|
Post by ginnycat5 on Feb 26, 2010 18:45:52 GMT -5
Geez, he was trying to kill himself because of the debt! I wonder how much money he gave the coma-boy's family? He had stashes of cash hidden all over. Wonder if it would have covered his debt.
How could his new boss just give him $30,000? Personally?? I wonder if she'll do anything else with the phone number and identity of the gangster......
Also I wonder if HaNa knew about the story Seok-man helped write, that got the big account for the business woman. Wasn't it based on her drawings of her neighbors (well, and on the traveling they both did to find the elderly woman)? Hope HaNa doesn't mind.
|
|
|
Post by ginnycat5 on Mar 12, 2010 20:12:45 GMT -5
That poor guy, taking on all the guilt of his father's accident. Probably Dr. Go (GO??) should have tackled him or otherwise kept him from being alone after the boy died. sigh.
|
|
|
Post by ginnycat5 on Mar 19, 2010 21:34:56 GMT -5
Dr. Go had it right, Seok-man was unnaturally cheerful, considering his being orphaned, and now that the boy died, he broke down because he lost his focus of helping with the boy's bills.
Still, I'm surprised that he's been blowing off his job, especially because the job is helping HaNa.
|
|
|
Post by ginnycat5 on Apr 20, 2010 14:38:15 GMT -5
I didn't understand why Seok-man was given only 2 choices for relating to HaNa, in the editor-lady's viewpoint. Either you go away (and maybe come back and maybe HaNa will still be available) or you stay with her and give up having your own life (because you're feeling obligated {not because you love her??}). Why can't the 2 of them be together and try to support each other? What kind of dreams will Seok-man have to give up if he stays with HaNa? World travel, maybe? I don't understand why she was pushing him to leave HaNa,....well, except that she saw what his sense of obligation to the boy accident victim had done to him.....
|
|