The situation is too complicated, we might as well start with a scheming bitch. It is no exaggeration to say that this Jill is a scheming bitch. For a middle-aged and successful uncle like Ed, her routine can be described as skilled: First, show curiosity and awe about his work.
Appropriately showing weakness arouses his desire for protection to satisfy his self-esteem as a man.
Note that the word will is used here, which not only implies that the now uncomfortable Chu Chu is pitiful, but also has a kind of thoughtfulness that is unwilling to trouble people. Then she went wild and hot: she used a knife as a mirror to apply bright red lipstick. But instead of looking in the mirror, she looked at Ed with a charming little look.
At the same time she is very understanding. Jill listened carefully to Ed's ideals, as if she was really a little woman who admired her lover.
Ed betrayed her and sounded the alarm, and when he saw him again, Jill returned the palm-printed gloves to him and said: We are together. Seeing this, even though I can't feel the beauty of this old woman with the same charm, I have to admit that she not only can flirt, but her feelings for Ed, who is going through a mid-life crisis and hates bland marriage and work, have Very in-depth understanding.
More on that later.
For the kind Sally, Jill also captured her heart: pretending to be a test-tube baby, successfully aroused Sally's memories and resonance; selling insurance, aroused Sally's infinite love and melancholy for her husband, and then fell down Several times she sympathizes and hurts herself - when she sleeps on Ed's couch, Sally almost sees her as her best friend.
Do you think there is something wrong with this QC bitch? Yes, I don't believe she is a simple Jill whose life is running out just to get "berries" to continue her life. If it were that simple, she should maintain her relationship with Ed's underground lover and let him steal one for her from time to time, because fleeing with a box of berries will always run out one day. And she had no reason to contact Sally. Her words caused Sally's helplessness and sentimentality about the failure of the marriage, and Su's sharp words deepened Sally's unease: Is he an honest person? Is it in his heart? Does she really trust him? So Jill knows both Ed and Sally, and what she's doing is actually two provocations. While making Ed more annoying Sally, while making Sally more heartbroken. Why did she do this? Then jump out of this unreal derailment. The garbage-sucking workers have this saying: nothing is forever.
Jill claims that the insurance she sells is actually a way of tearing apart the relationship between Ed and her husband: when two people are disappointed with each other, let each other die and get a lot of money to go to the so-called El Dorado, the ideal country, how can it be? Isn't it both getting out of a failed marriage and being reborn?
Ed was the first to betray the relationship, but Sally was the first to betray. This is really nothing is forever.
So Jill destroys their marital relationship just to go on a long trip? I have one, ah, not two very bold guesses: ①Jill may not be Jill.
but a real person. Jill's identity has an excuse to approach Ed, and Jill's pathos can deceive the Ed couple's sympathy. This episode isn't about what ordinary people would do if they got berries, but apparently Jill is obsessed with berries.
This obsession can almost be classified as the same kind of mania as the search for El Dorado.
So I think the ordinary person Jill has the power of berries for ordinary people, so she has to trick berries to continue her spirit and intelligence, because she has to sail for a long time at sea to reach her ideal land. ②The government or a certain organization behind Jill can see from Su that people who are genetically grafted and hybridized are regarded as tools without human rights. So Jill may be a tool of an organization: because they know that the shelf life of food is getting shorter and shorter, and the continent will eventually be engulfed. least noticeable. In any case, Jill's insurance business is a (human) insurance business. It is not her intention to be chased by the coastline on a continent that will eventually disappear. Her intention is to make a new beginning.
Really nothing is forever. ——I am the dividing line between Formo Chai and Shen Si Chai———— In the world of E04, whether it is Ed's house or the path they go to work, there is a sense of the future. A sense of the future, or a sense of the end of the world.
What is that, making it more and more difficult for humans to survive with more and more advanced technology and more and more "controlling everything". Maybe it's because it's too developed. Men who are seduced, women who are confused about marriage, couples who have no children, these are common in today's less developed world. But today's people do not have the technology to manage the "soul", nor the opportunity to think of themselves as creators.
Not admitting that you are ordinary can make people stop or even regress. They start to manage human life and humanity, but they don't have the ability.
So the balloon of the new power has become bigger but has boundaries, while selfish desires think it has no boundaries. So, Ed, bang. But is there really nothing that lasts forever? I captured this picture: Jill was walking on the coast, fascinated by the little seedlings that Sally planted. I think it was a rare moment of sincerity for her. If as I thought, she was a used tool, as short-lived as a pea sprout. At this time, she may be thinking about finding and exploring, using this temporary life and limited energy, or even an unrecognized, human identity, to make a difference. Maybe this is the forever of mankind.
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