The phone's broken. It's not moving. What's your first reaction? Is it like me: take your life to the maintenance shop and change the screen

On 7 april, a mother faced this terrible situation. But as soon as she was ready to pay, her 12-year-old son came. Only young men who don't change their faces, pull out a line, stick their mouse on the phone -- a few clicks, a slide of light on the screen, a perfect "restoration" on the phone! Mom looked at me with a stupid eye, and she was like, "that's right, the new brain is good!"

That sounds funny, but it makes people sweat。
Is it really new brain? It's not at all! It's actually a fallout. In our adult “old head”, the cell phone is called the “touch screen cell phone”, and if the screen is broken, it is an experience and a constraint. But in a child's eyes, a cell phone is a microcomputer. Since it's not working, why don't you change the input device

We have always thought that, with age, we have accumulated countless experiences that have not been found to have been built into a wall. In the event of a dead end, adults are used to “manger” or “pay for a permit”, while children are used to “roll over the wall”. It's not a brain gap, it's a passivation of mind after being taught
In retrospect, you've got a bottleneck at work. Is there always a contradiction in life? We're too easy to get caught in the trap of “this is what it was”, and we forget to ask, “is this the only way?”
This 12-year-old boy, with a few dozen dollars of mouse, not only fixed his cell phone, but also taught all adults who were self-righteous: don't let your “old experience” turn into a “dead mind”。
After watching this video today, i just want to ask, "have you ever had a moment when a child or a young man in your family's home had been squeezed on the floor by their actions?" let me know i'm not alone




