I think there's a bit of confusion as to why Tae Su-mi is stepping down as the head of her company. It's not because she wants to go back to being a regular lawyer, it's because she's going to run for the position as the Minister of Justice, so her running her law firm at the same time would be a conflict of interest. It's also why the head of Hanbada is using Young-Woo as a pawn, because if Tae Su-mi does become Minister of Justice she can make things more favourable for her company, and Hanbada would have a harder time competing. I also understand the mom walking away. She literally did not want to have a baby. She was in the middle of college, living in an incredibly conservative society. It would have straight up ruined her life. She could have had an abortion and had a fresh start, but Young-woo's dad begged her to and she gave in. So then she lived her whole life with this bombshell (Young-woo) hanging over her, ready to drop at any given moment, because he wanted to keep the baby. He's a good dad, and she clearly feels some amout of guilt over it, but at that point she basically became his surrogate.
There were other reasons apart from professional and corporate rivalry motivating Han. There is a deleted scene where it is revealed that Tae Su-mi ended up ‘stealing’ and marrying Han’s boyfriend. So it is a very personal beef she has with her.
@@HuntingViolets I wouldn't have minded if they left part of that scene in though. I think it makes Su-mi's reaction and conversation with Young-woo's dad, in the following episode, make more sense. It would have been a reaction to feeling threatened rather than a preemptive strike like it is now.
24:56 this part shows youngwoo’s clumsiness😭she desperately needed to tell attorney jung her idea(and probably wouldn’t have forgotten about her point due to her interest in her job) but forgot that calling someone at 3am probably isn’t the most ideal time, cute ˙༥˙
The reason we sit on the floor to eat is primarily due to the heating system that developed here. Traditionally the floors of homes had water flowing underneath that could be heated, so the warm floor helped to keep the body and food relatively warm during colder seasons. For Summers it would be cooler to be closer to the floor since cold air is heavier than warm air. Also, due to the culture of taking your shoes off indoors meant floors were clean, so there would be no reason for chairs and tables with long legs to develop.
I was in tears at the end. But I never thought Su mi was in the wrong for what she did. She wanted to abort which she was in the right to but Woo’s father begged her and said he’ll be sole parent of young woo and never have to see her again. Probably buried having a daughter deep and realizing who Young woo is brought all that back up. I know it’s just a show but knowing this actually happens it’s a lot to ask someone to carry for 9 months and give the baby up.
woo is not an uncommon surname in skorea - as korean surnames are usually clan names, so the mum wouldn't immediately think that youngwoo's surname relates to her in any way cause that could be anybody, unless it's made clear about who her father is and his full name. she also has a complete different surname to them too so, it's quite easy to completely remove yourself from someone if you try.
The latter part is true, but statistically Woo is actually quite an uncommon surname here. It consists of only 0.4% of the population compared to surnames such as Lee (15.5%), Choi (4.9%), Jung (4.6%), Kwon (1.5%). Funnily enough Tae is even more rare (0.02%) to the point where there's less than 10,000 people with that surname.
On first view (when it came out) my reaction to Tae Su-mi was as this cold, ruthless person who put career over being a young mom, but now I see the situation as more nuanced and complex. 1. Recall how controlling the rich dad was in the wedding dress slip episode. Su-Mi's dad was the powerful head of Korea's top law firm and you can bet he didn't want rumors out that his daughter had a kid born out of wedlock and with a man from a lower social class on top of that. In their society, scandalous news like that hurt business and drop stock prices of companies (other kdramas). So imagine the pressure he put on her to 'bort the pregnancy. 2. When someone knows what the outcome will be, it's better to forget and move on with life for your own sanity because dwelling on it makes you rack so much guilt it could literally drive you insane. I think that's what she did; assume WYW was in good hands with her dad and just moved on with life. 3. I would even now be open to Su-mi wanting to deliver the newborn in person and to say a final farewell to her boyfriend but her parents were against that and sent the head housekeeper instead (that was 100% a housekeeper coming out of that car because a rich, 'madam' from a family like that wouldn't lower herself to hand-delivering her daughter's 'astard baby because of the 'stain' that baby represents on the family name).
