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[K-drama therapy] The comfort of shared survival

By @cu2701 (“Dramaddictally”)

In 2019 I left my home of six years due to social unrest. The ongoing violence between the protestors and the military had made my neighborhood unlivable and, without a plan in place, I packed two suitcases and left the country.

I landed in a town that should have felt like home — given that I’d grown up there — but it didn’t. I’d been away so long that it felt as foreign to me as the country I’d just come from. The trauma of what I’d witnessed over the prior weeks left me feeling afraid and alone. And worse, guilty. I’d left a home, a business, a relationship — all things I’d worked hard to build — and I felt like I’d failed at life by ending up right back where I started. One event had knocked everything off course, and I didn’t know if I had the will to start all over again, or even the desire to try.

I was surviving. But I struggled to understand what that meant and whether or not survival was worth it.

K-dramas had been a part of my life since 2014, when I’d steal away to a corner of my apartment for two days to binge a drama and then return full of hope: for love, romance, beauty, opportunity, and improvement. They gave me a way to escape and feel refreshed in the world I lived in.

Some months after leaving my home, I attempted to return to dramas, hoping the escape would help. But I found the salve no longer worked. The cheesy rom-coms I usually liked felt empty and increased my feelings of failure for living in such an ugly world.

And then, with no prior knowledge of its existence, I stumbled on Just Between Lovers. I liked the subdued colors in the cover image, and the short description about a building disaster felt right and true when I pressed play on Episode 1.

As the episodes passed — through that day and into the darkness of night — I cried. But for the first time in months, I wasn’t crying out of sadness or despair but for the strange feeling that came from a shared sense of total defeat in a world you can’t control. I felt connected to something again. It was a kind of hope — one that didn’t look toward the future, or an escape, but stared the present in the face for what it was.

All the characters in Just Between Lovers, not just the leads, are struggling. The drama presents those struggles with both diversity and nuance. There is the big disaster (the building collapse) and all the ongoing disasters that branch out from it (mental and physical health problems, alcohol addiction, perfectionism, PTSD, suicide, divorce). And then there are the systemic hardships we are born into and struggle to handle (poverty, abuse, war, levels of ability and responsibility). No one has it easy. No one deserves the circumstances they fall into. No one is really acing life.

I watched as Kang-doo and Moon-soo and everyone else in the heartbreaking realism of this world endured trauma and pain and discrimination and blight until the day when they achieved acceptance and finally hope. They survived for ten years, wishing that they hadn’t. Wondering what it was worth if it was all going to be so hard. What they found was each other. Other people who survived too. Recognition that they weren’t alone in their suffering. And in the end, that’s what they needed most — more than making the past disappear or dreaming of a perfect life. They needed a mirror in each other to know it was okay to survive, and even thrive, and that their pain wasn’t a punishment. It was life, as it is.

Their story gave me the mirror I needed as well. I began to see trauma as implicit, rather than abnormal. A part of life, rather apart from it. And I saw that it’s the bad things — the ones that hurt — that give us the deepest connections to the good people, the ones that help. Through the emotional wisdom of this drama, I began to find comfort within my seeming failure to be doing better than I was. And by the time I got to the closing line, I felt included in its sentiment. The voiceover says, “Because we survived. 다행이다.” It’s a relief. And I realized I was relieved too. Because I no longer felt so afraid or alone.

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Thank you for your wonderful article @cu2701 ..I am also struggling to live and is wondering if living is worth it..your writing made me realize that iam not alone..that one day or some day i will feel relieved for not giving up..

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You are not alone. We are all struggling underneath something heavy (at one point or another). I find so much comfort in fiction (k-dramas, novels, song lyrics) where people are not afraid to show how much they hurt and how they moved past it. I hope you can find power and inspiration in knowing that others have survived to tell their stories and you can too 💪

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Just between lovers totally fits this theme of the month. I was wondering why it wasn't included in any of the entries yet, they may have saved it for the last. The drama showcased survivors guilt and how disaster or trauma affects so many people including and excluding those who fall victim quite accurately.
That was a beautiful writeup @cu2701
Hope you feel better now!

