me too flower - 7

Dec 03, 2011 10:03

Though no one expects you to tell your life story to the person you've begun dating, significant deception in those early stages can lead to pain. It just seems like a bad idea to lead someone to believe that you're a poor parking attendant when you actually own the company. Or that you're the Princess when you're actually the daughter of Suyang. I don't expect Me Too, Flower to reveal a bloody coup (even though it also stars Queen Seondeok's father), but pain is pain.

He's really not handling any of this well. He's blurred the boundaries between himself and Hwa-young. Yes, he's taken some responsibility for helping with her son because of the accident, but she's obviously used to just walking into his place whenever she wants. Now, she finds the door locked. A boundary that wasn't there.

Bong-sun is too insecure to believe he's actually interested. She pushes away his every gesture. "After telling me to wait, are you going to stand me up?" But then after lunch is over and she's in the police car again, she's giddy.

"What did you eat for lunch?" asks Maru. "Why are you laughing, sunbae? All you need is a flower in your hair and you'll look like a crazy woman."

So naturally Jae-hee doesn't show. He has a very good excuse, but he can't tell her because that would mean revealing his other life. Telling the truth is kind of inconvenient that way. So instead... pain.

Later, he stands up for her again in the store. But because of his ruse, he can't do this as the owner... only as a lowly parking attendant. And Hwa-young takes advantage of this.

Oh kdrama characters, why must you mislead?

eta: Their chemistry is still fantastic. And I really, really can't wait for the sweetness I see in the next episode.

queen seondeok, the princess' man, me too flower

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