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Oh My Ghostess: Episode 7

I love it I love it I love it. I was thoroughly enjoying this show already, but today’s episode takes everything to that perfect place—perfect in its balance of funny and heartfelt, heightening of stakes, growth of feelings, and approach to the conflict. As much as I loved the characters and feeling behind the show, there were little sticking points that kept niggling at me (mostly about the ghost-possession), which I mentioned in previous recaps. But I’m happy to report that with this week, I’ve hit that point where I’m ready to throw myself into the show fully and trust that it’s going to good narrative places.

 
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EPISODE 7 RECAP

The medium unni tracks down Soon-ae in Bong-sun’s body, and Soon-ae runs for it. She somehow runs out of the body and her spirit self leaps into a passing bus, leaving Bong-sun confused to find herself in the middle of a sidewalk.

She runs into Sun-woo, though, who’s here to meet her for their not-quite-date and mock-scolds her for making him wait. She stammers an “I’m sorry,” which makes him note that Depressed Bong-sun is back, and she goes with that explanation.

Since the last thing Bong-sun remembers was the cooking show, she asks how the spilled flour problem worked out. Sun-woo thinks she’s angling for praise at how well she fixed things, and throws in some cooking tips while he’s at it. Then he instructs her to look up directions to the restaurant on her phone, and she’s startled to see that her wallpaper has been changed to the cozy selfie she took with him.

Soon-ae disembarks from the bus and looks around carefully for signs of the medium. She relaxes just as the medium swoops in from behind and grabs her, looking like a crazy person to the rest of the bystanders who can’t see the ghost she’s dragging.

At the restaurant, Sun-woo tells Bong-sun that food is like music and art—it’s about more than just eating. He has her taste the food and teaches her about various properties of ingredients, and she takes in his tips attentively.

As they leave, Bong-sun stumbles and he tells her to build up her endurance, chiding her for shrinking back and giving off the impression that she’s weak. It’s why the other cooks call her “Bong,” which is on one hand a simple shortening of her name, but on the other hand another word for a pushover. He tells her to speak up more and not let them get away with that… and then tosses out, “Let’s go, Bong.” She double-takes, and he quips, “It’s okay for me. Only me.”

Bong-sun pauses to watch a street musician singing and playing guitar, enjoying the song. Sun-woo grumps that it’s no big deal and calls her away, though she’s loath to leave, lingering to hear more.

The medium unni takes Soon-ae back home, binding her with some kind of spiritual rope, ignoring Soon-ae’s whining for freedom. Soon-ae insists she’s on the verge of resolving her lingering grudge, so all unni has to do is let her do the last step. Unni perks up to hear that Soon-ae has found a man whose yang energy can withstand her yin, but when she hears who it is, she puts her foot down. No way, no how.

Her argument is that Sun-woo’s mother is her client and friend, but Soon-ae guesses it’s more that she’s taken lots of Mom’s money. She’s not moved by that argument, but Unni grows serious and offers to send Soon-ae onward with a spiritual rite that will move her forward to her heavenly afterlife.

But Soon-ae tenses up in fear at the mention of those rites, having heard how painful they are—they supposedly cause pain that feels like your skin is being ripped apart. Unni says it’s only for a moment, but Soon-ae refuses.

Sun-woo and Bong-sun arrive back at the restaurant, and she bids him a good night. He says he’s not sure if that’s possible since she might switch to her manic side and pounce on him, though really, at this point I think he’d be disappointed if she didn’t.

The screen splits as they head into their respective rooms, and the first thing Sun-woo does is reach for his guitar. Ha! I knew we couldn’t have a Jo Jung-seok drama without a serenade of some sort. He starts playing, acting like it’s not a big deal while totally showing off for his audience on the other side of the wall, and starts to sing. (The song is titled “Sweet Chocolate,” and was written by Jo Jung-seok himself.)

Bong-sun perks up to hear him, moving close to the wall to listen better, totally impressed.

In the morning, Sun-woo wakes her up early insisting on starting an exercise regimen. You know, for her health and cooking endurance, like a good teacher would do. Suuure.

But he’s agog to hear that she never learned how to ride a bicycle, and it’s hilarious how he finds every opportunity to show off, literally riding his bike in circles in front of her. Doubly hilarious is how his bragging would impress nobody else, but lucky for him that it works on her.

