Summary
Some people spend years wishing they could go back and fix a handful of mistakes. Qin Guan never expected to wake up with that chance already waiting for him.
Eighteen years disappear overnight, leaving him back in the final semester of high school, sitting in a classroom he thought he had left behind forever. The faces around him are familiar, the teachers are saying things he remembers hearing long ago, even the little routines he had forgotten somehow return as if no time had passed. Only Qin Guan knows that none of this is happening for the first time.
Memory alone, however, doesn’t magically solve anything.
He still has exams approaching, lessons he barely remembers, classmates who know him as someone completely different, and a future that can easily repeat itself if he falls into the same habits. Growing up once does not mean he suddenly becomes perfect at being seventeen again. Some conversations are harder than he expected, some decisions feel surprisingly difficult, and more than once he catches himself reacting like the adult he used to be instead of the teenager everyone else sees.
That quiet struggle gives the story its charm.
Qin Guan doesn’t chase impossible dreams overnight. He starts with smaller things, studying a little harder than before, paying more attention at home, taking better care of himself, and saying the words he once kept to himself. Little by little those choices begin changing the people around him, friends who barely mattered in his previous life become impossible to ignore, while relationships he once took for granted slowly gain a different meaning.
Of course, having memories of the future comes with its own temptations. There are opportunities he recognizes, mistakes he knows are waiting ahead, and feelings he never truly let go of, especially when someone from his past appears once again. This time, he refuses to watch life pass by while convincing himself there will always be another chance.
The novel leans heavily into everyday life rather than dramatic twists. School competitions, family dinners, awkward first love, late-night studying, jokes between classmates, and the quiet pressure of preparing for the college entrance examination all receive as much attention as the bigger milestones. It feels less like watching someone rewrite history and more like following a young man learning that changing the future begins with ordinary decisions most people overlook.
Qin Guan already knows where regret leads. Going back doesn’t guarantee a happier ending, but it finally gives him the chance to find out what happens when he stops running from the life he actually wants.