My questions 1. How come she never looked for her after all these years, not even once (not even out of curiosity). 2. why would she assume that the baby and her ex would be ok when she knows full well he's not financially stable seeing as he had to give up college to take care of young woo. 3. Why is she trying to hide the fact that she has a first child? 4. Does her ambition far outway young woo's existence? 5. Does she still want to run away from her responsibilities like she did when she was younger Or is she still scared of her "dad" even as a grown woman. I find it hard to justify her actions and it became even harder after seeing the things she did later on in the story. No one's perfect, she made her decision and that's fine but what really bothers me is the fact that she didn't look for them, not even once.
@@shortznig2938 1. To not reopen old emotional wounds. 2. rationalization as a psychological defense mechanism. Easier to move on with life if she assumes they are somehow doing ok and not starving. People do this all the time when their pet goes missing; assume it must've found a loving new family who took it in. 3. the intense social stigma against out of wedlock pregnancies and the (unfair) moral judgment society casts on women more than the man who got her pregnant. She's also up for Minister of Justice. Her secret will divide Korea; feminists and progressives will still support her; social conservatives/traditional family value groups will condemn her. In the end her political party will find the controversy too big of a headache and stop supporting her candidacy. 4. My answer to #1 makes this response unnecessary. 5. She's not responsible for WYW. That's what it means when you give up custody. But it goes both ways so she's not deserving of WYW's understanding or forgiveness either. The end of ep 8 showed how WYW felt - she is resentful for being abandoned and has no wish to start any late-stage relationship with her at this point. Su-mi just has to live with that. There's far fewer good that comes from telling the world at this point she has a daughter. What would it accomplish? WYW doesn't need her to tell the world about her.
@@shortznig2938 thing is, she made it clear she didn’t want the baby. going through a pregnancy is no joke. i wouldn’t doubt if she held a little resentment towards the dad for that situation.
I'll never blame her for abandoning woo with the father. she wanted an abortion she never wanted to have the baby and the social implications at the time for her as a young girl would've been crazy
I know ppl might hate on the mom for giving the child up, but considering her entire life had to be put on hold/medical issues that come with pregnancy, I can’t really dislike her for giving Woo up. Some ppl just aren’t ready for kids, or want kids. She did what he asked for. Of course, that doesn’t absolve her anything she might do later, but what she did as a teen/young adult was kind.
Just like if a woman gets pregnant and the man doesn’t want the child but the wife does, I can’t fault him either. And those men have to give up far less. I don’t think ppl should stick around out of obligation for a child they don’t want, cuz it’ll just hurt the kid anyway.
Not to mention the cultural aspect where two people having a baby out of wedlock is not common and still frowned upon in Korea, especially from someone from a upper class background. I think she was doing what was best for her situation, but she still gave Young Woo's dad his wishes by having the baby- which was nice.
I also now consider the tremendous coercion placed on Sumi by her side of the family; a rich dad of a major law firm in a society where out of wedlock births are already taboo and one from a "proper" family (i.e. rich) even more so. She could've had passing thoughts on being a young mom but for sure her parents crushed that. No proof on the show that they did but it would be on point for a rich family in a kdrama to do.
That actually shows her in a more positive light. She didn't have to give her to him, but she respected his wishes. It would be different if she was actually her mother for a few years, then abandoned her, but that isn't the case. She was never her mother. She was just a stranger that gave birth to her.
Woo Young-woo's mom didn't step down as CEO of her law firm out of guilt it was because she's running for Minister of Justice & can't run a law firm cause people might think she will show favoritism towards the law firm, and is why the reporter was asking questions about a rumored pregnancy she had.
