Human factors make fate more smooth

Roel 2022-04-20 09:01:43

After the hero and heroine parted in the restaurant, because they forgot to take something, they met again when they went back to the restaurant to pick up something. I like this part.
The heroine is so stupid that everyone presses the elevator on the same floor, and the hero also presses 23, but when he approaches a naughty child, fate is really joking.
Sarah's fiancé Lass was very moved and surprised when she was waiting for Sarah at the hotel. He said, "I checked all the hotels in New York, starting with the longest!" When
the heroine's fiancee gave the hero the book as a wedding present, I was quite shocked, and felt that the fiancee was a tragic figure. Thought the male protagonist would hesitate, who would have thought that he would fly to the UK decisively.
It's just puzzled, he clearly saw the appearance of the woman in the room, obviously she was not the heroine, why did she look injured.
Fate is destined, and it also takes man-made efforts. If the male protagonist didn't check the bill number, didn't go back to the department store, didn't go to Sarah's roommate at the time, and didn't fly to the UK decisively, although these did not contribute any practical results to finding the heroine, he understood his heart better throughout the process. what. Even the heroine who believed in fate the most, went to New York, and then retrieved the banknotes with the contact information on it? Find the male lead's address and learn that he cancels the marriage. And then the reunion later.
Everything, even if there is an element of fate in it, still has to be pushed artificially.
Off topic, I like the male protagonist's friend. No matter how crazy he is, he is willing to accompany him to do what he wants to do. I am very envious of such a crazy friend, and I really want to have one. It reminds me of my friend, ahhh, we seem to be getting further and further.

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Serendipity quotes

  • Jonathan: Forget about privacy laws. You know what privacy laws do?

    Leasing Office Temp: No.

    Jonathan: They protect millionaires. You know who those millionaires are?

    Leasing Office Temp: Who?

    Jonathan: Tell him who they are. Tell him.

    Dean: Kids your age. Pimple-faced college drop outs who have made unhealthy sums of money forming internet companies that create no concrete products, provide no viable services, and still manage to generate profits for all of its lazy day-trading son-of-a bitch shareholders. Meanwhile, as a tortured member of the disenfranchised proletariat, you find some altruistic need to protect these digital plantation-owners?

    Jonathan: [reacting to Dean's speech] Wow!

    [to Temp]

    Jonathan: Come on.

  • Dean: You know the Greeks didn't write obituaries. They only asked one question after a man died: "Did he have passion?".