Sun-woo proceeds to teach her how to ride, though not successfully, and ends up with a sore arm when she starts to fall and he leaps forward to break her impact.

Stopping at the vending machines for a drink, Sun-woo’s just a bit short to buy two cans. He feels under the machine and comes up with one coin, but they’re still short, and as he’s suggesting they split one can, Bong-sun fiddles with the coin return knob and finds what they need. And of course, Sun-woo finds a way to make this his doing: “Well, when the teacher is quick, so is the student.”

They return to their parked bikes just in time to see a thief making off with one of the seats, and Sun-woo runs after him, chasing him through the neighborhood. Bong-sun runs too but fades quicker, and goes in the other direction to intercept the thief from the other side. She clings madly to the thief’s leg, wailing, “I’m sorry! I’m really sorry!” He yelps, “If you’re sorry, let go!”

But instead, Bong-sun chomps down on his calf, just long enough for Sun-woo to catch up.

They hand over the culprit to the police, who have been after him for a while for a number of neighborhood thefts. I love how proud Sun-woo is of Bong-sun as he explains to Officer Sung-jae how she caught the guy, while she protests modestly that she only bit him a little.

As Sun-woo and Bong-sun head off together, Sung-jae and his partner wonder at how surprisingly friendly the fussy chef is with his employee—it’s certainly new behavior for Sun-woo.

Sun-woo invites Bong-sun to eat some of his favorite cake with him, and she shyly accepts. He looks down at her fondly and notes that she’s smiling a lot today and how much better that is than constantly shrinking back. “I really like today’s Na Bong-sun,” he declares, making her feel even giddier as he ruffles her hair affectionately.

That’s when So-hyung arrives, awkwardly noticing that he’s eating the same cake she brought for him. Sun-woo explains about Bong-sun’s living situation, and explains so thoroughly that she says it sounds like he’s making excuses. She teases that he’s usually not like this.

Still, to others it looks like Sun-woo and So-hyung are the two flirting with romance, and when his assistants arrive for work, they immediately make excuses to leave them to some privacy, not really buying the couple’s protests that they’re not together.

Medium Unni insists on performing that rite to send Soon-ae on to the next realm, grimly dragging her along while Soon-ae begs to be allowed to do things her way. She’s legitimately terrified and on the verge of tears, but Unni reminds her of the consequences of failing to resolve her grudge—she only has a few months left before she hits the third year anniversary of her death, and becomes a malevolent ghost.

Unni begins the ceremony, chanting in front of an altar where Soon-ae sits, bound by ropes, wailing that she doesn’t want to go this way. She gets so worked up that for a brief flash, black wisps start to emanate from her body, and that pent-up force sends parts of the altar flying. Then the black cloud dissipates and Soon-ae returns to normal.

Seeing Sun-woo so cozy with his assistant weighs on So-hyung’s mind, so when her flirty married sunbae suggests setting her up on a date, she considers it. She’s not inclined to go but isn’t very convincing when she says it’s not because of Sun-woo, who’s just a friend.

At the restaurant, sous chef Min-soo is being his usual pushy self with the other assistants, pressuring them to go drinking after work, and accidentally nicks his knife. Worse yet, he hadn’t realized he’d been using Sun-woo’s knife, and they all know how much he hates that.

So Min-soo madly sharpens the blade before Sun-woo gets there, preferring to be on the hook for that minor offense rather than the bigger one of damaging it.

So-hyung calls Sun-woo under the pretense of talking about the cooking show, then brings up the potential blind date, asking if she should agree or not. Sun-woo hesitates before saying she should do it, and she’s disappointed with his answer.

Soon-ae’s outburst during the rites caused something to scratch Unni’s face, and she apologizes contritely for getting too worked up. But Unni has bigger concerns, having identified that black smoke as Soon-ae’s malevolent energy. It’s starting to grow within her as her deadline approaches, and when she got upset it flared out of control.

That night, Sun-woo gives Bong-sun another cooking lesson, this time with salts and seasonings. When he pats her head, Bong-sun smiles to herself, while Sun-woo smiles to himself as he watches her working her way through the tastings. They are freaking adorable, in the way it makes them so obviously happy to be in each other’s presence. Then he caps off the lesson with a cup of tea to soothe her taste buds, and the thoughtfulness gives her another thrill of pleasure.

