How much influence does one's childhood have on one's life?

Britney 2022-04-23 07:01:02

That day, someone coerced and enticed me and sent a message urging me to watch a liar, which happened to be fine, so I reluctantly agreed. From the very beginning of the film, I knew it was a good movie that I had seen a long time ago but never knew the name of.

Little Frank ran away from home because he couldn't accept the reality of his parents' divorce, and was forced to make a living by making fake checks to cheat money. His father had an allusion to two mice that fell into a bucket of butter, the first gave up quickly and drowned, and the second kept running and running until it churned the cream into butter and ran away come out. His father is going to be the second mouse, which is his philosophy of existence. Frank is very much like his father. He never admits defeat. There are many examples of him being influenced by his father. For example, he chose those young and beautiful tellers in the bank and bribed them with necklaces. The first suit he rented was his father. Got it this way.

After reading this passage, maybe a person's growth trajectory is really indelible. What I want to say is that you can never escape your childhood. The place where you grow is like a mole, which grows on a certain part of the body. A hidden corner is a lifelong imprint.

All Frank did was to hope that his parents would get back together. At 17, and since then, he was just a kid who thought he was much more comfortable living in a lie. The lie that he fantasized about brought him wealth was also the one that brought him the reconciliation of his parents. Time and time again, when he sees his father, he always wants to use his "brilliant" achievements to get his father to win back his mother's favor. Although he found out about his mother and his father's friends a long time ago, it's just that he has always He didn't want to face it, and no one told him, "It's not your fault."

I watched "Soul Hunter" two days ago. It is also about a gifted and righteous child. Because he was an orphan, he was abused by his adoptive parents in his childhood and turned a blind eye to his talent or even closed it to protect himself until one day. , the psychology teacher approached him slowly and told him, "It's not your fault".

Humans have no innate concepts, and all human knowledge comes from experience. How much influence a person's childhood has on his life, I think everyone is more or less reflected. People who have experienced the same are also more likely to have feelings of sympathy and see the advantages in each other. Like the policeman Carl in "How to Get Away with Murder" and the psychology professor Sean in "Good Will Hunting", the patience and tolerance in the face of the two children may be precisely because of the two children, what they see is their own shadow.

View more about Catch Me If You Can reviews

Extended Reading

Catch Me If You Can quotes

  • Frank Abagnale, Jr.: [donning a James Bond style suit and mimicking Sean Connery in the mirror] Hello, Pussy.

  • Assistant Director Marsh: [Carl and Mr. Marsh are visiting Frank in prison; Carl hopes to convince the FBI to let Frank out of prison] I'd like for you to take a look at something, tell me what you think.

    Frank Abagnale, Jr.: [Marsh hands Frank a fake check as Carl looks on] It's a fake.

    Assistant Director Marsh: How do you know? You haven't looked at it.

    Frank Abagnale, Jr.: There's no perforated edge, right? This check was hand-cut, not fed. The paper's double-bonded, much too heavy to be a bank check. Magnetic ink, it's raised against my fingers, not flat. This doesn't smell like MICR, it's some kind of, uh, some kind of drafting ink. The kind you get at a stationery store.

    Assistant Director Marsh: Frank, would you be interested in working for the FBI's Financial Crimes Unit?

    Frank Abagnale, Jr.: I've already got a job here, you know. I, uh, deliver the mail.

    Assistant Director Marsh: Frank, we have the power to take you out of prison. You'd be placed in the custody of the FBI where you'd serve out the remainder of your sentence as an employee of the Federal Government.

    Frank Abagnale, Jr.: Under whose custody?

    [Carl raises his hand]