
This is a love story about Ogawa Manami, a high school teacher who grew up in a strict family, and Kaworu, a host who is not good at reading and writing, as they search for love despite the obstacles they face. Manami is being pressured to marry a man she met through her father's introduction, and the high school where she works is also facing a crisis of class collapse. She spends her days lamenting, "I want to run away from this place."
One day, she receives a call saying that a student has been deceived by an unscrupulous host, and she rushes to the store to bring the female student back, where she meets Kaworu. Kaworu has to sign a promissory note promising not to contact the student in the future, and Manami finds out about the problem that he had kept secret from anyone until then. In the play, the two gradually become closer through Manami's secret "private lessons," in which she teaches Kaworu about language and society.
One day, she receives a call saying that a student has been deceived by an unscrupulous host, and she rushes to the store to bring the female student back, where she meets Kaworu. Kaworu has to sign a promissory note promising not to contact the student in the future, and Manami finds out about the problem that he had kept secret from anyone until then. In the play, the two gradually become closer through Manami's secret "private lessons," in which she teaches Kaworu about language and society.

Both involve a noona romance where the FL is in a position of authority over the ML (ie boss or teacher) and knows a relationship with the ML is inappropriate. Find Yourself has a FL who has no experience with love. In Biscuit, the FL’s first love was her own teacher back in high school, who no works as a colleague in the school she’s teaches at. The central focus of these two is slightly different since FY centers on the aspects of learning to love through the relationship. Biscuit focuses on the love that grows from friendship/mentorship and takes a really long time for the FL to accept the ML.

Both stories are older woman / younger man romances.
In Biscuit Teacher Star Candy it's a student / teacher relationship and in Ruk Sutrit it's a teachers assistant and a boy she tutors who fall in love. Also in both the male lead starts out as immature rich brat only to grow and change because of the female lead.
In Biscuit Teacher Star Candy it's a student / teacher relationship and in Ruk Sutrit it's a teachers assistant and a boy she tutors who fall in love. Also in both the male lead starts out as immature rich brat only to grow and change because of the female lead.






