"Enough of life slap, that's enough, chisa" , says the narrator. He's tired of the slap, and he's not going to let it go. He tells us that he and Chisa were just having a good time at the reunion, and that Chisa was just getting tired of him. The narrator says that it's inevitable that he'll get tired of someone boring like him. He says that he couldn't really hate Chisa, because he was "presumptuously as he was," but that it was "inevitable" that he would "get tired of something boring like me" . Chisa's a jerk, the narrator says. He complains that he hasn't slept well since Chisa showed up, and says that a friend came to stay, too, but that the friend was actually a "friend" of his wife's, not a stranger. He doesn't want to sleep alone, he says, because if he gets irritated, he can kick him out. He sets up a futon for Chisa to sleep on, but he complains that it makes him want to "wash off" the "lust for con quest" because of how hard it was for him to get along with Chisa. He also complains about how chisa is always trying to make him do things, even when he is resisting them. He thinks that chisa was trying to force him to do things because he thought that if he got distant, he'd "chase after" him, and so he broke up with all of his friends. He feels that he is being "unjustly resented" for breaking up with his "special" friends.
"Enough of life slap, that's enough, chisa" , says the narrator. He's tired of the slap, and he's not going to let it go. He tells us that he and Chisa were just having a good time at the reunion, and that Chisa was just getting tired of him. The narrator says that it's inevitable that he'll get tired of someone boring like him. He says that he couldn't really hate Chisa, because he was "presumptuously as he was," but that it was "inevitable" that he would "get tired of something boring like me" . Chisa's a jerk, the narrator says. He complains that he hasn't slept well since Chisa showed up, and says that a friend came to stay, too, but that the friend was actually a "friend" of his wife's, not a stranger. He doesn't want to sleep alone, he says, because if he gets irritated, he can kick him out. He sets up a futon for Chisa to sleep on, but he complains that it makes him want to "wash off" the "lust for con quest" because of how hard it was for him to get along with Chisa. He also complains about how chisa is always trying to make him do things, even when he is resisting them. He thinks that chisa was trying to force him to do things because he thought that if he got distant, he'd "chase after" him, and so he broke up with all of his friends. He feels that he is being "unjustly resented" for breaking up with his "special" friends.