As she leaves the restaurant, Officer Sung-jae comes by and offers to buy a late snack. She starts to decline politely, but he overrides her with friendly insistence, telling her where to meet him.

With Bong-sun back in her body, Soon-ae’s family wonders why they haven’t seen her around lately. It’s mostly little bro Kyung-mo who’s cranky at her lack of response to his calls and texts, which Dad laughs about since it’s obvious Kyung-mo wants to see her. But they’re both bewildered when Bong-sun walks right by them without noticing, and when Kyung-mo stops her, she just says, “I think you have the wrong person.”

Kyung-mo finds her behavior insulting, sure that she’s acting. Even Dad is confused, wondering at the drastic change.

Bong-sun and Sung-jae sit down at a pojangmacha, and he notes that she seems different every time he sees her. She gives a vague explanation about being moody, and he prods a little before backing off and saying that he’s just worried about her, because there was something in her vibe that one dawn when he’d run into her—she seemed on the verge.

“I’ve experienced that moment in my life a few times too,” he explains. Something in his manner gets Bong-sun to start confiding, but she cuts herself off.

At home, Sun-woo listens for sounds of Bong-sun through their shared wall, wondering why it’s so quiet. Then Mom calls saying that she’s sick, so the next morning Sun-woo drops by her house… where he finds her hearty and hale, of course, since she just lied to get him to come over for family time.

Sun-woo practically rolls his eyes when Mom starts in on all the spiritual warnings again, telling him to beware of water this year. She wonders if he’s wearing the talisman underwear she bought him (LOL), and starts fishing around his waistband to check for herself. Sun-woo fends her off, and she exclaims, “If that’s so unfair, you can see mine too.” Sun-woo: “NO!” And then Mom literally chases him around the living room and over couches.

Soon-ae is understandably dismayed at the signs of her impending future as a malevolent ghost, and tells Unni that she’s scared. While Unni rummages around her kitchen, Soon-ae glances at the door, seeing her opening to escape. But this time, Unni doesn’t go after her, feeling overcome with pity for Soon-ae’s fate and wishing for her to solve her grudge soon.

Dinner service at the restaurant is a muted affair, with Sun-woo in a withdrawn mood. When the camera pulls out, we understand why: So-hyung is here with her blind date. The staff wonders at it, having been convinced she was in some kind of relationship with Sun-woo.

So-hyung finds Sun-woo to ask what he thinks of her date, hoping for some kind of reaction. Bong-sun hangs back, overhearing as Sun-woo finds positive things to say about the guy and suggests that she keep dating him if she likes him.

But So-hyung’s disappointed at the reply, asking if he really feels nothing to see her on the date. She even admits that it upsets her—because it means she’s alone in being bothered by it. Okay, finally a straight word out of one of them, even if Sun-woo doesn’t do anything with it. But So-hyung does cut her date short, knowing she’s not interested in pursuing something.

After slipping away from Unni, Soon-ae heads back to the restaurant, telling herself she can solve her problem her own way. She bounds up to Bong-sun, who yelps in alarm and tries to avoid her, to no avail—Soon-ae keeps hounding her, sorta asking for permission to possess her and sorta diving for the body anyway.

She tells Bong-sun how important this is and how she has very little time and needs to avoid turning into a bad ghost, but every time she lurches for the body, Bong-sun skitters away.

In her hurry to evade the ghost, Bong-sun knocks into her desk and causes a notebook to fall, and Soon-ae sees the clippings that fall out—they’re all about Sun-woo. The ensuing exchange is hilarious, as Bong-sun clocks Soon-ae’s interest:

Bong-sun: “It’s not!”
Soon-ae: “What’s not?”
Bong-sun “…everything! It’s just not.”
Soon-ae:It is? REALLY?”

But it makes sense for Soon-ae, who now appeals to Bong-sun to make a deal. Bong-sun listens warily as Soon-ae argues a pretty decent case for possessing her body: She’ll make the chef Bong-sun’s man, and seduce him for her. Bong-sun isn’t going to be able to make progress on her own, but Soon-ae is totally fine being pushy and making all the advances. In the end, Bong-sun will win Sun-woo over, and Soon-ae will get to resolve her grudge. She adds that Bong-sun could lose the chef to So-hyung if she doesn’t do anything.

