Hope to remember to look back when you are thirty

Ewald 2022-10-30 03:38:45

In fact, what touched me most about this film at this time was the worry of the parents when the little boy was sick and hospitalized. Mainly because of the sudden hospitalization last summer. It was originally just a minor problem, but after checking and checking, it almost didn't come out. After returning from the hospital, I went to school, and I didn't have time to communicate with my parents. This semester, they are always straining my body. I always don't understand, it's just a small appendicitis, why is it so nervous. When they came back later, they said they were scared to death when they were hospitalized. I also do not understand a little bit, a little fuss. After reading it, I understand. In the eyes of parents, no matter how small a disease may be, it may be a thunderbolt to them.

I also hope that I can look back when I am in my 30s. It seems that my concept is young people now. It’s good to work hard. I don’t need to worry about the family, so I don’t usually call my parents when I go to school. . It seems that the importance of parents is put under study or work. But this film has a sense of alertness to me, as the lines say: "There is only one family."

Every time the male protagonist quarrels with his wife, he says that he works hard for the family, but isn't the male protagonist's behavior putting the cart before the horse. Although the rhythm is getting faster and faster, I hope that I remember to live a good life and live a good life with the people I love. Not the kind of mechanical life, the kind of emotional life.

Finally, a family of three little babies is so cute 1

View more about A Defintely Maybe reviews

Extended Reading

A Defintely Maybe quotes

  • Lou Wheeler: All families got problems but you only got one.

  • [first lines]

    Dane Jensen: [narrating] I am a headhunter and I am the purest form of salesman alive. I sell the American dream. I make money out of thin air, smoke, whole cloth. I stand on the shoulders of giants, the hardest of hardened salesmen. Tin men, Bible salesmen, slum realtors. We're a wolf pack of commissioned phone jockeys working 70 hours a week without a net. You hit, you hit big. You blank, and the repo man's tailgating the minivan at the grocery store. This job is a desk, a phone, a chair, and your ass.