Rina, a seven-year-old girl, loves her pink bike very much. It was a birthday present from her father, who rarely came home because he worked far away. She always imagined traveling around the world with her father on that bike.
One day, while playing in the yard, Rina saw a black car stop. Her mother cried loudly. Her father came home, but in a box.
The pink bike was then put in the warehouse. Rina didn't want to use it anymore.
A few years later, when Rina was a teenager, she found the bike again in a dusty state. She cleaned it slowly. On the bottom of the saddle, she found a small writing: "For our first adventure, son. Love, Dad."
Tears flowed profusely. She could no longer pedal it, but she knew that her father's love lived on in every wheel that had ever turned.
Interesting knowledge: According to developmental psychology, objects left behind by the deceased can act as an "emotional bridge" to help children process grief more healthily.
Philosophy: True love doesn't need to be physically present to live on; it spins in memories, like a bicycle wheel that never really stops.
Weird rumor: There's an old belief that if a child's bicycle suddenly stops on a straight road for no apparent reason, it means someone is watching over it from a distance.