She Doesn't Know Why She Lives. - Vol. 2 Ch. 15 - The Great Aging

From time to time my parents or acquaintances remind me, that if I were doing some sport, I would have felt much better.
But me too, most often turn on to do it lately in the night (like now). If I'm extremely lucky, I even go half of weekend bicycling. But that's it. Earlier I could hold up to 2 weeks. Now, I guess, I quit after 3 days.
With my current situation like OL Izumi from previous chapter, at the end of day the only wish is do some chores and to turn off mind playing some computer games, leaving myself 4 hours of sleep. If you're drowsy, you can't perceive the reality effectively, and can't think about sad things of your life too much
 
This is pathetic. She's just comparing herself to people's highlight moments. The author is just appealing to our culture of envy and the sense that time passed us. 25-26 is still very young. I hope whoever reads this doesn't think "this is sooo me lol" but rather motivates themselves to get out of any rut they're in.
 
Can't say I never felt envy like that. But it does help to realize that most of the time, you're just better off not getting into comparisons like that. Though sometimes it does put things into perspective.

Also, Orimoto Motokazu --> Harimoto Tomokazu

Kinda interesting to use him as an example. When he was 15, he took the table tennis world by storm, beating a bunch of top players at a super young age. Now, a couple years later, he kinda hit a wall. He's still obviously one of the best in the world, but he's having a bit of trouble against certain players.
So in one sense, he's a huge outlier (most people at 15 are nowhere near that level), but in another sense he's probably just like everyone else, feeling inadequate. Going by some of his interviews anyway.

Guess what I'm trying to say is that there's a probably a bit of similarity between MC and him, even if that wasn't the point the author was making.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top