I am currently studying at Guizhou Minzu University, and my childhood love for electronic products still remains vivid in my memory. Back then, smartphones were not yet popular. As a child, I used a satellite dish as an antenna for the radio. Though the device was simple, it could capture the waves of distant broadcasts — those sounds seeping through the current were like a beam of light piercing the silence of childhood.
Now, I finally have the opportunity to touch my dream. When the strange yet warm voice comes from the radio through my earphones, it always evokes a wonderful sense of moving. On both ends of the radio waves, we don’t need to know each other’s appearance, but we can exchange thoughts and convey messages through frequencies. In the connection of the radio, this vast world seems to be folded into a receiver: the one-in-a-million probability of being on the same frequency makes the resonance across mountains and seas feel within reach. This is exactly what "A bosom friend afar brings a distant land near" depicts.