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I Want You to Live a Happier Life Than Me
Modern Romance我要你过得比我幸福
Beautiful Orchid
Summary of the book: This story describes a relatively special emotional experience of secret love. The heroine Gao Keer is pure, kind, and devoted to feelings, but later she discovers that the object of her secret love is a man with a family. The male protagonist, the "number one coach", also likes each other in his heart. Although the two of them have turbulent feelings, they only interact spiritually with each other, and they both bury this feeling deeply in their hearts. . . Unlike other extramarital affairs, in today's social context, young boys are not mature enough, and most of the mature men that girls admire are already married. How should these "leftover women" in the city make a choice? Choosing true love will hurt the other half of the other person's family; choosing not to love will hurt her own feelings, so the heroine is wandering in this entanglement and heartache. . . . . . In the end, I chose to "let go" and hoped that the other party and his wife would live happily. It's not that I don't want to love anymore, but I love the other person more, "I want you to live a happier life than me." Gao Keer's "big love" should indeed be worthy of learning and emulating by young people in modern society.
Summary of the book: This story describes a relatively special emotional experience of secret love. The heroine Gao Keer is pure, kind, and devoted to feelings, but later she discovers that the object of her secret love is a man with a family. The male protagonist, the "number one coach", also likes each other in his heart. Although the two of them have turbulent feelings, they only interact spiritually with each other, and they both bury this feeling deeply in their hearts. . . Unlike other extramarital affairs, in today's social context, young boys are not mature enough, and most of the mature men that girls admire are already married. How should these "leftover women" in the city make a choice? Choosing true love will hurt the other half of the other person's family; choosing not to love will hurt her own feelings, so the heroine is wandering in this entanglement and heartache. . . . . . In the end, I chose to "let go" and hoped that the other party and his wife would live happily. It's not that I don't want to love anymore, but I love the other person more, "I want you to live a happier life than me." Gao Keer's "big love" should indeed be worthy of learning and emulating by young people in modern society.