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  • Essay / Preserving Innocence: They Can See All - 1290

    If one were to ask where the highest standard of innocence found in humanity is, they would answer in youth. Children who least understand what is happening around them are considered innocent. Yet, [these same] people like to say that “children are cruel”; in certain circumstances. This may be true, but it is only due to their innocence. A child's mind is a delicacy; they indulge in what they believe to be correct. Their eyes see and their ears hear the events taking place around them; and their natural instinct is to question, react, or both. Most repeat because knowledge of something new is quite fascinating and wonder why people find such joy in it. They are not conscious of anything, they are innocent, intact and blameless; they are innocent. So who exactly is at fault? Possibility those they admire. So who do they admire? Those whom they must physically admire - those who feed them, bathe them, clothe them, teach them are also those who nourish them and bathe them in the notions of the world before them. The love of a parent for their child is like no other, especially if it comes from a mother, and is quite exceptional if it comes from a father. This is genuine from a mother because she held us and sacrificed for several months until we were born; we have this connection with them. We are essential to their lives, to their emotional and mental health. What a child becomes is a great reflection on his parents, whether triumphs or falls; but whatever mistakes a child makes, the willingness to forgive and the unconditional love of their parents remains. A father's love generally differs from that of a mother; fathers are more severe and want their children to leave...... middle of paper ...... were "love is all you need". Love is innocent and pure, and it is something that could preconceivedly be known. Any person, no matter how intelligent, is capable of love, and Lucy didn't believe intelligence mattered. There are a lot of scenes in the movie that are like that, where we don't know what's going to happen next and when it does, it surprises you. The soft tones they provide, also to induce more emotion in this scene, give us just that little push to tear up. IrreparableLa Vita e Bella by Roberto Benigni, tells the story of a Jewish-Italian man who is taken from his home during his son's birthday, his son, who was also taken, to experience the holocaust. The film foreshadows notions of the Holocaust early in the film, when Guido's uncle is harassed in his own home by people because he is Jewish. The relevance of these stories is a father's love