Even if she IS SunJu, why would she come back? If she really needs JD for some kind of medical donor-thing, she…
They would have to submit documentation to have her declared legally alive. I believe once that happens she will then be his legal wife again since there was no divorce.
Edited - ok I’m wrong - everything I am reading states death ends a marriage so even if a dead spouse shows up alive, that marriage has already been terminated through the “death” of the resurrected spouse.
Well, I'm pretty sure it's the real SJ. The passport (unless it's fake) was issued 4/3/23. It's interesting how…
To know her dress size I’d say she either had help or she’s been watching her for a while. If you look at things in real time here is a timeline:
Apr 3 - Sun Ju gets her passport issued (this is also ep 6 air date) July 13-14 - Sun Ju’s “fake death” and suicide note reveal (eps 77-78 air dates) August 17 - Sun Ju appears before JD (ep 100)
So just a little over 3 months before the fake death, Sun Ju got her passport. 1 month after she is supposedly dead and there is a funeral for her - she shows up.
Motivation please. A character has to be triggered by some kind of motivation. She wanted to be dead. SS’s wife even said if her sister didn’t want to be found she would go into hiding.
It's hard to understand the mother's angle yet. She doesn't want to have anything to do with any other family…
The way Sun Ju smirked when JD walked away from her on the playground tells me whoever she is, her intentions are not “motherly”. It was the smirk of “you stupid girl, you really believed all of that?”
Even if she IS SunJu, why would she come back? If she really needs JD for some kind of medical donor-thing, she…
Yeah but I just am having a hard time reconciling it being Sun Ju. KS barely got accepted as a widower with a child there is no way MR’s family will accept him as a divorced single dad. And we don’t have time for a divorce to go through - if this is the path the writers take I can can absolutely see nothing more than maybe an engagement by episode 121. Like I said yesterday - the wedding we will get will probably be aunty ding dong’s or Ye Ju’s. I am getting ticked off just thinking of all the episodes wasted on JH and MR.
You are not Debbie Downer and I very much agree with you. Every time they show his face, now with that "new and…
Unless Sun Ju is Yu Jin and she ends up telling Ye Ju the truth. What a freaking mess. Can you imagine thinking your sister has designs on your new love interest?
For the first time in a long time i am not even excited about Monday’s episode. It feels like the writers stopped caring. And it then makes me feel like i shouldn’t care. I can only imagine what the actors must be feeling. We got cheated out of the great love story and romance of our leads. 😕
Even if she IS SunJu, why would she come back? If she really needs JD for some kind of medical donor-thing, she…
I did find this though below my comments. I find this interesting:
Korea does not allow dual citizenship for those under the age of 65. American passports are only good for 10 years. It takes at least 2 years to become a citizen in America. Sun Ju has been gone 10 years. The passport was brand new. It’s not a replacement since she wasn't a citizen 10 years ago. To become me a citizen she would have to also report that to the Korean Embassy. She would pop up on a missing person’s file or reported as dead.
When a Korean national becomes a citizen of another country, that individual is no longer a Korean citizen effective on the date recorded on their Certificate of Naturalization. The individual must personally file renunciation documents, called “Gook Jeok Sang Shil Shin Go,” to the Korean government reporting the change of citizenship. If the individual does not file the necessary documents, it will appear on Korean Family Registry documents as if this person is still a Korean national. However, failure to file does not mean that this person is still a Korean citizen or has acquired dual citizenship. Whether the individual files the day after being naturalized or 20 years after the fact, once the documents are submitted and processed by the Ministry of Justice, the Korean Family Registry will reflect the renunciation date as the same as the one listed on the Certificate of Naturalization. Failure to formally renounce one’s Korean citizenship after being naturalized in another country may cause issues when applying for visas, marriage or birth registry, and legal matters.
Required Documents: - Application form - Original Certificate of Naturalization - Valid passport of new country of citizenship - 1 passport photo - Copy of Korean Family Registry Personal Certificate (Gi-bon Jeungmyeongseo) - Copy of Korean Family Registry Kinship Certificate (Gajok Gwangye Jeungmyeonseo) - Original court-issued Name Change Statement or Decree of Adoption (if name on Certificate of Naturalization differs from Korean Family Registry due to marriage, adoption or legal change) ** A Korean national who has formally renounced their Korean nationality after becoming naturalized in another country may apply to restore their former Korean nationality and become a dual citizen after they turn 65 years old with the intent to reside in Korea.
