The lightsaber was bought last year for the New Year.
One night last year, I went to play in a nearby small park.
I lent it to another child, and one connector piece was lost.
After it was lost, three or four kids helped Erbao look for the connector.
I thought it would be hard to find because it was dark.
The next day, I revisited the place.
I looked around the small bushes and the grass by the drainage ditch but couldn't find it.
The lightsaber can still light up.
I rarely turn off the lights when fighting,
to avoid accidentally hurting other screens.
Previously, a friend had a metal charm shaped like a Coke bottle hanging from their phone.
They casually tossed the phone onto the sofa.
With a snap,
the screen cracked.
I thought it was just the tempered glass that broke.
After removing it, I found the inner screen was also cracked.
There are quite a few surveillance recordings.
The big screen TV at home,
how did it break?
Many of them were messed up by mischievous kids.
Erbao loves to fight.
He likes to have a sword for each person,
to chop at each other.
I originally wanted to chop a few times on his arms and legs to let him know it hurts,
so he would stop playing.
But Erbao, while in pain, still wanted to keep chopping.
In the end, he found a way to protect himself.
He carried Daba's backpack on his back,
with his own empty backpack in front.
He wore a roller skating helmet,
and a neck pillow.
In his right hand, he had a sword and a homemade neck guard,
and in his left hand, he used a floating board as a shield.
He looked very mighty.
As soon as the fight started,
he directly lay down on the ground.
This reduced the chances of his legs and feet getting chopped,
but also reduced his chances of counterattacking.
I tapped his exposed fingers with the sword,
and he would retract his fingers.
The shield was not held steadily.
I kicked the shield away,
and he would start swinging the sword wildly,
then go pick up the shield.
Repeating this felt boring to me,
but he found it very interesting.