire, bullying the good and fearing the evil~ Looking forward to growing up and full of childishness. Looking back now, I was like that back then. At that time, I was always a little rebellious, I didn’t want to listen to adults all the time, I always wanted to be the focus of the class, I always liked to bully my friends~ Always do something Stupid things, shameful things~ At that time, I made some small mistakes and experienced some small setbacks, and I seemed to want to find a hole to get in right away~ I don’t know when I started to care about other people’s thoughts. Really be yourself.
Hehe, what could be more important than the friends who walked together at the most hesitant time? At that time, everyone had nothing, only youth, only presumptuous ~ laughing and cursing, anything is possible.
Perhaps the Diary of a Wimpy Kid is too real, too bland, but this can evoke the resonance of the memory. . .
Is that the diary of a little kid?

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Extended Reading

Diary of a Wimpy Kid quotes

  • Greg Heffley: [smugly] You're way too smart for me Patty Ferrell...

  • Greg Heffley: We'll hide here for the rest of class because I'm not playing that game! It's not fair. He's got all the neanderthals on the same team. It's barbaric!

    Angie Steadman: It's completely barbaric. This place is an intellectual wasteland. But it's nice to meet a person more interested in his mind than his body.

    Rowley Jefferson: You girls get to jump rope. What are you doing hiding?

    Angie Steadman: Avoiding the pain. It all starts in middle school, you know? You're not a kid anymore. The coddling has stopped. Kids are now separated by intelligence. The weak are picked on and girls that you've known since kindergarten won't even talk to you anymore.

    Greg Heffley: Well, it sounds like you've got it all figured out so go back to your book.

    [laughs]

    Angie Steadman: This place is a glorified holding pen. It's where adults put you as you make that awkward transition between child and teenager so they don't even have to look at you.

    [pauses]

    Angie Steadman: Hi. I'm Angie.

    Greg Heffley: [Pulls Rowley's hand away] Great Story! We're going to go now.

    Rowley Jefferson: Why? This is a good spot.

    Angie Steadman: It's a perfect spot. I survived all of the sixth grade here and I would enjoy some like-minded company to get me through the seventh.

    Greg Heffley: Is that the whistle? I think I hear the whistle.

    [laughs]

    Greg Heffley: We need to go!