. --(In the adult world, in the real society, whether it's love or career, if you give a lot and end up in vain, no one appreciates you or rewards you, it's not fair for you to yell! Why!. Hehe, Fairness is just our wishful thinking. The world we live in is inherently unfair, and it is because it is too unfair, so there is so-called fairness, to try to balance this impossible so-called fairness, law, religion, heaven and hell, Socialism, even science, is a spiritual airbag made by human beings.)
Whether you are grateful or not, to love you in my way is both selfless and selfish.
Story 1 The
king sacrificed his life to the queen for her wish, and the queen stepped over the king's body on the shore without a trace of guilt.
The same is the sacrifice, the queen turns into a dragon and dies, she is equally selfless to her son.
I do, I just want to love you like this, whether you accept it or not, even if you don't appreciate it. Well, one-sided love is extremely selfless,
but the mother's love for the prince is so suffocating that he runs away in various ways. Maybe the king did the same to the queen. It is wishful thinking, and it is extremely selfish
. On the other hand, the wizard is talking about the equivalent exchange from time to time. You can pay attention to observe. In the scene on the beach, the corpses of the king and the water monster both lay there, and then two lives were born. The two brothers are really (king + water monster)/2 equivalent exchange, thus forming the heart of the king and the water monster to redeem the queen, The queen redeems the prince, and the prince is the causal balance between the king and the water monster.
It seems to be comforting the audience that the injustice is only superficial. Macroscopically, this world has cause and effect, just like the karma of Buddhism. When it comes to love, 1 hurts 2, 2 hurts 3 3 hurts 4 4. . . .
In the final analysis, it is to adjust the mentality. Regardless of career or love, you must be prepared for no return. And don't think that giving "apples" to your lover, relatives, or company is a contribution, maybe the other party only eats "oranges"
Story 2
At the beginning, the two sisters promised to play fingers to the king in a week, so the sister took care of her fingers and opened the gauze, but her fingers were more disgusting than before. Get the jade body of "Girl". From the sister wishful thinking that the king will accept her when she wakes up, to the sister wishful thinking that she will not despise her after she becomes beautiful, to finally the sister wishful thinking to believe her sister's words and go to someone to peel her skin. Sometimes our wishful thinking = self-deception.
Story Three
This court story of the flea, the barbarian, is the most obscure expression of "control" of the three. Control is out of fear of losing, yes, the result is also wishful thinking. There are many people who think that the king neglects his daughter, and that her daughter is not as good as a flea. Actually not. The king's morbid feeding of fleas is a metaphor for his fear of his daughter losing his grip. The daughter grows up and wants to fly out of his palm, "What if my little princess loses my control?" He wished that the princess will always be a doll that will never grow up (explains why it is a Babyface to play the princess), and Now she's getting married, under the protection of another man instead of him. So this psychological black hole is replaced by a little flea, which is his parasite, so small, forever (in theory). But the flea also grew up and finally left him. This is the king's fear, and the external force is unstoppable and loses control. Because it has the cloak of a fairy tale, it is reasonable to let the metaphor appear no matter how absurd it is. But the king still didn't want to let his daughter leave him, so there was "a blind date problem that no one can answer correctly". In the end eat the fruit.
In the story, the sacrifice of the savage to the princess and the sacrifice of the circus to the princess can be said to be tragic and ulterior, but the result is still a cup. It seems to tell us again that giving and benefit are not the same thing in the world of adults.
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