The narrator tells us that he's worried about his daughter's school. He's also worried about the reader surveys that the manga artists receive every week. The reader surveys, he says, are like "schrdinger's cats" . They're fine as long as they're not looking at them. If you're the girl's father, he suggests, then you should look at her progress report instead of messing around and messing around with the results. The narrator says that he hasn't looked at his report card yet, but he'll look at it when he does. He wants to know if the reader survey results are good or bad, and if the grades are better or worse than he thought they were. He asks the narrator if he can feel the results first, but the narrator says he can't, because he doesn't want to get too bored. He says that if he looked at the report card, he'd see that it's not as good as he thought it was, and that it would make him feel bad. He wonders if he should have dropped the survey in the park instead of looking at it. He thinks that if they look at the results together, they'll be able to split up the happy feelings evenly, and he thinks that's the best way to do it.
The narrator tells us that he's worried about his daughter's school. He's also worried about the reader surveys that the manga artists receive every week. The reader surveys, he says, are like "schrdinger's cats" . They're fine as long as they're not looking at them. If you're the girl's father, he suggests, then you should look at her progress report instead of messing around and messing around with the results. The narrator says that he hasn't looked at his report card yet, but he'll look at it when he does. He wants to know if the reader survey results are good or bad, and if the grades are better or worse than he thought they were. He asks the narrator if he can feel the results first, but the narrator says he can't, because he doesn't want to get too bored. He says that if he looked at the report card, he'd see that it's not as good as he thought it was, and that it would make him feel bad. He wonders if he should have dropped the survey in the park instead of looking at it. He thinks that if they look at the results together, they'll be able to split up the happy feelings evenly, and he thinks that's the best way to do it.