Bong-sun seems to find this tempting, but she shakes it aside firmly, saying she doesn’t want Sun-woo that way. Soon-ae complains that she’s way too conservative, but doesn’t keep chasing her.

Instead, she finds her father out for a walk and accompanies him up the hill, though of course he can’t see her, or hear her wondering about her fate.

The cooking lesson tonight involves knife skills, and Sun-woo corrects Bong-sun’s grip and shows her how to trim tomatoes properly. He has her hold his hand as he goes through the motion, and she thrills at the touch, holding her hand close afterward.

Sun-woo finds So-hyung outside the restaurant, swaying drunkenly. She admits she drank alone because she was feeling peeved, and asks again if he truly feels nothing to see her with another man. She even admits, “Watching you with your nobody assistant makes me jealous.”

They don’t see that the front door opens, and Bong-sun overhears as So-hyung wonders why she’s feeling this way all of a sudden, and asks Sun-woo if she was really only a friend to him. Then she kisses him impulsively, though she’s immediately mortified. Sun-woo’s stunned, and Bong-sun whirls back inside in shock.

Meanwhile, Soon-ae drinks funeral liquor with her ghost friend, sighing over her predicament. The friend urges her to just go for it and seduce Sun-woo, but Soon-ae doesn’t see a way to do it when she can’t possess the woman he likes, and the woman she can possess won’t allow her.

Soon-ae wonders if she may have to give up, sighing that she really did want to try “it” once: “The thing that’s so easy for others, why is it so hard for me?” Her friend suggests that she go through with that passing rite, which is better than turning into a bad ghost, although they both wince to think of the excruciating pain involved.

Reeling from the kiss she witnessed, Bong-sun thinks back to all her encounters with him, like his lessons in cooking and his serenade. Finally it prompts a decision, and she gets up with determination, looking for Soon-ae.

She can’t find her in the restaurant, so she heads out into the neighborhood (cutely yelling, “Hey, Ghost!”) until she comes across her in the street. Soon-ae makes a few digs at Bong-sun for being a conservative stick-in-the-mud, but Bong-sun looks her in the eye and says decisively, “I’ll allow it. I’ll let you come into my body.”

Soon-ae’s eyes widen, and Bong-sun asks, “Make Chef-nim mine.”

 
COMMENTS

Yesss, they make a deal! It’s what I wanted from the outset, though it makes sense that Bong-sun needed time (and the proper impetus) to make her amenable to the idea. We needed to advance the developments between her and Sun-woo enough, so that she feels a relationship may be within her reach after all. By now she’s had enough encouragement from him that rather than shrinking back and keeping all the feelings bottled inside in silence, as was her wont, she’s willing to go for it.

The irony, of course, is that Sun-woo’s already halfway in love with her and Bong-sun doesn’t expressly need Soon-ae’s help—their rapport in today’s episode felt so sweet and natural that one could imagine life taking its course and leading them together eventually. It might take longer that way, but I could certainly believe they’re well on their way.

But that’s the kind of dramatic irony that enhances this situation for us, since we know things they don’t know about themselves and have to just sit back and watch them take the long way around. Sometimes being the omniscient viewer is just frustrating, but sometimes that frustration is part of the eventual payoff. I much prefer when it’s the latter, and I’m glad that Oh My Ghostess lets me enjoy the tease.

I’m relieved that we’re starting to see more of Bong-sun’s true personality peeking out, the one that was buried under layers of stress and fear. It’s a little like she was living in a permanent state of PTSD that kept her personality stuck behind a wall of defense, and now the fear has been relaxed and she’s emerging from her bunker. It feels like watching someone wake from a stupor, proving that there’s more to her than everyone could see before. It’s gratifying to see her enjoying herself, even showing flashes of sass. How much did I die laughing when she kept apologizing while she was chasing the thief, and then bit his leg? And Sun-woo’s proud reaction to her gumption was just the cherry on top.