My heart leaped into my throat at the same time Sheeras did when Dad told Young woo who her Mom is. Then I heard in Sheeras voice "YEEEAAAAAHHH" and ruined the moment for myself
I find it that most people her age and successful would rather have spent that time making a family. I wonder if she would have changed things if she could.
"Illegal tint" I noticed in Asian countries, the darker the tint, the better. It's like that where I came from. My car back home has the darkest tint. 😅 When I came to Canada, I was quite flabbergasted that the tint of the cars are controlled and the required opacity is too light. 😂
I don’t know how much rookie attorneys earn at the beginning of their careers but I’d like to believe it’s not significantly enough to help their day to day lives especially when they live in a country where everything is so expensive like it is in Korea. I could be wrong but from my understanding based on people’s accounts that are in this particular line of work aren’t well off in the job until you reach a certain level and experience. (Remember Young Woo, Kwon, and Su Yeon are all on one year contracts and based on their performances in that year will determine if they get a full contract). And as for Young Woo possibly inheriting the Taesan law firm later in her life while I would say never say never, I would like to believe that would never happen as this show has a lot of significance in many ways like Hanbada meaning ocean and Taesan meaning mountains and since Young Woo has a deep connection or a liking to whales my guess would be that she will probably stay with the Hanbada law firm until she is experienced enough to be on her own if she wants.
I wish you had played more of Woo-Young was saying to her birth mother because I thought it answered a lot of the questions you talked about. (Maybe I am misremembering, though, who knows?)
Her mom is going in to politics she wants to be the minister of justice. Also you have to look at this from Asian views not west. A child out of wedlock is a big No No but in the west it’s normal. Also her family has money like big money but Woo’s dad was poor so her they could never get married. Great reaction
Kwon >>>>>>> The guy is the only one who treats Woo like a normal person from the beginning, but it's a shame that the "standard" treatment isn't that good
agree! i know he's been shit, but given his backstory i feel like he brings the realism in the show, so the fact that he sees woo's employment as nepotism than special treatment as being autistic tells how he see her as a competition
@@isabelcabilin-qo8zt He also calls out her taking unapproved leave, and being allowed back, presumably because that kind of behavior is detrimental the firm, and believes the company should penalize her for it. Yet he doesn’t seem to think that he should be severely penalized for undercutting the best interests of a client, by withholding important information from one of their attorneys. Deliberately sabotaging the best interests of a client to make a competing coworker look bad is a far worse offense than quitting and being persuaded not to do so. In fact, it might be a very good reason to fire a lawyer, and certainly a reason NOT to give him a permanent employment contract.
@@fordhouse8b im not saying he's not flawed, he's cunning, a tactician and a hypocrite himself, i just like him as a character that provides that realism, not just the 'there are evil people' but how his standing as a lawyer in their community represents the lack of privilege too, that's why his dynamic with the other female attorney is exciting to see because she's the total opposite of her coming from a good family, he's hateable, but i still think a significant character
@@isabelcabilin-qo8zt “...because SHE's the total opposite of HER coming from a good family,...” Sorry, I’m just getting a bit confused about which characters you are referring to here. Who are the she and her you are referring to in this sentence?
Woo has a good Dad, I respect him a ton for taking responsibility for his child he made. So many people act like they made babies by g*npoint when they have an unexpected pregnancy. It’s a lot to take care of a child, especially an unexpected one so W Dad.
@@aenwynn950 coersion is by threats of harm or blackmail. He just straight up begged. She was just weak. You don't want a child then you gotta comitml
@@ArtesMatt My mistake, it varies a lot between countries. South Korea is mostly the exception that is was still rather conservative, but it also has more Christians at 32% of the population (probably where a lot of the opposition comes from), where as abortions were slowly legalised a long time ago (from 1950s) in China and Japan.
