Nothing

Madilyn 2022-01-21 08:03:38

Knowing that the title should have a deep meaning, but the interpretation of D is limited by the amount of words. Because I was sensible too early, I wanted to be responsible for everything, but I didn’t know what kind of additional consequences would be caused by the so-called undertaking. From small to large, "sensible" has been told time and time again from different people. They don't understand what my smile is, and there is no pride in it. When he returned to New York, he looked up to her as he did when he was thirteen, hoping to get a hint of guidance about the future. She is one of his reliance, for no reason, but the only "not sensible" of a "sensible" child-confide in recklessly. When I look at my wife after talking to me, I will always unconsciously feel that she is like my first love. I wonder if I oversubstituted it in my interpretation or how? Maybe some things are unforgettable, irrelevant to right or wrong. That episode changed my trajectory like to Tommy, but I am not full of regret about it. Everything is an arrangement of fate. When you end with a comedy, you will naturally recall his beginning, and you have to remember those sad pasts again. What the hell is this? Is it mourning with music? Even after reading it in tears, I still like it very much, thank you Tommy for giving it. This makes me feel more uncomfortable than detachment.

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Extended Reading

House of D quotes

  • Pappass: Places change like people change.

  • [first lines]

    Tom Warshaw: [narrating] My name is Tom Warshaw. I'm an American artist living in Paris. I've lived here for 30 years with a secret nobody knows. My son, Odell, is turning 13 today. And for his birthday, I'm gonna tell him my secret.

    Tom Warshaw: I'm gonna tell him, "You know how in old movies when the bad guys want to break into a safe? There's this one guy, the safecracker, who puts his ear up to the lock and listens as he dials the combination, listening for what they call in English, the tumblers. Because when the number is right, there's a click, and he knows with the click, he's breaking in. Well, in a man's life, there's a tumbler too. And I think that number is 13, when there's a click and a boy breaks into manhood. And the safe of his life open up and Shazam, there are all the riches of what a man can hope for and hope to be."

    Tom Warshaw: What I want to say to my son is, the opposite thing happened for me when I turned 13. Instead of opening, the safe locked shut on me. Because of certain things that happened, I couldn't hear the tumblers anymore. Now that he's turning 13, I'm hearing the tumblers again. Maybe it's like we're becoming men together.