The author wrote this chapter an hour or two in advance, and to be honest, he hesitated for a long time.
The first thing to explain is that the protagonist's sword did not fall, not because of the girl in the blue dress, but because he was unwilling to let go of his past self.
"I" runs through the past and present lives, and I don't want to make "I" incomplete because of the pursuit of Tao.
No matter how strong a person is, he has grown up step by step from when he was weak. Does it mean that after he becomes strong, he must completely deny himself with all the flaws in the past?
Or even cut off the past?
The protagonist had a premonition that if the sword was slashed, "I" might no longer be "me", so he did not slash it in the end.
No matter what, since this chapter has been published, the author will never regret it or modify the story.
Just like the chapter title: Then let me not ride on the wind!
Written this way, the layout is indeed small.
But if you don't write it this way, it will deviate from the story you planned at the beginning. If you continue to write it, it will not be satisfactory. Maybe one day you will become a eunuch.
It’s not that I don’t know, this is not in line with the market, but at least in this book, the author just wants to write about the world of immortality in his mind.
Dividing and reuniting is common.
Feeling bad about this chapter, some Taoist friends chose to abandon the book. Although the author felt sorry for it, he could only express regret.
No matter what the results are, the author will abide by the promise he made when he put it on the shelf and write it down seriously.
However, it does not mean that some apprentices can jump out and add insult to injury!