Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What words have you heard that cause the most buzz?

What words have you heard that cause the most buzz?

1, I am eager to see you, but please remember that I won't ask to see you. This is not because of pride, you know I am not proud in front of you, but because it makes sense for us to meet only when you also want to see me. -simone de beauvoir's Overseas Love Letters

A person's great luck is that both adults and children have to embark on an extremely difficult road, but this is the most reliable road. A woman's misfortune lies in being surrounded by almost irresistible temptations. She doesn't need to make progress, but is encouraged to slide to bliss. When she found herself fooled by a mirage, it was already too late, and her strength had been exhausted in the failed adventure. -simone de beauvoir's The Second Sex

3. The reason why clothing is so important to many women is that it can make women rely on illusion and reshape the external world and inner self at the same time. -simone de beauvoir's The Second Sex

It is often said that women dress up to arouse the jealousy of other women, and this jealousy is actually a clear sign of success; But this is not the only purpose. By being admired, admired or appreciated, what she wants is absolute affirmation of her beauty, her elegance and her taste. She shows herself to realize herself. -simone de beauvoir's The Second Sex

5, men ask women to give everything, and when women give everything and live according to it, men will bear an unbearable burden. -Simone De Beauvoir

6. I'm tired of chastity and depression, and I don't have the courage to lead a degenerate life. -simone de beauvoir (Ps: simone de beauvoir is a French existentialist writer, one of the pioneers of the western feminist movement, graduated from the Paris Teachers College, and is Jean-Paul Sartre's lifelong companion. These words are even more interesting to write from her. )

She was too young to know that all the gifts given by fate had been marked in the dark. -Stefan Zweig's Broken Queen