192

Scent of a Woman: Episode 9

With feelings confirmed and out in the open — hence putting to bed the conflict of self-denial — it’s time for the Dreaded Others to step in as antagonist of the day. With the burden of bad guy shifted to meddling others, at least we get some cute, sexy, happy times with our main couple in the brief window of time they get before Yeon-jae’s cancer steps to the fore. And I think that’s gonna happen sooner than later, to my sadness. Why is happiness so fleeting in K-dramaland?

SONG OF THE DAY

Scent of a Woman OST – “화답” (Response) [ Download ]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

 
EPISODE 9 RECAP

Sae-kyung’s family is taken totally by surprise at Ji-wook’s defection, and while Chairman Kang is trying to slap some sense back into them, the parents wonder what’s going on. Hot-tempered Big Brother is particularly insulted and doesn’t hide it when Chairman Kang returns to the party and hangs his head apologetically. But Chairman Im’s decree puts an end to the potentially squabbling: He tells his family to keep today quiet, and tells Chairman Kang to do what he can to bring Ji-wook back around.

Sae-kyung battles her conflicting desires to speak up out of fairness to Ji-wook, and to keep her mouth shut so as not to incur blame. Ultimately she says nothing while Chairman Kang receives her family’s scorn.

And then, on their way out of the restaurant, Dad collapses, clutching his heart. Ah, that old chestnut.

Ji-wook arrives outside his home and crushes Yeon-jae in a hug, not letting her break the embrace and only letting go once she gasps of not being able to breathe. He asks her to come inside, and at her hesitation he laughs, “What are you imagining?” and tells her he has something to say.

He tells her he called it off with Sae-kyung, and she takes this in quietly and asks why. Her response isn’t as dramatic as he may have expected, and he tells her not to think it was because of her: “I did it because of me. I want to live my life, too.”

His tone is uncertain because of her calm response, so he asks why she asked him out — what if he said no? But that’s moot since he admits he isn’t averse to the idea, and the mood lightens.

A phone call delivers news of Sae-kyung’s father’s collapse, however, cutting this short and taking him to the hospital, where the Im family has already arrived.

The mood is fairly hostile as Sae-kyung’s brother tells Ji-wook’s father to leave, since he’s technically the cause. Perhaps feeling guilt for not speaking up earlier, Sae-kyung steps in and speaks to him more kindly.

Ji-wook arrives just as his father is leaving, and Dad faces him with scorn, telling him to fix this or he’s never speaking to him again.

Chairman Im’s condition isn’t life-threatening; his angina has been aggravated by stress-induced shock, but he’ll be fine soon. Sae-kyung’s brother blames her, though, and reminds her that she’d caused Dad grief with man troubles five years ago, too.

When Ji-wook arrives, Sae-kyung asks why he didn’t use her extorting ex as a reason to take the heat off himself. She’s got tears in her eyes, as though she wishes he hadn’t taken the high road because it’s just easier to hate him than to feel like he’s done her a kindness. Ji-wook says he didn’t use that as an excuse because it had nothing to do with the reason he broke it off.

Both Ji-wook and Sae-kyung spend the night in the hospital room, until Chairman Im wakes in the morning. He asks Ji-wook again about the engagement, giving him a chance to take it back, but Ji-wook replies that he’s sorry.

Sae-kyuung’s bitter that he couldn’t even pretend to reconsider, if only out of consideration for her father’s weakened condition. Ji-wook answers that the marriage wouldn’t happen in any case:

Ji-wook: “There are times when I think my father has even picked out the coffin I’ll lie in when I die. I felt suffocated to death, but I always did as he wanted. But I can’t any longer. I’ve begun to want to live a life of my own, rather than my father’s. Live your own life, too.”

Eun-seok spots the two of them talking and puts two and two together, figuring this is Ji-wook’s fiancee. So when Ji-wook runs into him on his way out, Eun-seok tells him pointedly, “You’re busy this morning. This woman, then that woman. Whichever side you choose, shouldn’t you tie up loose ends quickly?”

