Fortune teller has a crush on you.
Key points:
It can be described in the third person. The narrator is not limited by space or time, nor by physiology or psychology. He can directly show the people and things in the article to readers and reflect social life freely and flexibly. But the third-person narrative is often not as intimate and natural as the first-person narrative.
It can be described by the language and behavior of the characters in the article.
Text:
Two lives were born at the same time in a backcountry alley, a boy and a girl. Maybe it's fate. Perhaps because they listened to the fortune teller, in order to save the doll's life, they had to be engaged at birth, and the two adults gave a small marriage. The boy and mother pointed to the girl and said, "She will be your wife in the future." The boy giggled while the girl cried. They didn't know anything that year.
Two years passed in laughter and crying. One day, the boy learned to use chopsticks and immediately asked his mother to carry him to the girl's house. After the girl saw the boy's kung fu with chopsticks, the girl cried because he could, but she couldn't. The boy also cried when he came home, because he saw the girl crying. After dinner, the boy insisted on not using chopsticks. Later, the girl finally learned to use chopsticks, but the boy forgot how to use them.
At the age of three, both boys and girls went to kindergarten. While sleeping in middle age, the girl wet the bed. The kindergarten aunt asked who peed, and the girl cried. The boy raised his hand and said, Aunt, I peed.
But my aunt still saw that the girl's pants were wet and told her mother. The girl pointed angrily at the boy and said, "You must have complained to my aunt. I will ignore you all my life. " . The next day, the boy peed on the bed, and then reported to his aunt that he wet the bed and was scolded and cried by his aunt.