Screws that cry rust. Can't adults really vent when they have a breakdown?

The world of adults is hard enough. Is it too cruel for adults if they are deprived of the right to collapse and vent? Although this society has always emphasized that adults should be decent, learn to hide their emotions and learn to manage their emotions, after all, people are not machines or screws. People cry and laugh, but they are all living things. Sometimes you have to vent those bad emotions in order to be reborn, clean up your emotions and start the next stage of your life.

1. Xiong Hao: Screws that cry will rust. Chipa said that a thought-provoking debate has been raised recently: should the collapse of adults be hidden? For this debate, many eloquent debaters gave their own understanding from different angles. Among them, Xiong Hao's speech was praised by many people. He said that the external environment wants us to be a screw, constantly asking us to keep running forever, but we are not allowed to collapse and cry, because the crying screw will rust. How does a rusty screw keep running at high strength?

In fact, Xiong Hao's breakthrough point makes many "migrant workers" feel the same way. From the discussion of the 996 working system some time ago to the sudden death of employees in Pinduoduo, the society has continuously raised the standards and requirements for individuals. Those capitalists or cruel lives can't see our vitality as independent individuals, only see the value that can be squeezed out. They even hope that ordinary people can give up the right to collapse and vent, so that they can concentrate on accepting the squeeze.

Second, adults often collapse in an instant, but even the machine will be damaged under high-intensity operation, let alone people. The pressure of life makes adults breathless. The cost of food, clothing, housing and transportation, mortgage, car loan and even money for children's milk powder are not generated out of thin air. It's tiring to run around for a living all day. I'm too humble now, even if I break down and cry or vent, I can't hide.

In fact, these arguments mentioned by Qipa are sometimes enlightening. I just want to say that I hope people will always remember that collapse is a right, not a burden. We really need to control our emotions in society, but if one day we can't stick to it, it's good to let it go.