Soon-ae does have a point in that she’s the impetus behind all this recent progress, because while she didn’t create Bong-sun’s and Sun-woo’s interest in each other out of thin air, it’s probable they wouldn’t have sparked without her actions. I’m still not sure how you’d parse Sun-woo’s interest in Bong-sun—exactly what percentage is Bong-sun, and how much is Soon-ae?—but the beauty of today’s episode is that it’s no longer a pivotal question. At least for me, because seeing Bong-sun for herself only feeds his interest. I loved his line about how he really likes her today, because she needs to know (okay, I need to know) that his affection isn’t based entirely on false assumptions.

One crucial point about this deal between ghost and host is that Soon-ae’s showing greater respect for the body, and I really love that. I didn’t mind that she hijacked bodies before, because I had faith that she’d grow and become more aware and respectful of the host, and she didn’t fail us. Even while she was chasing Bong-sun around half-asking, half-demanding her body, she backed off when Bong-sun gave her a final decision. She was even ready to give up her whole mission because she accepted Bong-sun’s answer, and wasn’t going to override it anyway.

Because the show put the decision to be possessed into Bong-sun’s hands, now I can face the rest of the show without qualms, without feeling uneasy about the drama steamrollering right over the issue of a person’s agency. The best ghost-possession dramas make it a point to address that issue, and to allow agency for all souls involved, which is really the most (only?) satisfactory way to go. (See also: Who Are You, the Yoon Kye-sang version.)

And to balance out all that sweetness and humor (Mom chasing Sun-woo around yelling about underwear was a particular highlight), we also got a bit more serious with Soon-ae’s ticking clock growing louder and more ominous. I suppose you could dismiss her dilemma since a simple ceremony is apparently enough to end her wandering ghost days—why all the fuss when there’s an answer? But I see it as akin to facing an execution, even though we’re told that she’d be moving on to a better place. Just because we may believe in a heaven after earth doesn’t mean we could face an excruciating death without second thoughts, right? Not when you hear that having sex would accomplish the same goal, certainly. Is that even much of a choice? SEX, PLZ.

So Soon-ae’s insistence on moving on the painless way is, at the very least, understandable and sympathetic. The problem is, in going after the easiest solution, she might fail and have to face the worst possible fate, and then it’ll be too late to take Painful Door No. 2 as an alternate exit route. Kim Seul-gi played Soon-ae’s fear particularly well—it’s enough to give you goosebumps—and there’s nothing like hearing that you’re slowly turning evil to kick the desperation into high gear.

Lucky for us, desperation comes hand-in-hand with identity confusion, romantic hijinks, and tons of hilarity. I’ve got my laughs ready to go.

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i dunno, i was actually quite disappointed when bong-sun decided to let soon-ae seduce the Chef for her. i can't root for a heroine who doesn't use honest means to win over her drama love lol, and it just seems counter-productive to her character development if she's willing to begin a relationship that's based on someone else taking charge of her body and actions for her. how is Chef supposed to fall for the real bong-sun if all he's ever going to see is soon-ae?

the moments between bong-sun and Chef were SO adorable though, i was dying from the cute the entire way through. hopefully the next episode somehow relieves my worries - i really want to like this drama wholeheartedly, but there's always something nagging at me in the back of my mind whenever i watch it. =__=

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At least its a mutual decision. I'm sure we'll have more of those cute Bong and Chef moments =D

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i think this is exactly the resolution i was looking for- that the girls partner up and help each other along. yes, my worries about who he'll be falling for aren't completely dissipated, but i felt a lot more at ease after this episode.
i actually think it's not out of character for bong-sun to ask seon-ae to possess her body in order to make sun-woo "her man"- her real personality i think, has been buried under all the exhaustion and trauma of always seeing ghosts, and tasting the happiness of having someone that she's liked for so long treat her so well, "waking up" to find that their relationship has magically progressed into a place she's probably dreamed of for ages, has made her want more of it. jealousy is such a human emotion, and i believe it in bong-sun.
it's a little sad that she doesn't quite believe that she could charm him with her own personality, even after being told by sun-woo that he likes her very much today as she is, not too timid or too overboard, but that's also true to her character.
i'm looking forward to her coming out of her shell bit by bit with seon-ae's help. even though their personalities seem so jarringly different that she's been diagnosed as manic-depressive and that fits as an explanation for sun-woo at the moment, i feel like it won't be so much seon-ae creating a whole new personality for bong-sun to live in, but seon-ae creating opportunities for bong-sun to become who she truly is. i like how sun-woo is like this too- his bragging and self-confidence is in a way, compensating for how he was in the past, but you get the sense that he is still himself and very naturally so, despite how different he was as a kid. he changed, yes, but i feel like being bullied hid his brighter personality, which reappeared again after moving on from the trauma.