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:) The Dramabeans community has added a lot to me feeling better! It gives me a sense of stasis no matter where I am in the world.

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'I felt connected to something again. It was a kind of hope — one that didn’t look toward the future, or an escape, but stared the present in the face for what it was'.

I am particularly drawn to your perspective angle about hope.

And you are surely not alone be it the people support system or fiction support system. It's really warm,comforting and a moment of acceptance when you see a personal pressing situation or experience play out on screen and insight is gained afterwards as to why such a thing happened to us. It takes this weight off our shoulders, even if it was only for that brief moment.

Sorry about what happened to you. I hope you keep on surviving; and for sharing your story, Thank You.

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Yes, I agree. It takes the weight off and feels like it’s being shared. I think that helps create the sense of relief.

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This was a great way to close this series on Dramabeans, very meaningful. I have one suggestion: give cheesy rom-coms another chance! They contain their own kind of truth!

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hahaha. Don't worry. I'm back to rom-coms these days.

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Thanks so much for this beautiful article. I love this drama so much, I am utterly happy whenever I find someone that loves it and has found comfort in it.

I always describe JBL to people who haven't seen it as the story of two people that learn to live instead of just surviving. As they learn, we also learn and that is the most wonderful lesson the drama show us, we should embrace the good things we are given and never judge ourselves too hard for enjoying them, or not.

On a lighter note, JBL quite changed my life if I come to think about it, as it led me to Junho and him to 2PM and... well, and then there was no coming back.

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I love your story :) JBL is life-changing for so many reasons. And Junho is a great reason!

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Thanks for this beautiful write-up. It's amazing how therapeutic kdramas have been for a lot of us here.
I hope you're in a better place now.

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It really is amazing. When I read this month’s prompt I was thinking, “K-drama therapy?” That’s the whole reason I got into k-dramas!
But, in choosing what to write, this was by far my most significant experience.

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This was the most sensitive exploration of PTS. I loved every minute of it. It's inspiring to learn that it actually served a therapeutic purpose. Surviving is so much more complicated than we commonly understand, and this drama explores those complications so beautifully. You have won so much wisdom from your experience and from the drama. It's so true that trauma is implicit in living, and the bad things make us value and connect deeply to the good. Thanks for this. Best wishes for your new life.

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Thank you for such a touching article. Despite the theme, it felt hopeful and unbelievably brave. Facing reality could be the hardest thing we need to do, and I'm glad you found the courage to do that and began healing. May safety, comfort, and happiness come your way. 💚💚

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💙💙 Thank you for such kind words and wishes.

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Beautiful! Thank you <3

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Thank you for sharing your story. It is beautifully written and resonates so well with me.

'One event had knocked everything off course, and I didn’t know if I had the will to start all over again, or even the desire to try.'

It was a relief to know that we're not alone in feeling this way and that everyone struggles one way or another in navigating life. Someone recently asked me why I spend so much time in Kdramas. My answer - it is the only thing that's keeping me sane these days.

I hope you are feeling better and all the best in your new life. May joy and laughter come your way from now on :)

In the spirit of Kdrama therapy, I leave this quote from my current favorite drama:
"I always think only about what I’ve lost. But you think about what you can gain.”

Can you guess the drama? :)

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💙 25-21? I'm loving it too :)

I'm so happy to know that what I wrote resonated with you, and that you feel similarly. May k-dramas continue to keep us all sane!

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Thank you for writing this. JUST BETWEEN LOVERS is a great drama- and the proof of this is lies in just what you have described so well.

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The last paragraph made me cry.

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Just discovered your article @dramaddictally It is so well-written and poignant. Thanks for sharing.

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@qingdao I'm so happy you found it and loved it!

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Beautiful and touching! Love the drama, love your article!

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