Only upon 2nd watching noticed, that - when Pran flirtily said to Pat at the door “I’m delivering food”…
not a big thing, but i saw 'advanced grammar' on pat's bedtable at the beginning scenes
at that point it was revealed that they broke up (or so i thought) so i was still in pain, thinking that Pat's trying to learn english well in order to go overseas with Pran
https://twitter.com/iIuvnanon/status/1484180399865892874This is the reason that i say P'Aof went easy on us. If…
not to mention that Pat was such a prick and Pran was a bit plain in the novel.. Pat's character is not portrayed as great in the series as well (on purpose) but there was good character development and realisation There was a lot more depth to Pran from his motivations and character background in the series too.
ANNOUNCEMENT: If you want to have a post-finale conversation on Friday or Saturday (OR BOTH), I am happy to host…
would it be rude if i were to just lurk in the meeting and to listen to your comments? not sure if i would be in the timezone for my brain to work properly
I was washing the dishes and was mulling over their progression from fighting for each other in ep 10 to acceptance…
Both Pat and Pran wanted the best for each other - even if it involved the pain of separation to sort things out.
that 'competition' on who mentions about parents first - that was like an alarm clock rather than a game. Pat knew from the start that he didnt want to take Pran away from his family permanently, even as he was also fully willing to leave it all behind just for Pran and himself (human beings are always in tension)
the next 'game' at the beach over beer to talk about hope and dreams pushed it further - both of them knew that they wanted a future that is different from what they are walking towards now - fluffy notions of romance did not rot their brains.
the 'breakup' scene where no words of 'breaking up' was said (where Pran was buttoning Pat's red waiter shirt) : they both knew that this was the 'last day' of their honeymoon, and they have to return to face the world on their own terms. To become better versions of themselves and to sort out what they had to sort out, so that they have the foundation to be truly and assuredly together (they're barely 18 in the plot, financially unstable, experientially immature for their family and anyone to take them seriously)
and i know that this 'better versions' of themselves will make them fall for each other even harder, and firmer.
i liked your last sentence "Neither of them saw a future without the other, but decided to go home to fight the battle separately and yet together"
there's a chinese saying: 喜欢是冲动 (Liking someone is an impulse/many impulses) 爱是责任 (Loving someone is to have responsibility) 专一是自律 (Being faithful is self-discipline - faithful not just about having 1 person, but being faithful and loyal to what you both are fighting for)
i still want to throw a slipper at him, just because
but i'll buy him cake afterwards
at that point it was revealed that they broke up (or so i thought) so i was still in pain, thinking that Pat's trying to learn english well in order to go overseas with Pran
Fanfiction aint gonna write itself y'know
what was off camera??!! P'Aof!?!
EDUCATE ME
is it what i think it is
spoiler tags your replies~
Pat's character is not portrayed as great in the series as well (on purpose) but there was good character development and realisation
There was a lot more depth to Pran from his motivations and character background in the series too.
https://www.youtube.com/post/UgkxJmuWJguoIVf-BWID4VM7SMkqcmcWEAiU
i do miss the sweet and almost fluorescent green guava that i find on the streets of phuket/hatyai though
start breaking the piggy banks and encashing those fixed deposits people
pre-order is a thing :D
They have sponsored items and quite a lot of merch to sell
The stakeholders can't possibly allow a sad ending - "how else would i get you guys to throw your money at me?!"
apparently people go to college at different ages from the stuff i see. dont quite understand too
that 'competition' on who mentions about parents first - that was like an alarm clock rather than a game. Pat knew from the start that he didnt want to take Pran away from his family permanently, even as he was also fully willing to leave it all behind just for Pran and himself (human beings are always in tension)
the next 'game' at the beach over beer to talk about hope and dreams pushed it further - both of them knew that they wanted a future that is different from what they are walking towards now - fluffy notions of romance did not rot their brains.
the 'breakup' scene where no words of 'breaking up' was said (where Pran was buttoning Pat's red waiter shirt) : they both knew that this was the 'last day' of their honeymoon, and they have to return to face the world on their own terms. To become better versions of themselves and to sort out what they had to sort out, so that they have the foundation to be truly and assuredly together (they're barely 18 in the plot, financially unstable, experientially immature for their family and anyone to take them seriously)
and i know that this 'better versions' of themselves will make them fall for each other even harder, and firmer.
i liked your last sentence "Neither of them saw a future without the other, but decided to go home to fight the battle separately and yet together"
there's a chinese saying:
喜欢是冲动 (Liking someone is an impulse/many impulses)
爱是责任 (Loving someone is to have responsibility)
专一是自律 (Being faithful is self-discipline - faithful not just about having 1 person, but being faithful and loyal to what you both are fighting for)
hope this comforts your heart too