The reunion
Hey can you watch the Witcher season 3 Henry Cavil is still Geralt of rivia
hell naw @@tatianawallace8971
Are you guys reacting to “Moving”
Its the best Kdrama this year for sure and finale is coming tomorrow
Waiting for moving reaction
@@seansucgang147 yes Finale is tomorrow
that camera tilt when she realized who she was was genius. her whole world was spinning.
I think there's a bit of confusion as to why Tae Su-mi is stepping down as the head of her company. It's not because she wants to go back to being a regular lawyer, it's because she's going to run for the position as the Minister of Justice, so her running her law firm at the same time would be a conflict of interest. It's also why the head of Hanbada is using Young-Woo as a pawn, because if Tae Su-mi does become Minister of Justice she can make things more favourable for her company, and Hanbada would have a harder time competing.
I also understand the mom walking away. She literally did not want to have a baby. She was in the middle of college, living in an incredibly conservative society. It would have straight up ruined her life. She could have had an abortion and had a fresh start, but Young-woo's dad begged her to and she gave in. So then she lived her whole life with this bombshell (Young-woo) hanging over her, ready to drop at any given moment, because he wanted to keep the baby. He's a good dad, and she clearly feels some amout of guilt over it, but at that point she basically became his surrogate.
There were other reasons apart from professional and corporate rivalry motivating Han. There is a deleted scene where it is revealed that Tae Su-mi ended up ‘stealing’ and marrying Han’s boyfriend. So it is a very personal beef she has with her.
@@fordhouse8b Yeah, I know about the deleted scene, but since it didn't wind up in the actual show, it isn't officially part of the plot.
@@fordhouse8b I prefer the professional plot to its being about a man, so I'm glad they deleted it. Makes a nice DVD extra, but that's it for me.
@@emeraldas1013 I agree. If it's not onscreen, it isn't canon to the show.
@@HuntingViolets I wouldn't have minded if they left part of that scene in though. I think it makes Su-mi's reaction and conversation with Young-woo's dad, in the following episode, make more sense. It would have been a reaction to feeling threatened rather than a preemptive strike like it is now.
24:56 this part shows youngwoo’s clumsiness😭she desperately needed to tell attorney jung her idea(and probably wouldn’t have forgotten about her point due to her interest in her job) but forgot that calling someone at 3am probably isn’t the most ideal time, cute ˙༥˙
The reason we sit on the floor to eat is primarily due to the heating system that developed here. Traditionally the floors of homes had water flowing underneath that could be heated, so the warm floor helped to keep the body and food relatively warm during colder seasons. For Summers it would be cooler to be closer to the floor since cold air is heavier than warm air. Also, due to the culture of taking your shoes off indoors meant floors were clean, so there would be no reason for chairs and tables with long legs to develop.
Kinda cool
I was in tears at the end. But I never thought Su mi was in the wrong for what she did. She wanted to abort which she was in the right to but Woo’s father begged her and said he’ll be sole parent of young woo and never have to see her again. Probably buried having a daughter deep and realizing who Young woo is brought all that back up. I know it’s just a show but knowing this actually happens it’s a lot to ask someone to carry for 9 months and give the baby up.
She was literally gonna murder her child, she is in the wrong for sure.
woo is not an uncommon surname in skorea - as korean surnames are usually clan names, so the mum wouldn't immediately think that youngwoo's surname relates to her in any way cause that could be anybody, unless it's made clear about who her father is and his full name. she also has a complete different surname to them too so, it's quite easy to completely remove yourself from someone if you try.
The latter part is true, but statistically Woo is actually quite an uncommon surname here. It consists of only 0.4% of the population compared to surnames such as Lee (15.5%), Choi (4.9%), Jung (4.6%), Kwon (1.5%). Funnily enough Tae is even more rare (0.02%) to the point where there's less than 10,000 people with that surname.
@@lukekim8108 Interesting.
On first view (when it came out) my reaction to Tae Su-mi was as this cold, ruthless person who put career over being a young mom, but now I see the situation as more nuanced and complex.
