Honestly, this one is fine for me although there's just one thing. It's implausible to act like her, especially when she was once a teacher (if I'm not wrong), as someone in a professional role. It is a a role that requires self-control and awareness of public judgment. If it was me, I'd certainly not do any actions that will embarrass me from the public eyes despite it not being my own body. Just because I am now in a new body with a new identity, doesn't mean I can act like mc. Babies don't feel any shame, but as children grow older and develop a sense of self, then that's the only time shame will occur, and it will develop more as they grow older and be ingrained. Mc was a conscious adult, a teacher at that, yet acts with no shame, which gives us readers the second hand embarrassment instead. The only time she acts shy is when her fave is around. There's this one scene where she was afraid of getting judged, so how come she doesn't mind it at all now? Because she's now in a new body where she doesn't need to worry about the pressures of the true owner's identity, thus weakening her self-awareness, reducing accountability, and disrupting expectations? If that's the case, then that's possible I guess. I'm not sure.
(My bad for writing unnecessary things, I just can't help it. I was rumbling while writing this.)
Honestly, this one is fine for me although there's just one thing. It's implausible to act like her, especially when she was once a teacher (if I'm not wrong), as someone in a professional role. It is a a role that requires self-control and awareness of public judgment. If it was me, I'd certainly not do any actions that will embarrass me from the public eyes despite it not being my own body. Just because I am now in a new body with a new identity, doesn't mean I can act like mc. Babies don't feel any shame, but as children grow older and develop a sense of self, then that's the only time shame will occur, and it will develop more as they grow older and be ingrained. Mc was a conscious adult, a teacher at that, yet acts with no shame, which gives us readers the second hand embarrassment instead. The only time she acts shy is when her fave is around. There's this one scene where she was afraid of getting judged, so how come she doesn't mind it at all now? Because she's now in a new body where she doesn't need to worry about the pressures of the true owner's identity, thus weakening her self-awareness, reducing accountability, and disrupting expectations? If that's the case, then that's possible I guess. I'm not sure.
(My bad for writing unnecessary things, I just can't help it. I was rumbling while writing this.)