Be a miserable man or be a happy pig

Filomena 2022-04-24 07:01:25

Because I also lived with my grandfather when I was a child, when I watched this movie, I had some resonance, and there were several touching places that I almost cried. I really envy Heidi, the innocent girl who grew up in the Alps, and I also envy the elegant and noble Clara, but I am neither Heidi nor Clara.

Middle Clara's grandmother told Heidi that people in the mountains believed that literacy was not important because they had never seen the outside world, and that literacy allowed Heidi to read storybooks. This period of education full of enlightenment made me start to think a little bit.

It still seems to be a commonplace question, to be a miserable person or to be a happy pig. I have always chosen to be a painful person, but I really don't like some condescending preaching. People in the mountains cannot see the outside world. It is a problem of social class solidification. The vested interests also come to accuse the victims. I don't know how to make progress.

Heidi's classmates only want to be a herdsman and a blacksmith, but Heidi wants to be a writer. If a person has a dream that she can't carry on her back, can she still be happy?

Besides, is it really that bad to be a girl herding sheep in the Alps? Value is originally given by people. It is not unreasonable to keep the world in front of you without knowing the outside world and get some simple happiness.

I myself didn’t hate enlightenment, but I really don’t like the author’s arrogant criticism of the people at the bottom who are ignorant of progress. I haven’t experienced other people’s lives, so why criticize? I deeply remember the words of Mr. Huang Yingying, whose morality did we kidnap whose life?

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