Hae-In's dad is a classic example of an enabling parent. He made excuses for his daughter, never followed up with logical consequences of her bad behavior, and tried to smooth over what she did in an effort to keep the peace. This usually happens out of feelings of guilt and shame when previous approaches to parenting a child don't work anymore and they ask themselves, "Is it my fault? What am I doing wrong?" I pity Hae-In's dad for that feeling of inadequacy he obviously has, but that's about it.
I love how at the beginning he's like "my name isn't worth mentioning," and then we learn his name from his own mouth at the end of the story. Talk about character development.
When Dojun saw the doc hesitating, the look on his face broke my heart, like he was already interpreting that silence as rejection. ╥﹏╥ So glad that doc pulled it together
I really didn't like ch. 65. Don't get me wrong, I love this series, and I love both couples, I just couldn't get behind this one chapter that should have been so absorbing but ended up falling flat in a lot of ways. It was so clunky and awkward and poorly laid out that it was hard to look at.
I got 6 chapters in and realized this would be just a smidge too dark for my taste. Don't get me wrong, I like dark, but too much nihilism puts me in a bad place mentally speaking
Hae-In's dad is a classic example of an enabling parent. He made excuses for his daughter, never followed up with logical consequences of her bad behavior, and tried to smooth over what she did in an effort to keep the peace. This usually happens out of feelings of guilt and shame when previous approaches to parenting a child don't work anymore and they ask themselves, "Is it my fault? What am I doing wrong?" I pity Hae-In's dad for that feeling of inadequacy he obviously has, but that's about it.