Ji-wook tells him he has. Eun-seok’s face registers his surprise (and alarm, poor Dr. Poopy!) when Ji-wook adds that he’s called off the engagement.

Chairman Im isn’t ready to take this lying down, and tells his secretary to apply pressure to Line Tour, “just enough to scare them.” The engagement has advanced so far that any step backward would be a public embarrassment for both sides, so this is really more for saving face than anything. And when you’re a huge conglomerate like Seojin Group, there’s a lotta face needing saving.

Ji-wook is adorably nervous as he works up the nerve to call Yeon-jae, tapping his fingers and fidgeting as he asks her out to dinner. She’s nervous as well, but handles it with more composure, whereas he breathes a sigh of relief so big at her acceptance that you’d think he’d just been granted a stay of execution. So cute.

Hye-won pops out of work to drop by Yeon-jae’s house, bearing health foods for her cancer. She’s happy to hear about the broken engagement, although Yeon-jae feels much more conflicted about it — she’s happy, of course, but uneasy and a little afraid as well.

I can see why Yeon-jae wanted to keep her cancer to herself, given that now Hye-won is overwhelmed with her own feelings of sadness and grief, while Yeon-jae wants to savor her remaining time without the label of Cancer Patient. But it’s not all badness, because at least now she has somebody to cry with her and miss her and understand how precious her time is.

When Hye-won returns to work, Manager Noh makes a sarcastic comment about her extended break, but that doesn’t have its intended effect (of cowing her into submission). Instead, Hye-won bursts out, feeling frustrated at the unfairness of Yeon-jae’s cancer, “This is all your fault! It’s because of the stress you cause!” He’s left scratching his head over why women in that desk always blow up at him, ha.

Suddenly, all the office phones start to ring, with clients canceling plans left and right. Clearly Seojin has swung into action, and Line Tour is forced to jump into emergency meetings to try to make sense of all the chaos.

These aren’t just individual travel packages, but huge deals like partnerships with airlines and hotels. The execs quickly make the connection to Seojin, and guess that there’s trouble in the air with the would-be in-law family.

Sae-kyung remains unaware of her father’s doings as she meets with the Line Tours team for an MOU-related meeting. It’s only when Ji-wook takes her aside to apprise her of the developments that she realizes what Dad has done, with some surprise at the swiftness and magnitude of his actions.

Eun-seok’s boss assigns him to handle Chairman Im, which means there’s a complication that the tests uncovered. A small growth was detected in the chairman’s throat, and while it appears benign at the moment, it must be examined further.

The Line Tour office is swamped with calls, keeping them busy well past closing time. With the employees frantically fielding calls, Ji-wook volunteers to meet one client in person, which means he has to cancel dinner plans with Yeon-jae. To take the sting out of the last-minute cancellation, he jokes that he’s playing hard to get intentionally, to make her miss him.

He takes care of the matter, then comes home late to find his father waiting for him. Chairman Kang tells him to beg forgiveness of Chairman Im immediately and continue with the engagement.

Ji-wook stands up his father, saying that he can’t live by his father’s dictate anymore. Dad blows his lid, yelling that he worked his ass off to build this company, which Ji-wook would ruin in one blow. Ji-wook replies, tears pooling in his eyes, “Do you think I don’t know that? In doing that, you abandoned Mother and me. You were so crazed with work that you didn’t even know she died!” Ji-wook recalls attending her funeral alone, at the tender age of 12, scared to death.

Ji-wook asks his father why he’s changed — he was fine without Seojin Group, building his company from a tiny office with one employee. After such an accomplishment, why is he so dependent on Chairman Im’s strength now? Ji-wook insists that Dad will be fine without Chairman Im’s support — and Ji-wook won’t let the company fall to ruin. “So please, Father, just leave me be.”

