In this chapter, we learn that some of the children in the orphanage are your age, some of them older than you, but they do not go to school. They do not even have pens or a book. They are so pitiful, right? They have gone on working as a teacher for two years. They could do it even if they had not had a child before. They think they are as selfless as not even caring for their own child. The baby cries out, "Why are you still at my push?" and "What's wrong?" and then "Bump bang!" and "Whoa! What's happening?" and so on and so forth. Finally, the baby says, "It must be my parents who bought it!"
In this chapter, we learn that some of the children in the orphanage are your age, some of them older than you, but they do not go to school. They do not even have pens or a book. They are so pitiful, right? They have gone on working as a teacher for two years. They could do it even if they had not had a child before. They think they are as selfless as not even caring for their own child. The baby cries out, "Why are you still at my push?" and "What's wrong?" and then "Bump bang!" and "Whoa! What's happening?" and so on and so forth. Finally, the baby says, "It must be my parents who bought it!"