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I like your comparison of how chef and BS both hid their real personality unwillingly because of their past trauma and when they are around each other , they are really themselves. Look at history, how many people have sold their soul for things they desperately want/need whether it's is love or money, what's wrong with a girl needing a little help to nudge the relationships into the right path a little faster?

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I think we should chill out about the consent vs. non consent thing and just enjoy the show for what it is. I mean when you read the descriptions for the show, did you really expect a ghost going around gathering consent then possessing only people who agree to be possessed? That's why she is a ghost aka non human being. Can't have the same standard and expectation. Like javabeans said, we should trust the narrative and writer to let us arrive at a plot line that makes sense, again it is a show, dont read into it too much, yet.

Anyone notice the random showing of the dog at the most weird moment? Like when Songae was making out with chef and then when she was taking to bong sun? Seems random but repetitive enough to be intentional. Lastly, isn't it hilarious that Songae was like, it is your responsibility as A Seoul resident to help me and Bong sun was like, technically I'm not a resident and from choongsun . Ha

One more thought, chef is falling for Bongsun because she always look up to him and he feels so cool to be around her. Versus Songhuyn who is strong and independent (nothing is wrong with that) and he just can't wow her like he did to BS. He probably never got a chance to be marveled at and admired in high school so he enjoys being that way with BS. That's the whole point of being in love, you want to impress the other person and need to feel good about yourself first before you can do that. He is probably just a little more reserved around Songhuyn. Besides, it was always a one sided crush so I don't feel surprised when he gets over her quickly.

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Also the subtle moments of when chef wanted to be cool and give out his autograph (when he was biking and when they were eating together) but none of the people actually want his autograph lol.

BS acts like she would be the girl lining up to get his autograph, and what do we know, she has a scrap book of his photos and articles , so cute. And I think that's a great job on the writer's part to drop hints along the way for us. If chef didn't experience what he did in highschool and if BS didn't have the little changes that she has shown, their relationship could be very different to watch and root for..

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I think the challenge around ghosty morals arises because there has been a lot of emphasis on good ghost vs bad ghost in the plot line. We want our ghosty heroine to really good, which is why the consent aspect jars.

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Oh man i just watched the next ep raw huhu and i can't find anyone to discuss it with.. Hope the recap will be up soon, i'm so menbong haha

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I watched it raw too just now and I know I can't discuss it with anyone here yet either. It's a great episode so hope everyone enjoys it as much as I did when I watched. :D I can always comment at Soompi... but for some reason I like community here better for commenting:)

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Are we certain that SA isn't in a coma somewhere?

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Seems like she's really dead... Not sure how one becomes an evil spirit in a coma.

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No, No voluntary possession! NO!

Thanks for the recap!

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i also agree with what someone else wrote about the drunken confession and kiss- like, i can understand it and sympathize with it. it makes sense, because the chemistry and the missed timing between the two of them has already been illustrated, though i thought so-hyung did a better job at hiding it. presumably, the guilt from the death of their friend from a mysterious accident has held both of them back from acting on their attraction......and this all makes sense in terms of the story, i buy it. and yet i didn't like it- not because i have a problem with drinking in dramas or the woman confessing first, obviously, but because it felt a bit unnecessary. disappointing, standard. strange, because he's clearly startled and shaken, but already you see his interest waning. although i guess maybe it could be attributed to the fact that he's falling for bong-sun/soon-ae and not just bc of her advances. and now she will transform into the standard second lead, all jealousy and bitterness and backstabbing. i kind of liked her character though. successful career woman, a bit oblivious, no-nonsense. didn't want to see her be this way. men and women can be friends too.....
i admit that i do like complicated love triangles, squares, etc. and all the ensuing jealousy (both petty/comedic and angsty), but at the same time, depictions of healthy, thriving relationships between women that are not based on men at all would be nice. the bechdel test, i think it was called? yes.