Mention of Mom’s death is a sore point, and Dad sits down heavily and says with a sigh, “What could you do? What do you think you can do?”

Yeon-jae goes through the morbid process of guessing how many days she has left to live — 127 or so, she figures — and flips through her bucket list. At the wish about wearing a wedding dress, she imagines marrying Ji-wook in a chapel like the one she saw in Okinawa. Then she shakes her head ruefully and flips ahead to another one: To ride a bicycle along the coast.

Ji-wook texts her from outside her house, continuing the joke about playing hard to get and saying that he’s showing his face to her now so she won’t miss him all night. With that, they send each other cute little goodnight waves as Yeon-jae makes her way (very, very slowly) back inside the house, pausing to look back and wave some more.

With the upcoming travel season fast approaching and all their overseas tours virtually frozen because of Seojin’s power play, Ji-wook decides to turn their attention to domestic travel packages in the pipeline, like Yeon-jae’s Wando tour idea. With other employees too busy to take on the necessary work needed to launch a new campaign, he again volunteers himself and prepares to make the trip.

Chairman Kang hears about Ji-wook’s intention to go to Wando directly and grumbles about the futile endeavor, but it’s worth noting that his dismissal isn’t quite as sneering as before. I suspect we’re going to continue to see Dad express his skepticism, but with his cynicism diminishing as Ji-wook proves him wrong with each mini-victory.

Yeon-jae calls Hye-won out with a birthday cake, her good cheer contrasting with her friend’s heavy mood. In addition to worrying about Yeon-jae’s health, she’s weighed down by the work mess and tells Yeon-jae about the Seojin crisis. Hye-won expresses sympathy for Ji-wook’s burden as he runs around in damage control, heading to Wando alone.

Chairman Im’s endoscopy goes smoothly, and Eun-seok tells the worried family that the growth was removed successfully. He adds that if it had grown, Dad could have been in greater dancer — a fact that big bro ungraciously twists around on Sae-kyung, saying bitterly that it’s great that the problem she caused actually saved him from greater harm. And Daddy loves you too. God, why are you such an ass, spoiled little manboy?

Yeon-jae heads in for her next chemo session, preoccupied with the Seojin crisis and how Ji-wook is running himself ragged trying to fix things. By the time she sits with Eun-seok for their appointment, she has decided she can’t sit by without doing something about it, and asks to push her treatment back two days.

Eun-seok can’t approve the move, telling her that she’s not in a position to delay her sessions. But her mind’s made up, and Yeon-jae rushes out with an apology.

Despite her worries, Ji-wook is actually managing on his own quite well. He charms the Wando contacts, who are thrilled to receive him personally and pleased with the way the travel package showcases their highlights.

Yeon-jae pulls up while he’s out seeing the sights in person, and Ji-wook reacts to her arrival with pleasant surprise. She tells him teasingly that she came because she was afraid he’d give this his usual half-assed — daechoong — attention, and had to make sure her project was carried out properly.

They continue the tour together, from harvesting abalone to scoping out camping sites.

Sae-kyung hears about the chaos at Line Tour and how Ji-ook is trying to salvage the situation. She calls him to say that she’s sorry for the trouble and offers to tell her father the truth once his condition has improved. Ji-wook tells her that he anticipated fallout when he broke the engagement, letting her off the hook, but she says that she wants to repay the debt since he didn’t use her ex as an excuse to cry off.

Just then, Yeon-jae (who’s pitching their tent) cries out in pain after accidentally hitting herself with the hammer, and Sae-kyung narrows her eyes suspiciously. Is he there with Yeon-jae? All of a sudden her calm understanding dissipates and her jealousy rears its head, and she exclaims angrily about being passed over for a woman like that. Ji-wook tells her that it’s none of her concern, and ends the call.

That just makes Sae-kyung fume even more, and she remembers her last meeting with Yeon-jae, when the latter warned her of revenge. Uh-oh. This isn’t going to turn into some big misunderstanding, is it?

