There seems to be nothing in this line that should resonate with me. At least from the perspective of now, my life seems to be far from bottoming out. But after seeing this sentence, I suddenly felt that the problem is not whether my life will encounter a trough, but whether I have the courage to admit that my life has indeed bottomed out. Up is undoubtedly a positive and ideal state, but do I allow myself to really go nowhere to go?
People will never know how much energy they have without forcing themselves. Perhaps when I saw this line, I was impressed by whether the "safe" life that never puts myself in danger is the trajectory I have followed and yearned for for many years.
One of the plots that impressed the movie was that Annie complained to Megan that life was always joking with her, opened a cake shop but closed down, lost her job and couldn't pay the rent, the car broke down and there was no money to repair, and her best friend was also Get angry. Megan didn't comfort her, but angrily threw Annie on the sofa, squeezed her hard, pushed her, and said to her, "I am a life, I will torture you severely, you'd better learn how to fight. "
Watching Annie being tortured by Megan on the sofa, there was an inexplicable pleasure in her heart. Seeing Annie finally drew out her hands to launch a counterattack to Megan, she also applauded in her heart. But life will not be Meghan, only a few short blows, not the punch of Annie's counterattack, can easily be defeated. Until the end of the film, Annie hadn't actually changed anything drastically. Perhaps getting back together with Lilian, and restarting with the police made her more or less regained confidence, but if the next blow comes, will she return to who she was at the beginning?
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