Outbreak, I don't know when. I also made a special investigation and thought that the Japanese "underworld" started it, but it seems to be from the United States.
It doesn't matter where it originated Anyway, hearing this word, I always feel that it is not a good thing. The picture in front of me is always a bunch of people fooling around!
However, my idea is estimated to be laughed at by quite a few people. What age, I still treat such a thing so traditionally?
Nowadays, maverick has become an ethos, which embodies the liberation and independence of modern people's personality and goes their own way. Why do you want to control so much?
I admire this idea from the bottom of my heart, especially the person who did it. It really takes a lot of courage to be independent, or to release your personality. Give me an example that I saw not long ago. At the night market, an elegant teenager hung a tweeter and played the theme song of the new White Snake in the 1990s. The street was shocked. Song is a good song, and people are handsome, but the combination of the two is somewhat uncoordinated. Moreover, the teenager is still very involved, swaying from side to side, dancing with the tune of the song, and dancing very manly. The boy walked all the way, like running water, no one was watching. Passers-by have stopped to observe, and the rate of turning back is really 100%. Everyone is whispering, laughing and joking. Of course, I was one of them, laughing happily.
However, in retrospect, I really have no right to laugh at him. Oppressed by life every day, personality is bound by long-term education and preaching. We are used to silence and to suppressing our personality. We always follow other people's advice and blindly follow other people's advice. Whoever takes the lead will quickly criticize. At least the boy has released himself and broken through the secular world, no matter what kind of eyes he welcomes. I remember when I worked in a university, I had to hand out leaflets in the street. I might be rejected at the thought of showing my face, but I held back. Later, I went through many ideological struggles before coming to power, and later became my own talk.
I remember when the square dance just started, it was ridiculous to see several aunts wriggling around there seriously, and there was a kind of watching psychology. As a result, just a few years later, square dance has swept the country and even gone abroad. If those aunts knew what I thought at that time, I guess they would laugh at me now "what an ignorant child" or don't care about my thoughts at all. For another example, in the popular flash-flash, a group of people quickly finished a performance, and the people around them disappeared before they recovered, even giving you a chance to judge! There are also various "street dances" on a small video. ...
Perhaps, in their eyes, we are frogs in the well and ridiculous people trapped in cages. When I was a child, I liked fooling around and was labeled as a deviant by my elders. Aren't we dismissive of this?
The problem is that the longer we go, the more backward we are. How dare we laugh at them?