Ji-wook and Yeon-jae set up camp and sit together, enjoying the night air. Now that she knows that his actions brought the wrath of Seojin on his company, she hesitantly asks if he regrets breaking the engagement. Ji-wook says merely that if he hadn’t, he’d have even bigger regrets.

In a sharing mood, he tells her that after his mother died, he stopped caring about things: “I didn’t want anything, and nothing was interesting.” But since Dad provided everything, he figured that it made sense that he follow Dad’s orders, including marriage. “But I started thinking that I couldn’t live that way anymore. And the reason for that seems to be you.”

She doesn’t know how to take that — it’s touching, but also a lot to take on — so she nervously babbles that it’s time for her to leave. Hurrying through a muddled goodbye, she stands up to go. Ji-wook grabs her wrist and asks her to stay.

She stays, and they settle down to sleep, albeit separately: Ji-wook sits in his car and Yeon-jae takes the tent. But he’s bored, and keeps calling out to her using the littlest excuses to continue talking.

For instance, he tells her to zip up the tent tightly so bugs won’t get in, just in time for her to spot a beetle crawling across the floor. She shrieks and jumps, so Ji-wook races to the rescue and barges into the tent. Wrapping the teeny widdle bug in his jacket, he tosses the whole thing outside and hurriedly re-zips up the tent, both of them waiting for their racing hearts to calm down from the fright.

Ha. I suppose he couldn’t have asked for a better excuse to end up on the same side of that zipper. Especially since she’s more freaked than he is and tells him not to open the tent again, lest it come back. And you two city slickers are the ones planning a camping project? Isn’t that like a deaf man planning a concert?

With the danger (snerk) passed, Ji-wook’s attention takes a turn and he registers their closeness. He moves in close for a kiss that goes from vertical to horizontal…but hilariously, that sideways move collapses the tent and they roll around clumsily until they break free of the vinyl prison and start bickering about who built what badly and who didn’t help.

In the morning, Yeon-jae emerges from the tent wondering where Ji-wook went, then sees him appear at a distance with two bicycles. He comments about having seen her notes about the bike ride (which just happens to be in her bucket list – another item to check off).

He invites her to join him, although his face falls hilariously when she admits she doesn’t know how to ride.

I’m pretty sure their compromise makes up for that:

Then, it’s time to head home. On their drive back, Ji-wook pulls over at the side of the ride to take a quick look at the bluff, explaining that he’s looking for a particular hill. Most likely it’s the vision he had of the tree where he buried his time capsule with Mom, based on his earlier memory of it.

This isn’t the right spot, though, so he turns to head back. Yeon-jae follows behind him, so he misses seeing the flash of pain when she doubles over and clutches her stomach. He looks back and asks if she’s in pain, but she lies and tells him no.

But it’s not so easily dismissible, especially since she white-knuckles it the entire trip back. Ji-wook asks again about the pain, but she waves it off again, saying that it’s probably just a stomachache and that she’ll be fine soon.

Arriving at her house, she sends him off quickly, not wanting him to see her dealing with the pain that’s becoming harder to hide. They don’t see that Sae-kyung is parked in front, eyeing them with a death glare.

She waits until Ji-wook is gone before approaching Yeon-jae, who is leaning against the gate heavily, doubled over.

Sae-kyung practically breathes hatred as she asks Yeon-jae if this is the revenge she spoke of — stealing her man and wrecking her engagement.

 
COMMENTS

I can’t say I love this Seojin Juggernaut storyline any more than I liked the Wilson one, because it feels like a retread of the big guys bulldozing over our heroes out of snideness. I think there’s plenty of emotion and story to be mined out of the relationships and the resolution of how Yeon-jae lives out her remaining days that I’d rather see that be the focus of the drama, rather than more corporate assholery. Like Eun-seok’s conflict as he watches the woman he loves both finding another man AND dying. Ugh, just punch me in the stomach while you’re at it, will you?

