I also want to meet a warm person to accompany hand in hand for a lifetime

Sandrine 2022-04-24 07:01:24

The final ending of the giant cure is really from the moment Ma Ma passed away. The tears could not stop. I cried until the end. The most touching thing is that the two people have been noisy and noisy for a lifetime, but they still deeply love each other and accompany each other in war, poverty and plight Failed to separate the two milkman Earnest worked at his post for thirty or forty years and finally retired and loved his job. The milkman went from a dilapidated tricycle to a shiny red car. He cared about politics. He started from scratch and made money slowly. Accumulate slowly, decorate your house little by little, watch the furniture in your home increase, finally switch on electricity, install a telephone and a TV, and finally buy a car and do manual work to avoid war. It is a typical example of starting from scratch and creating a better life together. It also reflects the taste of an era. Changes Ethel is also married to Earnest. Since then, they have worked diligently to manage their shared life. The two of them take care of each other and love each other. It's really touching. Opposite her bed, but she doesn't even know Earnest, maybe it's a common Alzheimer's disease. Later, in the family who had experienced hardships but laughed and laughed, only Earnest was left. He was so lonely. When the black cat accompanies him, he will still put tableware for two people, but now the chair opposite him is no longer in tears, but the warmth and warmth of healing a family is very touching. I also want to meet a warm person to accompany hand in hand live a lifetime

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Extended Reading

Ethel & Ernest quotes

  • Ethel Briggs: I could have married a deep-sea diver.

    Ernest Briggs: Well, why didn't ya?

    Ethel Briggs: Because I didn't love him.

  • [first lines]

    Raymond Briggs: [voice over] There was nothing extraordinary about my Mum and Dad, nothing dramatic, no divorce or anything, but they were my parents and I wanted to remember them by doing a picture book. It's a bit odd really, having a book about my parents up there in the best seller list among all the football heroes and cookbooks. They'd be proud of that, I suppose, or rather probably embarrassed too. I'd imagine they'd say, "It wasn't like that," or, "How can you talk about that?" Well, I have, and this is their story.