1. Recall how controlling the rich dad was in the wedding dress slip episode. Su-Mi's dad was the powerful head of Korea's top law firm and you can bet he didn't want rumors out that his daughter had a kid born out of wedlock and with a man from a lower social class on top of that. In their society, scandalous news like that hurt business and drop stock prices of companies (other kdramas). So imagine the pressure he put on her to 'bort the pregnancy.
2. When someone knows what the outcome will be, it's better to forget and move on with life for your own sanity because dwelling on it makes you rack so much guilt it could literally drive you insane. I think that's what she did; assume WYW was in good hands with her dad and just moved on with life.
3. I would even now be open to Su-mi wanting to deliver the newborn in person and to say a final farewell to her boyfriend but her parents were against that and sent the head housekeeper instead (that was 100% a housekeeper coming out of that car because a rich, 'madam' from a family like that wouldn't lower herself to hand-delivering her daughter's 'astard baby because of the 'stain' that baby represents on the family name).
My questions
1. How come she never looked for her after all these years, not even once (not even out of curiosity).
2. why would she assume that the baby and her ex would be ok when she knows full well he's not financially stable seeing as he had to give up college to take care of young woo.
3. Why is she trying to hide the fact that she has a first child?
4. Does her ambition far outway young woo's existence?
5. Does she still want to run away from her responsibilities like she did when she was younger Or is she still scared of her "dad" even as a grown woman.
I find it hard to justify her actions and it became even harder after seeing the things she did later on in the story. No one's perfect, she made her decision and that's fine but what really bothers me is the fact that she didn't look for them, not even once.
@@shortznig2938 1. To not reopen old emotional wounds.
2. rationalization as a psychological defense mechanism. Easier to move on with life if she assumes they are somehow doing ok and not starving. People do this all the time when their pet goes missing; assume it must've found a loving new family who took it in.
3. the intense social stigma against out of wedlock pregnancies and the (unfair) moral judgment society casts on women more than the man who got her pregnant. She's also up for Minister of Justice. Her secret will divide Korea; feminists and progressives will still support her; social conservatives/traditional family value groups will condemn her. In the end her political party will find the controversy too big of a headache and stop supporting her candidacy.
4. My answer to #1 makes this response unnecessary.
5. She's not responsible for WYW. That's what it means when you give up custody. But it goes both ways so she's not deserving of WYW's understanding or forgiveness either. The end of ep 8 showed how WYW felt - she is resentful for being abandoned and has no wish to start any late-stage relationship with her at this point. Su-mi just has to live with that. There's far fewer good that comes from telling the world at this point she has a daughter. What would it accomplish? WYW doesn't need her to tell the world about her.
@@shortznig2938 thing is, she made it clear she didn’t want the baby. going through a pregnancy is no joke. i wouldn’t doubt if she held a little resentment towards the dad for that situation.
@@xrrgr then don't have sex simple.
Han-Ba-Da means "Big Ocean" in Korean, and Tae-San means "Huge Mountain" in Korean. So, we can assume which place the whale belongs.
wow! ❤
"Cuz it got illegal tint on it"
I'm crying 😭😭😭😭
I gave big props to Tae Su-mi for having Woo. That was a big deal.
I'll never blame her for abandoning woo with the father. she wanted an abortion she never wanted to have the baby and the social implications at the time for her as a young girl would've been crazy
i actually cried so much watching this episode
I know ppl might hate on the mom for giving the child up, but considering her entire life had to be put on hold/medical issues that come with pregnancy, I can’t really dislike her for giving Woo up. Some ppl just aren’t ready for kids, or want kids. She did what he asked for.
Of course, that doesn’t absolve her anything she might do later, but what she did as a teen/young adult was kind.
Just like if a woman gets pregnant and the man doesn’t want the child but the wife does, I can’t fault him either. And those men have to give up far less.
I don’t think ppl should stick around out of obligation for a child they don’t want, cuz it’ll just hurt the kid anyway.