Yeon-jae’s starting to feel pain, which means that the giddy, free-spirited days of Living (capital L) are winding to a close. Well, come to think of it, so are her days of living (lower-case L). With the drama halfway over, it’s probably about time this development showed itself, and it’s true that I wouldn’t want the drama to skimp too much on showing the cancer part, because as painful as that would be to watch, it gives her conflict stakes and heft. But now the ticking clock is really making itself heard, and it makes me nervous and sad.

On the upside, the onset of her symptoms makes it harder for Yeon-jae to keep her condition a secret. And while I do understand her reasons for wanting to keep it to herself — she doesn’t want to be treated like a Cancer Patient, and she wants to enjoy what remains of her life without being defined by illness — I do think it’s frustrating that she withholds it using the argument that they wouldn’t be able to handle the truth. It’s one of those staples of self-sacrificing, silently suffering K-drama heroines that drives me up a wall, because even if you’re right, you’ve stripped people of the ability to react, to prepare themselves, to say the things they want/need/hope to say before the ultimate goodbye. Yes, it’s your right to the kind of death you want, just as it’s your right to live the kind of life you want, and it’s your right to be selfish. And it’s my right to hate to the fiery death the kinds of heroines who use that line of thinking.

RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , ,

192

Required fields are marked *

Really like JW's cheeky expression when he said 'Shall we do it again?' The kiss on the bike is so sweet! :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Actually, I've been anticipating, with trepidation, JW's reaction to the news of the cancer.
Wouldn't he feel cheated that the woman that he has quickly learned to love is going to be just as quickly taken away from him?
And, will that give him an 'Eeyore" attitude of 'what's the use' and push him back to living life as dictated by father?
I hope not. I hope YJ's legacy to both men is for them to live life the way they each way.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really love the kissing scene.
I love seeing their lips getting attached.. And from the looks of the kissing scene.. Lee Dong Wook's lips are really soft. :D I also love seeing Lee Dong Wook's side viewed jaw.. It really has the shape which I like. :D

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Is it even possible to balance someone on the handlebars like that? Any physics people here?
On a random point, I REALLY REALLY want to pluck Sae-Kyung's eyebrows. Can't Miss Chaebol afford to get it done?

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I noticed that too. I was thinking, what's happened to the make-up/stylist people behind the scenes? They're not doing their job, lol.

Back to the actual episode... i thought the kiss scene in the tent was cute. Ji Wook sitting in the car talking to her in the tent was totally adorable, and then when he ran to the tent when he heard her screaming! How can you not fall in love with him!? I love the Doctor, but I am firmly a Ji Wook girl.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

The stylists are very sophisticated in their approach to "character dressing" just like set dressing.
Every detail is planned, down to the last unplucked eye brow hair.

All the things you SEE that you hate about her add to the amount of hate you FEEL for her. If you think she is beautiful, strong-willed but vulnerable, and annoying as all get out, they have done their jobs well.

Remember the horrible abominable snowman outfits for YJ in My Princess, and her short short short skirts? Gah!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Haha. I know. It might be deliberate but still, get some tweezers peeps! ;)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i wonder why people kept on saying she's selfish. is it just because she has cancer and she knows she's gonna die yet she still wanna date ji wook?

oh come on. everybody gonna die. sooner or later. duh

it's not like we can't love just because we thought we're nearing death. right?

what if he die first??

it's all in the future,babe.. and we never know what's future has stored for us

just saying

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

agree.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

True. How and why and what should she tell him? He didn't ask for her opinion before he cancelled the engagement, and told her it's for himself anyway.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

uhm ki joon has his own charisma in every potrait of his characters, i really love when he chased kim sun ah at the moment she left.. although lee dong wook has a-killing-me-softly sixpack body (i felt like being devoured by him somehow.. :D ), my heart will belong to dr poopy pants!! love ya!! :) hwaiting..

