When I scrolled Korean folk tales, the title of the story drew my attention. This story is called "liver of rabbit". At first, when I read the title I hated it a lot. Because who wants to read the story about the liver, especially the liver of a moribund rabbit. But I clicked on this link because I like to read those strange and strange stories. For me, there are no blood-like liver or dead rabbit, but this is just ordinary folk tales, and we need to pay attention.
But when I began studying this article, I accidentally fell into a rabbit hole containing information on the relationship between gluten and liver disease. Because of his autoimmune disease, my husband received a liver transplant at the age of 16. Of course, some of the studies I stumbled upon has made my interests the best. Soon after I got married, I worked at Starbucks. My husband, he is a fan of Starbucks, has the greatest opportunity and has the opportunity to visit every time. Coffee intake in Starbucks has more than quadrupled. As coffee consumption increases, he begins to drink a special drink and many processed foods that we can not afford.
What is the meaning of rabbit life? A rabbit was born. I will eat and sleep. It has reached sexual maturity and has its own children. It is either natural to eat or dies. There is no heaven after death. It's just dead, and that's it. In this case, we can conclude that the life of the rabbit is meaningless. Rabbits exist to produce other rabbits. And that keeps seeds alive, yet it is not much meaning in a magnificent plan. The school of idea that "life is meaningless" applies the same inference theory to humans. Humans, logically speaking, are not different from rabbits because there is no soul and no future. When we die, we die, and that is the end. This thinking process can lead to one of several behavior patterns.
Rabbits are premature, relatively mature at birth, hair is also good looking, rabbits are awkward, naive hairless, blind, careful. Rabbits (and cotton rabbits) were living relatively lonely in the simple nest of the earth, but most rabbits were living in the caves of the underground social group and war. Hind legs are big and long. Rabbits are not domesticated, and descendants of rabbits in Europe are usually raised as domestic animals and kept as pets.