*woman
Not wife, it’s another story if you’re married
Not to mention the cultural aspect where two people having a baby out of wedlock is not common and still frowned upon in Korea, especially from someone from a upper class background. I think she was doing what was best for her situation, but she still gave Young Woo's dad his wishes by having the baby- which was nice.
I also now consider the tremendous coercion placed on Sumi by her side of the family; a rich dad of a major law firm in a society where out of wedlock births are already taboo and one from a "proper" family (i.e. rich) even more so. She could've had passing thoughts on being a young mom but for sure her parents crushed that. No proof on the show that they did but it would be on point for a rich family in a kdrama to do.
That actually shows her in a more positive light. She didn't have to give her to him, but she respected his wishes. It would be different if she was actually her mother for a few years, then abandoned her, but that isn't the case. She was never her mother. She was just a stranger that gave birth to her.
Woo Young-woo's mom didn't step down as CEO of her law firm out of guilt it was because she's running for Minister of Justice & can't run a law firm cause people might think she will show favoritism towards the law firm, and is why the reporter was asking questions about a rumored pregnancy she had.
Woo's mom is in a currently running show called My Lovely Liar and she's a hoot in that one!
And she is the nurse that everybody loves in the Doctor Romantic series.
The running scene was so goofy 😭😭 and the way shera shouted hello i see you?? 😂😂
My heart leaped into my throat at the same time Sheeras did when Dad told Young woo who her Mom is. Then I heard in Sheeras voice "YEEEAAAAAHHH" and ruined the moment for myself
Bro roshi hates kwon’s guts 😭
Rightfully so
At the end it was GREAT acting from both actors...
best channel to watch while eating fr fr
facts!
Woo still closes the case with his mother's words 😔
This show is just so well done can’t wait for you to continue the journey
I always see your new uploads at the BEST TIMES YEAAAAAAAAAA thanks for being my after school specials guys
Are you guys reacting to “Moving”
Its the best Kdrama this year for sure and finale is coming tomorrow
I love Suneyong standing up for Woo-Young.
park eun bin as young woo was amazing, Guys you shoould watch her other program Called "The kings's Afection"
No I'm not crying, it's just a cold. 🤧
Now things are starting to get spicy 🌶️ guys throughout the series
I find it that most people her age and successful would rather have spent that time making a family. I wonder if she would have changed things if she could.
i doubt it.
@@HuntingViolets The next episodes did this theory dirty.
Atty. Jung - Woo's mentor/their senior who guides them.
Atty. Jang - that rude attorney that grabbed Atty. Jung's collar on their company pantry.
The subtitles on these episodes are different from when I watched them on Netflix, which is interesting.
This is my fav episode lol the story the acting and revelation is so good
Btw the Judge was also the teacher in the glory.
That judge is the teacher that slaps moon done eun in The Glory. Never forgetti
"Illegal tint"
I noticed in Asian countries, the darker the tint, the better. It's like that where I came from. My car back home has the darkest tint. 😅
When I came to Canada, I was quite flabbergasted that the tint of the cars are controlled and the required opacity is too light. 😂
I don’t know how much rookie attorneys earn at the beginning of their careers but I’d like to believe it’s not significantly enough to help their day to day lives especially when they live in a country where everything is so expensive like it is in Korea.
I could be wrong but from my understanding based on people’s accounts that are in this particular line of work aren’t well off in the job until you reach a certain level and experience. (Remember Young Woo, Kwon, and Su Yeon are all on one year contracts and based on their performances in that year will determine if they get a full contract).
And as for Young Woo possibly inheriting the Taesan law firm later in her life while I would say never say never, I would like to believe that would never happen as this show has a lot of significance in many ways like Hanbada meaning ocean and Taesan meaning mountains and since Young Woo has a deep connection or a liking to whales my guess would be that she will probably stay with the Hanbada law firm until she is experienced enough to be on her own if she wants.
