Yes, Squidward represents ordinary people. He is a very real character. He is depressed, doing an ordinary person's job, and has ordinary people's troubles and happiness. He likes to play the recorder, often paints self-portraits, and thinks he has artistic talent. He dreams of becoming a world-famous artist but ultimately fails. However, Squidward, who lives in an ivory tower, always seems to be out of tune with the surrounding environment. Squidward has his own feelings, wants to have a quiet life, has Bole to appreciate his music, and is immersed in his own world every day. He has his own interests and hobbies, and longs to become famous overnight, but he always becomes a person in the cruel reality. Ordinary people. If Patrick Star symbolizes the ignorance of the world as a child, SpongeBob SquarePants symbolizes the innocence of the student years, then Squidward symbolizes the sensitive, closed, violent and lonely adults. Who doesn’t long to be a child who doesn’t have to worry about life forever? But Squidward, enslaved by reality, can only escape, live passively, and avoid the complicated market. Few of us are Spongebob, even fewer are Patrick Star, but most of us are Squidward.