If he and everyone changes and it’s not the same script anymore and she does love him or the other him, she…
Thanks for clarifying! 🙏 I really appreciate you taking the time to explain how you see it.
It’s possible I missed the scene where he sincerely apologizes and takes full responsibility — my memory might be fuzzy. I mostly recall his emotional appeals and blame-shifting (especially in episode 23 and 27), like when he says, “I need your forgiveness because I want to marry you.” That moment felt more like pressure than accountability to me.
But if there’s a scene where he genuinely owns his actions without deflection, I’d love to revisit it! Do you happen to remember which episode that was?
Interesting review, emotionally invested in the idea that the ML changes, and that once he stops being physically threatening, the FL is now _obliged_ to forgive and love him.
So glad this drama touched you so deeply! 💕 I actually had a very different experience — some of the emotional turns in the story unsettled me, especially how certain behaviors were framed.🫠 It’s fascinating how the same scenes can feel comforting to some and unsettling to others. Maybe that says more about us as viewers — and what we’ve learned to call love — than about the drama itself. 🌿🌀
Wait, what? Nan Heng 'never once judged her for protecting herself'? 🧐 You might want to rewatch episode 27…
That’s interesting — I actually have a very different take. Just because he realizes now that she was telling the truth doesn’t mean he truly understands her, or that his need for control has disappeared. To me, his emotional intensity doesn’t feel like healthy love — it feels more like a deep need for validation, rooted in his childhood abandonment. That would explain why he is coercing, guilt-tripping, and gas-lighting her to marry him. 💭 Just another lens, of course — but that’s how it landed for me 😄
Y’all, I was away for a few days and just binged all the missed episodes — AND OMG 😭 I’m so emotionally…
Wait, what? Nan Heng 'never once judged her for protecting herself'? 🧐 You might want to rewatch episode 27 — the fire scene. He’s literally guilt-tripping her for doing just that 😆
Interesting take! I really felt your read on Song Yimeng and Nan Heng.Just wondering—what made you see Chu Guihong…
Do you mean that recognizing one’s flaws without changing immediately is proof of moral failure, rather than a realistic depiction of internal struggle or shame?
It’s possible I missed the scene where he sincerely apologizes and takes full responsibility — my memory might be fuzzy. I mostly recall his emotional appeals and blame-shifting (especially in episode 23 and 27), like when he says, “I need your forgiveness because I want to marry you.” That moment felt more like pressure than accountability to me.
But if there’s a scene where he genuinely owns his actions without deflection, I’d love to revisit it! Do you happen to remember which episode that was?
I actually had a very different experience — some of the emotional turns in the story unsettled me, especially how certain behaviors were framed.🫠
It’s fascinating how the same scenes can feel comforting to some and unsettling to others.
Maybe that says more about us as viewers — and what we’ve learned to call love — than about the drama itself. 🌿🌀
💭 Just another lens, of course — but that’s how it landed for me 😄
Glad I’m not the only one who felt the 2025 chaos!