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

also when he wears the surgeon suit :)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

loved the way they love each other

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think I missed it...but can anyone tell me what episode Ji Wook saw Yeon Jae's diary/plan of things to do before dying? thanks!

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think you did not miss anything. My take is that JW referred to the trip proposal that YJ prepared (for business). He still does not know about the bucket list.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

in episode 10 JW see YJ bucket list

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

AGREE. I think so too!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

They kissed?? Omona... *swoon

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

now i'm so jealous of yeon jae. i feel like crying. imagine, kissing those succulent lips of wookie? my gosh, lucky girl.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Has anyone noticed SOAW's focus on hands?

It was particularly noticeable in Episode 9.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

It's all about the hands with LDW, yes.
Just watch the Tango scene and see how he manipulates her for his own need. She lets him, because she can't believe how much passion is coming off him, and is completely shocked.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

“There are times when I think my father has even picked out the coffin I’ll lie in when I die. I felt suffocated to death, but I always did as he wanted."

Whoa! This boy is in some serious pain, no wonder he reacted so strongly to the "Milss Lee" that wanted him to wake up and enjoy the world.

Before he met her, he was living in a dark dark room windows heavily curtained, with his hands tied behind his back. But Miss Lee poked some holes and let in just enough light for him to want more. Later meetings with her showed him how to untie his own hands and how easy it is to completely flood his world with light, and to drive away all the shadows.

I know we want to focus on the Cancer and the ticking clock. I don't think the writers are building the story about her dying, hajiman, it is around>/i> her dying. I guess what I am trying to say is her dying is an unchanging fact; but not the most important thing to focus on. She is focusing on LIVING, being in love, having a normal live despite the cancer.

I agree with those who think she shouldn't be telling her mother, because once that happens, YJ'll spend all of her energy comforting the mom, and YJ knows it. I don't think YJ is going to try to keep her cancer a secret from JW for much longer. It would be physically impossible, since we know she has to disappear for days to get treatment at the hospital. I suspect the first step will be to tell him that she is sick, and once that settles in, that she is dying, but later.

Meanwhile, JW is still working through his own "learning to live in the light" issues. He is responsible for finding his own happiness. Will he be angry when he finds out her time is limited with her? Sure, but not AT YJ. How is it her fault? If he decides to go all "Poor me, how come just when I decide to be happy, someone takes away my new favorite toy?" he is a big JERK. I am hoping he understands that the limited time they have together is a gift worth treasuring, and not the opposite.

PS I LOVE the SK character, btw. She is the exact opposite of YJ. Spoiled, selfish, impulsive, and NOT HAPPY. We see how NOT to live your life as if every day were your last, and how that "freedom" will corrupt. By comparison, we see that YJ won't end up that way.
I love her flowey Greek tragedy costumes, her annoying screw (you) curl, and her f/u, "I am NOT tweezing my brows cause it hurts" face. Her willingness to believe YJ is doing what she is doing with JW to get back at HER is so ridiculously self-centered that it is sad sad.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm kind of starting to love Sae Kyung, too. I like how we've gotten some background about her character, and I'd like some more.

She actually has something in common with Ji Wook: both first come off as these people who aren't very connected to others--Sae Kyung because she's so invested in her job and just bosses people around and Ji Wook because he was so detached from everything. But as the show went on we discovered how passionate they are/were, Sae Kyung with her douchey ex and her relationship with her father (how she feels responsible for him and indebted to him for "making him suffer" in the past, even though she was the one who was suffering so much as to attempt suicide) and Ji Wook with his mother and how tightly he hugged Yeon Jae once he decided to reject the plans his father has for him (it was this really intense outpouring of emotion. I was like, woah, Wookie, calm down. Let's not crush the girl). And they both have had these incredibly close experiences with death, and now they'll have to handle it again, with Yeon Jae. And Sae Kyung's willingness to believe Yeon Jae is as petty and vindictive as she is is, as you said, really sad. It's like she can't even conceive of a world where people aren't resentful and spiteful of one another (which is also why she's so flabbergasted that Ji Wook didn't use her past against her.) It shows how weak she really is, even though she acts like someone invincible. She actually so vulnerable that she is floored when someone is kind to her--ironically the complete opposite of Yeon Jae, who even though she has cancer, expects others to treat her with respect and kindness, the way she treats them. Yeon Jae is the strong one and Sae Kyung is the sad sad weak one. And I love the development of her wanting to keep hold of Ji Wook, not simply because she can, not just to be petty, but because she's seen something good in him, something she's probably contrasting to how her horrible ex acted, and she wants to hold on to that. So she and Yeon Jae kind of both want the same thing--someone to love whom they can trust. It's fascinating.

