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关于我的青春物语这件事
Yun Ling Yu
Some anomalies do not come in the form of monsters or disasters. They are more like subtle deviations in daily life-- A crack that is getting longer quietly, a journey that is being slowed down, a feeling of excess. The story unfolds from the moment "I" started having insomnia. Not out of fear, but out of awareness. When the world still maintains a superficial normality, and only "I" realize that certain details are changing, abnormality is no longer a sudden accident, but becomes an existence that has been repeatedly confirmed. On the boundary between normal and abnormal, "I" met her - a being who seemed to have been accustomed to this kind of rift in the world. She doesn't guide or save, she just gives time for the choice to happen. Continuing means gradually losing the qualification to return to the original life; giving up means forgetting everything, including herself. This is a story about habits, choices and coexistence. When abnormalities no longer appear as threats and become part of daily life, can people return to "normal" without any cost? Or maybe the real boundary is not outside the world, but is completed quietly within?
Some anomalies do not come in the form of monsters or disasters. They are more like subtle deviations in daily life-- A crack that is getting longer quietly, a journey that is being slowed down, a feeling of excess. The story unfolds from the moment "I" started having insomnia. Not out of fear, but out of awareness. When the world still maintains a superficial normality, and only "I" realize that certain details are changing, abnormality is no longer a sudden accident, but becomes an existence that has been repeatedly confirmed. On the boundary between normal and abnormal, "I" met her - a being who seemed to have been accustomed to this kind of rift in the world. She doesn't guide or save, she just gives time for the choice to happen. Continuing means gradually losing the qualification to return to the original life; giving up means forgetting everything, including herself. This is a story about habits, choices and coexistence. When abnormalities no longer appear as threats and become part of daily life, can people return to "normal" without any cost? Or maybe the real boundary is not outside the world, but is completed quietly within?