Her biomom also has a son who is her legal son, although I don't know whether he is interested in law.
I doubt it just based on what I’ve seen later on in the season when he comes into the story.
@@G10-n7f I haven't gotten that far yet. I just wanted to watch these reactions through where I was.
@@HuntingViolets Oh my bad. I wasn’t trying to spoil anything for you.
She's stepping down to run for minister. She can't afford to have her out-of-wedlock daughter being brought out to the public now.
I wish you had played more of Woo-Young was saying to her birth mother because I thought it answered a lot of the questions you talked about. (Maybe I am misremembering, though, who knows?)
Eugene almost got isekai'd.
I’ve never been this early
I think it might be really expensive to live on your own there.
Her mom is going in to politics she wants to be the minister of justice. Also you have to look at this from Asian views not west. A child out of wedlock is a big No No but in the west it’s normal. Also her family has money like big money but Woo’s dad was poor so her they could never get married.
Great reaction
Kwon >>>>>>>
The guy is the only one who treats Woo like a normal person from the beginning, but it's a shame that the "standard" treatment isn't that good
agree! i know he's been shit, but given his backstory i feel like he brings the realism in the show, so the fact that he sees woo's employment as nepotism than special treatment as being autistic tells how he see her as a competition
@@isabelcabilin-qo8zt He also calls out her taking unapproved leave, and being allowed back, presumably because that kind of behavior is detrimental the firm, and believes the company should penalize her for it. Yet he doesn’t seem to think that he should be severely penalized for undercutting the best interests of a client, by withholding important information from one of their attorneys. Deliberately sabotaging the best interests of a client to make a competing coworker look bad is a far worse offense than quitting and being persuaded not to do so. In fact, it might be a very good reason to fire a lawyer, and certainly a reason NOT to give him a permanent employment contract.
@@fordhouse8b im not saying he's not flawed, he's cunning, a tactician and a hypocrite himself, i just like him as a character that provides that realism, not just the 'there are evil people' but how his standing as a lawyer in their community represents the lack of privilege too, that's why his dynamic with the other female attorney is exciting to see because she's the total opposite of her coming from a good family, he's hateable, but i still think a significant character
@@isabelcabilin-qo8zt “...because SHE's the total opposite of HER coming from a good family,...” Sorry, I’m just getting a bit confused about which characters you are referring to here. Who are the she and her you are referring to in this sentence?
I still don’t like him
Woo has a good Dad, I respect him a ton for taking responsibility for his child he made. So many people act like they made babies by g*npoint when they have an unexpected pregnancy. It’s a lot to take care of a child, especially an unexpected one so W Dad.
He coerced her to give birth though, she didn't want to have her.
I mean.. he begged for the child, and even under the continued that he alone would raise her so…
@@aenwynn950 coersion is by threats of harm or blackmail.
He just straight up begged.
She was just weak. You don't want a child then you gotta comitml
@@aenwynn950 so she should have just killed her
@@xrrgr yeah, wanting his child to have life is bare minimum
lmao. the reason she's not running her company is for politics tho. that's the ultimate career move. she sacrificed her company for it
Please watch ( new K-drama ) "MOVING " ❤❤❤
Are you guys ain’t doing the one piece show?
Mid october
If all this were in the West Woo would be aborted 3 times.
Unfortunate, very sad truth. She would’ve ghosted him and never saw him again.
East Asian countries are way more progressive with abortion than U.S for example, with lower rates of religion also lowering stigma.
@@sinfia9775 This is very interesting, could you share the sources?
@@ArtesMatt My mistake, it varies a lot between countries. South Korea is mostly the exception that is was still rather conservative, but it also has more Christians at 32% of the population (probably where a lot of the opposition comes from), where as abortions were slowly legalised a long time ago (from 1950s) in China and Japan.
tale
I'm not gonna give up until u respond
U guys can u plz give MOUSE a chance, like plzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Wow
I'm waiting for the head attorney story