Even if she IS SunJu, why would she come back? If she really needs JD for some kind of medical donor-thing, she…
You could be absolutely true too. She could be Sun Ju and they may do a 4 month time skip gir the divorce and the chairman could say i don’t care if you are divorced.
Even if she IS SunJu, why would she come back? If she really needs JD for some kind of medical donor-thing, she…
This is why i think she is not Sun Ju. And a divorce would take at LEAST 1 -3 months to be final. And if she was declared dead, they would have to go through the courts to reverse that first. There isn’t enough time here fir that unless they do time skips. But no way will MR’s family approve of KS as a divorced single dad. They barely got approval of him being a widower.
And i still keep thinking if that motorcycle accident that seemed deliberate.
US passport! It even had the red white and blue pattern as in our passport.
Exactly. That passport looked brand new as Loelha pointed out. They are good for10 years. So she couldn’t have got it when she got to the US 10 years ago because she wasn’t a citizen. She would have had to also go through the South Korean embassy to obtain citizenship so they could record that. If she did that she would absolutely pop up in a missing person’s file or reported as dead. Its got to be fake.
US passport! It even had the red white and blue pattern as in our passport.
If she has dual citizenship she can have both but that means she would have to have an American spouse 💡or parent. Or they are fake - which means she is in a lot of trouble. Huge trouble.
Added: Korea does not allow dual citizenship. So in order to get a US passport a Korean would have to become an American citizen - which can take 2 years or longer.
Edited - ok I’m wrong - everything I am reading states death ends a marriage so even if a dead spouse shows up alive, that marriage has already been terminated through the “death” of the resurrected spouse.
Apr 3 - Sun Ju gets her passport issued (this is also ep 6 air date)
July 13-14 - Sun Ju’s “fake death” and suicide note reveal (eps 77-78 air dates)
August 17 - Sun Ju appears before JD (ep 100)
So just a little over 3 months before the fake death, Sun Ju got her passport. 1 month after she is supposedly dead and there is a funeral for her - she shows up.
Motivation please. A character has to be triggered by some kind of motivation. She wanted to be dead. SS’s wife even said if her sister didn’t want to be found she would go into hiding.
What brought this snake out of her hole?
Korea does not allow dual citizenship for those under the age of 65. American passports are only good for 10 years. It takes at least 2 years to become a citizen in America. Sun Ju has been gone 10 years. The passport was brand new. It’s not a replacement since she wasn't a citizen 10 years ago. To become me a citizen she would have to also report that to the Korean Embassy. She would pop up on a missing person’s file or reported as dead.
When a Korean national becomes a citizen of another country, that individual is no longer a Korean citizen effective on the date recorded on their Certificate of Naturalization. The individual must personally file renunciation documents, called “Gook Jeok Sang Shil Shin Go,” to the Korean government reporting the change of citizenship. If the individual does not file the necessary documents, it will appear on Korean Family Registry documents as if this person is still a Korean national. However, failure to file does not mean that this person is still a Korean citizen or has acquired dual citizenship. Whether the individual files the day after being naturalized or 20 years after the fact, once the documents are submitted and processed by the Ministry of Justice, the Korean Family Registry will reflect the renunciation date as the same as the one listed on the Certificate of Naturalization. Failure to formally renounce one’s Korean citizenship after being naturalized in another country may cause issues when applying for visas, marriage or birth registry, and legal matters.
Required Documents:
- Application form
- Original Certificate of Naturalization
- Valid passport of new country of citizenship
- 1 passport photo
- Copy of Korean Family Registry Personal Certificate (Gi-bon Jeungmyeongseo)
- Copy of Korean Family Registry Kinship Certificate (Gajok Gwangye Jeungmyeonseo)
- Original court-issued Name Change Statement or Decree of Adoption (if name on Certificate of Naturalization differs from Korean Family Registry due to marriage, adoption or legal change)
** A Korean national who has formally renounced their Korean nationality after becoming naturalized in another country may apply to restore their former Korean nationality and become a dual citizen after they turn 65 years old with the intent to reside in Korea.
And i still keep thinking if that motorcycle accident that seemed deliberate.
Added: Korea does not allow dual citizenship. So in order to get a US passport a Korean would have to become an American citizen - which can take 2 years or longer.