Is very sweet, but this story has certain plot holes. I felt the author changed her mind while writing the story, which caused these holes. When the protagonist is rescued and taken to ML's house, I thought ML already knew the protagonist and this would be developed throughout the work. What reinforces this idea for me is the fact that in the initial chapters, we see MC call a clinic that is saved as a friend (which could perhaps be ML's clinic, and the secretary who answered MC ). I thought MC had a child with ML. We predicted that resulted in ML's son, that's why the children look so similar. That Yul was actually the son of his previous relationship with ML, but since his husband, who passed away, couldn't have children, decided to accept MC and be the father of this boy. And that's why the rich family mistreated MC (but treated Yul well, because they needed an heir). And the MC actually didn't transmigrate, but rather was using this mechanism to deal with depression, so much so that the author doesn't completely discard the idea, but uses it in another way.
Is very sweet, but this story has certain plot holes. I felt the author changed her mind while writing the story, which caused these holes. When the protagonist is rescued and taken to ML's house, I thought ML already knew the protagonist and this would be developed throughout the work. What reinforces this idea for me is the fact that in the initial chapters, we see MC call a clinic that is saved as a friend (which could perhaps be ML's clinic, and the secretary who answered MC ). I thought MC had a child with ML. We predicted that resulted in ML's son, that's why the children look so similar. That Yul was actually the son of his previous relationship with ML, but since his husband, who passed away, couldn't have children, decided to accept MC and be the father of this boy. And that's why the rich family mistreated MC (but treated Yul well, because they needed an heir). And the MC actually didn't transmigrate, but rather was using this mechanism to deal with depression, so much so that the author doesn't completely discard the idea, but uses it in another way.