all

Lizzie 2022-03-23 09:02:52

When I was three years old, I felt that I was capable enough to help my aunt look at the counter. I felt that my aunt could walk away and do other things. I helped her sell those cosmetics. But I never understood why she didn't trust me to sell it there myself.

When I was four years old, I hated going to kindergarten. I told my mother that I hated kindergarten. I didn't let me sleep when I wanted to sleep, and I had to let me sleep when I didn't want to.

I learned to ride a bike on my own when I was five years old. I stubbornly landed on both feet, put one foot on the pedal, and once I stepped on it, the other foot immediately came up. Deviated. Come again. repeat. The bike was a miracle until the wheels drove me straight.

When I was six years old, I was very envious of elementary school students. Hope you are one of them.

When I was seven years old, I was as timid as a mouse. I remember walking a long way to the toilet on the first day of school with my legs between my legs.

When I was eight years old, I first discovered that I liked a boy who had transferred and left. And told a lot of friends about this in the west playground.

When I was nine years old, I always envied the fifth grade students, because one morning when they came to school, they could be seen queuing up to go to the spring outing with their schoolbags on their backs.

When I was ten years old I participated in several speech contests. I don't know which teacher found out that he has a good voice and can speak. The film was recorded on the TV station of the school activity in the Xijiao Zoo, and my father asked for the film. It's a silent picture for a few minutes.

When I was eleven years old, I entered the fifth grade, but found that the school had canceled the fifth grade spring outing because of the sixth grade spring outing. I began to envy the middle school students, and it seemed that there were always some middle school students' programs on TV.

When I was twelve years old, the sixth grade was finally able to go on a spring outing. The brigade counselor insisted that I dub a dance competition in a school, and crying swollen eyes in the grade office didn't help. She made an empty promise that she would take you students to Tiananmen Square to watch the flag-raising in the future.

When I was thirteen years old, I realized that there can be so many smart people and such good minds. I got 78 marks on the math test. I came home and cried.

When I was fourteen, I realized that I could no longer score as high as seventy-eight in mathematics.

When I was fifteen, I had a crush on a handsome guy in the sports team. At that time, he was rowing on the windowsill, and he was seventeen years old. He is seventeen. I think seventeen is such an old age. How out of reach.

My best friend left me when I was sixteen. Only correspondence is allowed on a monthly basis. But the best days are inevitably gone. I didn't know it at the time, but since then, there will be no more tired days together. There will never be. Why is the world different from what we imagined? Why are there so many things that I can't do anything about at all?

When I was seventeen, the rainy season did not have too much haze, and the days of the liberal arts class became more and more happier. The legendary characters are all gathered in front of them. Holding the same desk every day for class.

When I was eighteen, I was sitting in front of my writing desk crying just before graduation. I doubt that such wonderful days will never be seen again. In fact, it really never happened again.

When I was nineteen, I knew what love at first sight meant, what it meant being unable to sleep at night, what it meant being lovesickness and disaster, and what it meant to be heartbroken.

When I was 20, I couldn't remember anything.

When I was twenty-one years old, I ate and fell asleep.

At the age of twenty-two, I started to experience a different life. At the end of the meal, I just wanted to drink the polenta in the cafeteria.

At the age of twenty-three, I knew that the edges and corners that I thought were worn away were all over my head. There are also many thorns that will hurt yourself one day if you don't want to pull them out.

When I was 24 years old, I set foot on foreign land for the first time and saw the foreign moon really felt big and round. I thought that I could be a simple self by jumping out of my own circle, but I found that it was the same where there were people. Grandma left me.

When I was twenty-five years old, I realized that my grandmother had left me, and I cried until I growled. This year is exhausted and speechless. People can only see half of the world, the other half behind them, who will help me see?

When I was twenty-six I was addicted to travel. The more you go, the more you will find that it is the same everywhere. An Rakuland without troubles exists only in people's imaginations.

When I was 27 years old, I saw the movie "Yi Yi". I found out that I am getting old. I no longer envy people older than myself.

Sometimes I wonder what would happen if I did it all over again. In fact, life really does not need to start over.

View more about Yi Yi: A One and a Two... reviews

Extended Reading
  • Trenton 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    We don't have to live all over again, because even then, it's the same result.

  • Idell 2022-03-25 09:01:16

    lonely one after another

Yi Yi: A One and a Two... quotes

  • Yang-Yang: I'm sorry, Grandma. It wasn't that I didn't want to talk to you. I think all the stuff I could tell you... You must already know. Otherwise, you wouldn't always tell me to 'Listen!' They all say you've gone away. But you didn't tell me where you went. I guess it's someplace you think I should know. But, Grandma, I know so little. Do you know what I want to do when I grow up? I want to tell people things they don't know. Show them stuff they haven't seen. It'll be so much fun. Perhaps one day... I'll find out where you've gone. If I do, can I tell everyone, and bring them to visit you? Grandma, I miss you. Especially when I see my newborn cousin who still doesn't have a name. He reminds me that you always said you felt old. I want to tell him that I feel I am old, too.

  • Yang-Yang: Daddy, you can't see what I see and I can't see what you see. So how can I know what you see?

    N.J.: Good question. I never thought of that. That's why we need a camera. Do you want one to play with?

    Yang-Yang: Daddy, can we only know half of the truth?

    N.J.: What? I don't get it

    Yang-Yang: I can only see what's in front, not what's behind. So I can only know half of the truth, right?