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I too also don't like it when people tend to get drunk in kdramas when they're feeling down, angry, or even push the plot forward. Seeing people resort to alcohol all the time on TV isn't healthy for younger generation and i think this is part of the reason why Korea is known to have such a drinking culture.

Most dramas do highlight the consequences of drinking by remembering your own embarrassing behaviour and regretting getting drunk but very few dramas out there highlight the health consequences from drinking. It's a good thing that this drama did with the dad. Cirrhosis of the liver is quite a serious issue and health problem. Many alcohol addicts die from this.

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Javabean's intro section for Healer episode 5:

"I didn’t expect to love any show for a while, and not this show specifically, but I TOTALLY LOVE THIS SHOW. What a great episode for all of the things that make this show so enjoyable—the action, the intrigue, the hilarious comic relief, the budding romance, and relationship development. What’s extra exciting for me is seeing that this isn’t just a love story about a cold-hearted guy having his heart melted by a nice Candy, but that it’s more about being fundamentally human than about falling in love. You can see the Healer having moments of realization and learning, and having his eyes opened in a new way, which make this (among other things) a story of damaged people in arrested development finding ways to move past their stunted pasts, coming of age and into themselves."

And her intro section for this drama (ep 7):

"I love it I love it I love it. I was thoroughly enjoying this show already, but today’s episode takes everything to that perfect place—perfect in its balance of funny and heartfelt, heightening of stakes, growth of feelings, and approach to the conflict. As much as I loved the characters and feeling behind the show, there were little sticking points that kept niggling at me (mostly about the ghost-possession), which I mentioned in previous recaps. But I’m happy to report that with this week, I’ve hit that point where I’m ready to throw myself into the show fully and trust that it’s going to good narrative places."

I totally love it when JB squee for a particular drama and most of the time when she does... the drama must be very good, and it ALWAYS is :D

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Healer had park min young...i ran away any drama from plastic face PMY. it seems like plastic surgery made her to smile even sad scene. She can only 5-6 emotion at max. Why people keep casting her is just shocking. i dropped healer at last 3 episode.

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I feel like PMY shouldn't be judged based on her looks... She's actually quite a good actress and I feel like her role in Healer is her best role so far. I can't imagine anyone else playing Chae Young Shin. I find her pretty too...so nothing wrong with her looks. These days nearly everyone in the entertainment industry in Korea would have some sort of surgery is done to enhance their looks. It's not uncommon. If we're just judging on 'plastic' looks only...then for me, the same could be said for actor Lee Jong Suk. However, just because he looks that way doesnt mean he can't act and I don't judge a drama based on actors' looks.

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? (Really good! ^^)

Also, I noticed that zkpop.com also has the same exact recap and pictures. I think they may have taken it from this recap...

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This drama is everything I wanted and more. LOVE IT TO BITS

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This drama has some technical problem. If soon ae doing all the hardwork and chef is loving soon ae energy pill character and he may lose interest in timid bong sun. Otherwise when ghost leaves she will be abandoned and left to rot. So i think directors probably make chef as mystery fan of her blog. They need to give some oomph to bongsun just to balance love conflict. chef may go crazy with this bipolar roles of bongsun. May be give her some skills on something that can make chef attracted towards bongsun. Also i want bongsun to explain to chef the ghost presence after solving soon ae mystery death. But there is no way to prove ghost presence so chef may think her lunatic. So may be better not to tell chef. :)

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I AM still confuse on he be liking the real Bongsun. I think he falls for the ghost. HOW WILL THE DIRECTOR twist that role is still up on air. PERSONALLY the real Bongsun is too nice and boring as heck.

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The one thing that's more important than agency is making good choices with that agency.

I hope we're headed for nothing but roadblocks until she realizes her worth. A guy who wouldn't want her for herself, is not worth sacrificing herself for. And certainly not worth sleeping with.

