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In a world of rigid rules and fractured relationships, a woman finds solace and confrontation in the everyday objects around her, revealing an inner struggle between control and desire as she seeks emotional connection.
SYNOPSIS:
Alex has developed a unique way of relating to the world around her, a form of connection shaped by her personal history. Throughout her life, Alex has lived under the rigid rules imposed by her parents, who see the world in terms of order and functionality, where everything has a clear, practical purpose. Yet, Alex has found a different way to connect emotionally with her environment, establishing deep, emotional bonds with everyday objects around her.
In her universe, objects like a fork, an iron, or a cushion are not merely tools but companions for dialogue, channels through which she processes her emotions and questions life. While her father lives by absolute rules, Alex finds in these objects an escape into a more fluid and emotional relationship. With them, she has intimate conversations that both confront and support her, projecting onto them the feelings she cannot express in her human relationships, especially with her family.
As the story unfolds, we discover how Alex has learned to live this way. Although her approach to relationships is unconventional, it is her adaptation to life—a response to the demands of a rigid environment, yet one that reveals an alternative way of understanding emotional connection. This journey, both inner and outer, challenges the nature of relationships—not only with people but with everything that surrounds us.
In this story where the ordinary becomes extraordinary, Alex invites the viewer to reflect on the multiple ways of interacting with life, where even the functional can become emotional, and the rules of others need not always be one’s own.
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