Ugh. This show is so much more than I expected, and I love it! And yes, her outfits could have a show of their own.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

love reading your comments ladida and jomo. love dramabeans for the recaps and being a 'home' for comments like these!!!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i love your analysis!

“There are times when I think my father has even picked out the coffin I’ll lie in when I die."

This is so funny and so sad at the same time! @_@

i thought there was a good opportunity for YJ to tell JW about her cancer when JW shared with her about his mom.

Truth hurts, but i'll rather have it. i hope she will tell him in the next episode. Then we can see how the story unfolds as they work it out together.

"Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away." (James 4:14)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

"Will he be angry when he finds out her time is limited with her? Sure, but not AT YJ. How is it her fault? If he decides to go all “Poor me, how come just when I decide to be happy, someone takes away my new favorite toy?” he is a big JERK. I am hoping he understands that the limited time they have together is a gift worth treasuring, and not the opposite."

'...my love for you is etched forever in my memory,
now i realize that life goes on
even though you're not here with me
i wake up looking forward to another day
a day of living without you...'
- Another Day, Buckshot Lefonque
(Ji-wook's ringtone)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I wish YeonJae would tell JiWook about it. the cancer I mean. I feel that it's really unfair to him. I can't stand to watch his heart getting crushed when she dies TT

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Sae Kyung thinks the world revolves around her.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yeon jae and Ji wook's bike ride was very sweet and romantic. Makes a girl smile :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh, how I love this drama! I went on vacation (to a wedding, really) in the Caribbean last weekend and could not wait to get back to catch up. (A bit sad, I know).

I just love Kim Sun Ah and believe she's my favorite K-drama actress. She's been the only one (so far in my limited k-drama viewing) to make me become engrossed in the her characters.

I daresay other female actors should learn from Sun Ah the proper way to kiss the male lead on screen. I'm disappointed that we didn't see too much of the kiss in the tent, but from the bit that we did see, it was hot!!! -- not the virginal teenage pecks I see in all non-Sun Ah dramas. I continue to rave and recommend City Hall on the basis of her kiss with Cha Seung Won alone. *Swoon*

I also love the lead in this drama. I didn't think she'd have as good a chemistry with other leads as she did with Cha (their chemistry was sizzling!), but I like these two together, too. I think Sun Ah's chemistry with her leads is a reflection of her greatness as an actor and person.

Again on the lead---my God!!! He's got to have the most luscious lips I've seen yet from a K-drama leading man! Hot damn!..and his eyes?! The way he looks longingly on just makes me want to be the object of his affection...

OK. I'm off to a shower now.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm trying to be good and only watch the fully subbed version this time, but this delayed gratification sure is hard....

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hmm... the 2 kisses now are either "hilarious" or "sweet", I am looking forward to a HOT one. Ha!
Btw, the bike ride is kinda mission impossible... I can see LDW pretty nervous during the shoot. Anyway, good try! (I thought it would end up to be another hilarious kiss, maybe knock into something.) I guess there'd be a lot of Korean couples falling off their bikes soon. Lol!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just watched ep. 10.

Get ready.

You all will have to excuse me now. I need to crawl back into bed and hide under the covers, along with my economy-sized box of tissues.