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One of the Soompi girls (@angelflower) translated part of the song that the Chef sang. It's so cheesy hahaha:

Ok, I've sort of figured out the song, although I may be wrong at some parts because I really can't tell a few words that he sings without some help... But the lyrics are really cheesy at the moment hahaha XD So just the short portion we heard:

"Sweet Chocolate" by Jo Jung-suk

Sweet as cappuccino

You’re my angel
I don’t know if you know my heart, I don’t know~
I miss your indescribable eyes, oh you~

Give me your chocolate
Give me your vitamin
You’re my sweet and sour endorphin

Give me your chocolate
Give me your vitamin
Together with you, forever
Together with you, tonight
Together with you, forever

---------------

*runs away from cheese and sugar overdose*

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Together with you, forever
Together with you, tonight

I swear the last sentence made my mind go straight to the gutter ?

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Of all sings to sing this song is selected, foreshadowing I hope for more cuteness to come!

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Thanks for the recap!

Maybe because I'm not watching the episodes myself (preoccupied with a class), but I don't get a good feeling from this. It's sweet to see Sun woo and Bong sun actually together and I'm rooting for them but this possession thing feels all sorts of wrong. I know Bong sun is desperate but fooling Sun woo into liking her seems terrible. What happens when Soon ae is gone? Do you realize this would involve letting another girl (ghost) essentially have sex with the man you love? And you would have NO memory of your first time with him?...More than anything else, how do you think Sun woo would feel? That isnt love to me. Its a different kind of possession (not ghost possession).

Im sorry if Im taking this too seriously; this is just my two cents.

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i really looove this drama, and i love bong-sun too, but soon ae and the chef are so perfect together!! why she has to be dead???

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@ultramarineblue

+10
It's sometimes hard to think beyond the fun and cute, but what you say is a cause for concern. This is deception by our main character to get something for herself. All the persons are to be objects to be used... the ghost is to be used to get the man for BS, BS is allowing herself to be used to help SA and SW is targeted to be used by both girls. What we need now are a series of blocks and obstacles to stop it from happening and to show the girls or at least BS, how wrong her attitude is.

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Thanks for the reply!! I'm glad you agree its at least a cause for concern and am looking forward to the show doing as you predict.

(Spoiler)
I think episode 8's ending might be such an instance of an obstacle preventing the girls from doing as they please!

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Thanks javabeans for your usual flair.

Chef was in sympathy with Bong-sun in early episodes so I'm not assuming his affections are all about Soon-ae. Both women are, in their own ways, stroking his tender ego. I'm betting that eventually if sex/intimacy (yes, please ;-) does happen it's with Bong-sun because I'm pretty sure Soon-ae's grudge is not about virginity and because Bong-sun is/ will be (mature?) enough to realize that using Soon-ae wouldn't be "right".

As for PD Lee - good for her for speaking up, even if she had to get drunk to do it. I think Chef is just as surprised as she that he doesn't feel like he he thought he did. They are both growing out of a stale relationship.

Open questions for me: who is Grandma Shaman? How dark will it go when we find out how Soon-ae died since it's Chef's sweet sister's husband we are suspecting? Why are the 'powers that be' not speaking to Uenni-Shaman as they were earlier? How fast can they post the next episode?

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Soon ae's reaction when Bong sun says she can use her body was the best!

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Finally bong sun said something besides I'm sorry!! She and Sun woo are so cute together but I think that she really does need soon ae help because even though sun woo likes her, he also likes the pd, and she is trying hard to get him.
Love this, keep them coming!

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I really, really, really like this drama.

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Since when did creepy cop become uncreepy?

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I can't wait to watch this episode

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I am still on withdrawal and I can't help replaying Sweet Chocolate over and over again. I love JJS voice!

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I'm in love with this show!! Im a bit of a laggard when it comes to kdrama coz i prefer to watch the drama once it finished airing.. so now im in ep7 and cnt wait to finish the whole drama.. kudos to tvn..keep on producing wonderful drama in the future n i'll be ur fan forever..job well done!

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I like this drama. Started yesterday and now on the 8th episode. Pheww!

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I know nobody is gonna read this as i am 2 year too late to comment. rewatching My Ghostess Na Bong Soon to commemorate Strong Woman Do Bong Soon coming up this week. Hooray...

Anyway, back to My Ghostess, i think that Na Bong Soon is not super timid. She is timid, but at the beginning of the drama she was so utterly super timid i think because she's sleepy most of the time. and of course being sleepy makes it hard for her to be herself since she's fighting to stay awake.

i see that now she's awake and all, her true personality comes out and she is quite easy going though slightly timid like a mouse. hehe...

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