If before leaving this world, no one had a deep affection for each other with you, whether it was a human being or a dog, as long as it was a creature with emotions, then when you leave, can it really reduce what you love or what you love? The pain of life?
Tsangyang Gyatso has a love song that says: "First, it's better not to meet, so that you won't fall in love. Second, it's better not to know each other, so that you won't fall in love. Third, it's better not to accompany, so that you won't owe each other. Fourth, it is best not to cherish each other, so that they will not remember each other. Fifth, it is best not to love each other, so that they will not abandon each other. Sixth, it is best not to meet each other, so that they will not meet. Negative. The eighth is best not to promise each other, so that they will not continue. The ninth is best not to depend on each other, so that they will not cuddle. The tenth is best not to meet, so that they will not meet. But once they have met, they know each other, When we see how we don’t see each other, An De and the king will never see each other, so as not to teach life and death to think of love.”
If it refers not only to lovers, but to the whole life we face, it represents a typical psychology, “Refuse to borrow life, it is To avoid paying debts and dying.”
Numb yourself and avoid passionately investing in life and life precisely because of the fear of losing too much.
In the movie "Grand Central Station," the truck driver, when she heard Dora express her love to him, drove away while she was looking in the mirror and wiping off her lipstick.
"I don't like meeting by chance," he said.
He avoids the pain of the inevitable end of his journey by refusing to develop close relationships with new friends he has made along the journey, refusing to engage.
However, the less you have experienced a full life, the more you will feel that life is empty and meaningless.
From this point of view, the old man played by Hachiko and Richard Gere is happy.
Hachiko's waiting, when the professor's Japanese friend saw it, had almost used up his life.
It's been a long life, Hachiko. said the friend. My tears couldn't stop flowing.
View more about Hachi: A Dog's Tale reviews