This show delights in stomping my heart into flat, little pieces.
:(

0
6
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just read the live subs for episode 10...

someone please hold me.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think my face was wet with tears more than not during this episode. Great ending.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I know. Read the live subs looking through my fingers, and now I know I'm gonna be crying when I watch it.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

They are putting us all through the Debra Winger!

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Make it stop, I cannae cope....

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

OMG! You are SO right!
I have the really unhappy feeling that it's going to be a semi-reinactment of Stairway To Heaven. She (CJW) died in his arms, I think. I dunno, by the time she closed her eyes and breathed her last I had almost passed out from the gut-wretching sobbing I was doing and couldn't see the screen...
:(

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ji-wook: “There are times when I think my father has even picked out the coffin I’ll lie in when I die. I felt suffocated to death, but I always did as he wanted. But I can’t any longer. I’ve begun to want to live a life of my own, rather than my father’s. Live your own life, too.” woow. Am i the only one stricked by this. This drama is really smth.. Thank You dramabeans!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah! I admire the character's courage to say this.
From the beginning like he said he was indifferent. Now he cares! Hurray XD

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

"He adds that if it had grown, Dad could have been in greater dancer-"

yeah typo there. at first i was like, whattt? dancer?
then i realized it's supposed to be danger.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I keep having to go back and confirm this is Kim Sun Ah in this drama after re-watching My Lovely Sam Soon. She's an amazing actress and her appearance has changed so much (no doubt considering the weight loss).

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I am such a romantic, I am totally loving this show!!!!
I am considered a ahjumma or how ever u spell it... a lot older than majority of the people here, but I can still enjoy a good love story that makes my heart swell and brings tears to my eyes. Soooo loving this show. Takes me away from my hum drum life. U.S. needs more shows like this.
Luv the recap DB cause sometimes the eng subs on certain sites don't make sense. LUV U DB :D.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

And the Eng subs are there.... gulp... .right, headphones on, nobody in sight to witness my blubbering... here I go...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Can’t believe that I just sat here and read all the posts . . . . Good thoughts and concerns!

Only familiar with KSA in this one, but have come to appreciate all the cast and the way the story is developing. You understand her choices here and want her to make her own choices how she handles it. She should not tell, she should. She should not tell, she should. She should not tell, she should. That one swings both ways, and we are taken along for the ride on the edge of our seats.

My desired resolution? Sae Kyung to find a man whole without its cover, fall in and never be seen again and really, missed?. Too simple?? Eun-seok to grow a set, and come out of his shell and find life more fulfilling. To much to ask for?? Ji-wook and Yeon-jae to have the expected bumps on the road that this situation causes, to resolve them, grown stronger and closer and help each other whether for this limited amount of time, or for a forever amount!! Hoping for too much???????

I am caught on this one, hook line and sinker. Watch it raw, run here for your ever so great recaps them do a happy dance when the English subs come out and I can watch it again. Yeah!!!!

One comment that sort of hit a discord with me: “And you two city slickers are the ones planning a camping project? Isn’t that like a deaf man planning a concert? “ One word comes to mind, Beethoven? He wrote the majority of his final work while going deaf, and his 9th Symphony (which is considered his greatest) when he was totally deaf . . . .

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

ok , that bicycle ride scene was just epic , totally genuine.........how much more I can love you , show?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

this was one of the worst episode for me which I almost slept through. I was starting to like SOAW after I saw 6 and this episode made me start to want to quit this drama. It was soo boring for the most part and I only liked the bike scene. Everything else, was ehhh.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

they have so much chemistry together......sigh! the tears are going to fall soon =(

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

it's so funny.....when JW asks JY to be careful if something gets into the tent - he actually refers to himself. And when he asks if JY wants to "start over again", he meant the kiss.

So lovely and adorable!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

SK's ex is a lying deceiving jerk. He only wanted to get money through her. I dont wish for someone to be with him, even its a pretentious brat like Sk.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *