Follow Your Passion: A Seamless Tumblr Journey
~ I want to hug Japanese dramas because they enliven my heart like flowers in spring. ~ đž
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Some more beautiful wisdom from âKitchen for Singlesâ đž
The Story:Â
Ikeda Sakiko, a 22-yr-old young-adult, has moved to Tokyo for her first job in a stationery company. Sakikoâs first love? Food. The show is about Sakikoâs journey as she navigates the ups, the downs, and the learnings of her work life. For her hard work, Sakiko rewards herself every week with âGohoubi Gohanâ a.k.a. âRewarding Mealsâ.
Thoughts:
1. Nobody does food dramas like the Japanese. No offense to the âLetâs Eatâ series fans (I am one too). They have this stupendous knack of combining life lessons, positivity, and love for food in a show. Itâs almost reverential.
2. I think Sakikoâs character is so amicable. Sheâs a newbie at work but sheâs also sure of who she is. Her colleagues tease her playfully for her incessant thoughts around âwhat should I eat nextâ, and Sakiko unabashedly acknowledges her passion. Sheâs kind but not meek. Sheâs polite but that doesnât stop her from being assertive or sharing her thoughts.Â
3. Sakiko has 6 colleagues and I absolutely love how every episode is crafted around her getting to know one of them over a meal. From awkward moments to relishing chilled beer after a long work week, friendship springs from sharing grilled skewers, cheese-oozing burgers and piping hot ramen.Â
4. I especially loved Sakikoâs solitary food-date. She decides to head to a Taiwanese restaurant by herself in the spirit of exploring new food. Her enthusiasm at the amount of soup in the âsoup dumplingâ is adorable.Â
Watching her eat with thorough love, the owner steps in and recommends local suggestions which Sakiko devours. The gusto with which she opens her mind to an entirely different palette is to me, as a foodie, so inspiring.
5. I love female friendships. The one between Kominato-san and Sakiko is endearing, fun and comforting.Â
The former is a lover of all things bread and on their first meal together, where they randomly meet at a hamburger restaurant after work, we see the two bond over deliciousness. Kominato then offers to take Sakiko to eat her hometown food specialty, and over a grill teaming with hot food, the two have heart-to-hearts.Â
6. When sheâs not exploring food outdoors, Sakiko cooks her Gohoubi Gohan at home. These are equally excellent to watch. From her first French toast experience, to enjoying sushi like her family back home would, Sakiko takes utmost care to prep and enjoy her meals.Â
When she cooks, there is an overpowering tenderness in the way she treats the ingredients. Her monologues are joyful, intimate and wholesome. They make you smile and make it hard to stop doing so.
7. A favorite moment of mine was to watch Sakiko spend her bonus on getting premium ingredients to cook herself a lavish âHot Potâ as her Gohoubi Gohan. I love how she even brought an âingredients manualâ to pick her choices from.Â
8. Iâm not against âhard shelledâ male characters, but I think Isogaiâs was a bit too anal for my liking. Heâs Sakikoâs senior and one of the most sought-after employees in the product development team. He may not have the intent to communicate harshly, but his words are often demeaning, sexist, and condemning. He does make up for his behavior, but I canât say Iâm his fan.Â
9. I watched this drama as my break time between work, and I think it taught me so much about how to approach situations at a workplace, how to choose the right time to say what you feel, and how, there are so many kinds of people out there, all trying to live life in the best way they can.Â
10. I am the biggest fan of food commentaries and Sakiko provides an ample amount of them. I love how descriptive, detailed and warm her thoughts on food are. She takes her time to savor various flavor combinations, cherishes the classics, deeply respects the ways of cooking and eating that sheâs brought up with, is constantly looking for ways to step out of her culinary comfort zone and expand her taste buds.
11. Another favorite episode of mine was the one where Sakiko steps into this fancy bar. The bartender, a cool, helpful man in his late 60âČs, introduces her to the charming world of cocktails. From fresh seasonal fruits to drinks with floral notes, Sakiko learns to treat herself without guilt. The two share a comradery where Sakiko confesses her newness to the world of liquor flavors and the bartender careful guides her to unique, enjoyable ones.Â
The show is filled with heart-warming moments and makes you want to hug every character for having the ability to enjoy food so well. I couldnât have asked for a better âGohanâ drama to the start of my J-drama explorations for the year.
Favorite Learnings:
1. You have your own place in this world. You donât have to fit it.Â
2. Life can get hard sometimes. During such moments, going back to what you love will reconnect you with joy.Â
3. Never stop trying new things, even when they feel scary and challenging.
Last Words: If you love food and you love watching people enjoy what they eat while learning kind, lovely things about life, you canât miss this one.đ„đđ
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Image Credits (www.aitado.blogspot.com) : 1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 11, 12, 17, 18, 19, 24 ,25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30,31, 32, 33, 37, 38, 39,Â
Our Beloved Summer was such a healing, therapeutic watch that did not hide the 'humanness' of love.
The drama is about two exes--- Kook Yeon Soo and Choi Woong (high-school students when they began dating) who had a 5-year relationship and broke up. They meet 5 years later and agree (fact: are forced) to shoot a documentary similar to the one they shot in high school. What starts from a '100 Things I Hate About You' turns into an introspective, messy yet heart-warming return to each other.
1. I love the layers in Kook Yeon Soo's personality. She's smart, socially inadept, deadpan, and more sensitive than she lets herself acknowledge. I love how the flaws in her character actually make her more endearing and relatable.
2. Kim Ji Woong, our male lead's best friend, is actually the prettiest one here, according to me. He's at constant war with himself, but I also love how he returns to the camera to shoot people's raw selves and finds comfort in it.Â
I especially love his friendship with Choi Ung, who despite knowing that Kim Ji Woong has feelings for Yeon Soo, doesnât push him away.
3. I thought the drama would come to be overwhelming given its storyline. But surprisingly, I couldn't keep away from it because of how comforting I found it to be.Â
4. Then we have K-pop idol NJ. She's such a fireball. She's funny, adorable, and yet so trapped and defined by people's idea of her. I love how Choi Ung and she decide to remain friends, comforting each other when things aren't going their way.Â
5. Okay, I love Choi Ung's parents so much! Honestly, the idea of running a restaurant and feeding people good food is the definition of a beautiful life for me. However, their care for Ung and his art is so cute and heart rendering.
6. It was through NJ that I realized how joy-crushing fame can be. You forget who you are and try too hard to become someone else's expectations of who you should be.
7. I think Choi-Ung's definition of happiness: "To do lie down and watch the sunlight stream through leaves" was when I first fell for him.Â
I love how he's never glorified 'living big'. He's so content with his wants. He knows exactly the kind of people he wants to be around and isn't afraid to go for an unconventional way of living if it makes him peaceful and happy.
8. When they all head for a 3-day trip for the shoot, I got really emotional watching Yeon Soo enjoy herself. It was so nice to see her smile and laugh and let herself free.Â
That was the first time I realized how lonely she must have been all these years, handling responsibilities and pushing people away to avoid hurt.
9. My favorite moment of the series was when Ung is waiting for Yeon's answer: will she travel to Germany with him as he enrolls in the architecture program? They meet at Sol Yi's restaurant and Yeon Soo chooses to stay back in Korea because that's what feels right to her.Â
There is this amazing moment where they know what they have to do for themselves and yet are so supportive of each other, without letting go of the love they've fought so hard to come back to.
10.Then we have Sol-Yi. I mean, who cannot love her? She's Yeon Soo's 'Reality Check Provider' and also her soundboard + BFF. I have to say I absolutely enjoy watching Park Jin Joo on screen. Even with her supporting role in 'Her Private Life', she was fabulous.Â
Here, Sol Yi is spontaneous, has a I-am-the-love-guru vibe and is atrocious in her choice of men. She cooks mediocre food but she doesn't give up on her dream. She's sassy, rude, amazing, and absolutely honest.
11. Lastly, I want to say I came to love Chae Ran so much. She's assistant produce to Kim Ji Ung and is also his unmistakable 'soulmate'. She possess so much sensitivity and yet is so calm and cool.Â
I love how she decides to wait for Kim Ji Ung to be in a better headspace before she confesses her feelings for him. That was such a mature, soft, 'ah' moment.
1. When the Universe gives you second chances, grab them with both hands and work to give them your all. People do not come into your life accidentally. Each one is there for a reason.
2. Love has a funny, soft, ridiculously amazing way to make itself known. Allow yourself to feel it when it knocks your door. (P.S: Open it wide and let love rain in your heart.)
3. Love is a fairytale, with all the sparkles, the imperfections, the laughs, the tears, the growth, the support, and the gooey-warm feeling you get when you're with someone right for you.
4. Forgiveness is hard. But regret is worse.Â
5. Whoever you were has made you who you are today. But you can always change if you don't like who you've become.
Oh, please watch this show. It is absolutely adorable, warm and mature.đđ
~ Our Beloved Summer ~ Favorite Moments / Stills (2) đș
~ Our Beloved Summer ~ Favorite Moments/ / Stills (1) đș
~ My favorite quote from âI Am Not A Robotâ. I think Ji Ah and Min Kyu make one of the cutest, prettiest K-drama couples.đŒÂ ~
This drama has a special place in my heart for the warmth and laughter it brought me. I recommend watching this show when you need a break from similar-trouped K-dramas and want to watch something light yet hearty.
The Story:
Kim Min Kyu is the Director of his father's firm, KM Finance. He's smart, witty and has absolutely distrusts fellow human beings. He bears a secret ailment where a single touch from another person can cause him a severe allergy resulting in death. Hiding his condition in order to continue keeping his father's company, Min Kyu keeps his distance from people.
After his father's death, he witnesses his father's closest colleague and confidant, Hwang Do Won, try to maliciously takeover the firm. Here's when Min Gyu pledges vengence against the man and his son (also Min Gyu's then BFF), Hwang Yoo Chul.
On the other hand, we have a team of fallen-from-fame scientists under the leadership of Hong Baek Gyun. Baek Gyun is a wiz and he's currently developing a humanoid called 'Aji 3' -- a robot that is created to resemble and think like a real person. For Baek Gyun, it is essential to secure a sponsor for releasing Aji 3 to the world. And in Kim Gyu, they find the perfect opportunity to do so.
However, things do not go as plan which is where our heroine, Jo Ji Ah comes in to the picture. On the day when Baek Gyun's team is supposed to send across Aji 3 for a live demo-testing to Min Gyu's home, a crucial part for the humanoid's functioning crashes. The scientists are desperate but Baek Gyun has a plan. Aji 3's physical looks exactly resemble those of his ex-lover Ji Ah and in order to save their hides, Baek Gyun asks her to step in as Aji 3's double.
Unaware of Min Gyun's disease, Ji Ah accepts the offer for the money she badly needs.
An inventor herself, Ji Ah has always been fascinated with making fun, wacky inventions that could also be useful to people. However, luck has not been on her side and Ji Ah is yet seeking her big breakthrough. Her big ray of hope lies in securing a prize at the annual competition for inventors sponsored by KM Finance. With her plans leading her to the very founder of the company she badly wants to impress, Ji Ah resolves to slyly deposit her proposal of ideas when she's playing Aji 3.
The story follows Min Gyu and Ji Ah's unconventional tale of friendship and love. Min Gyu's distrust of people slowly evaporates as he begins to spend more time with Aji 3. He also gradually opens up to the possibility that the world isn't as evil a place as he thinks it to be and it is safe to open his heart to it.
Side Characters:
I have an entourage of side characters that have added so much fun to the show.
There is Pi, Baek Gyun's first assistant who's a genius. She's been in love with her mentor ever since they began working together.
Then we have Hoktal, our blubbered, too-cute-but-doesn't-know-how-to-as-a-girl-out assistant. He reminds me of a lost puppy.
There is Ssanip, our youngest, funniest assistant in the team who has really bad comic timing. He's a complete softie.
Hwang Sun Hye is a tarot-card reader who also prides on giving the best relationship advice. Ji Ah's best friend, she's fierce, sexy and very charismatic.
Lastly, there's Jo Jin Bae, Ji Ah's brother. He works as Min Gyu's secretary and is extremely talented and smart. I love how he silently cheers Ji Ah on even though he's also the one who brings her frequent reality checks.
What I Liked:
~ I LOVED how this show cracked me up and was such an interesting story overall.đŒ
~ Kim Min Gyu's 'Pretties' (a collection of all his precious gadgets whom he considers and talks to like one would with real people).đŒ
~ Aji 3 and Min Gyu's super adorable friendship.đŒ
~ Ji Ah's eccentric, never-going-to-stop-trying attitude.đŒ
~ Ssanip and Hoktal's very fun bromance.đŒ
~ Min Gyu's dazzling smile *take my heart, please.* đŒ
~ The slow, natural evolvement of relationships between all our  characters.đŒ
~ Baek Gyun's journey to realizing the errors of his ways and owning his wrongs.đŒ
~ Pi's no-nonsense crush on her boss.đŒ
What I Didnât Like:
~ I'd like to have seen more romance between Ji Ah and Min Gyu versus just Aji 3 & Min Gyu. I think that was missing for me.
My Favorite Learnings:
1. Trust is a journey. It doesn't happen overnight. 2. Let in people, especially if they are good for your heart. 3. Life is too beautiful to be afraid of, even when it hasn't been kind to you before.
My Last Thoughts: Aji 3's official enlistment as a 'pretty'.đ
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GIF Credits: GIF 1, 9: @kdramareviewsâ | GIF 2: Pinterest | GIF 10: We Heart It
I feel K-Variety shows have a way to help you tap into your Zen. My encounter with them has made me fall in love with how positive, uplifting and fun they can be.
'Little House In The Forest' is a special one among the litter. I received the link for the first episode from my friend who'd just stumbled upon the show and was already head over heels for it.
I won't lie, she had very good reasons to be.
What the show is about:
The central theme of the show is around how simple, mindful living can actually boost people's happiness.
We have 2 celebrity subjects in the show: 1) Subject A: Park Shin Hye 2) Subject B: So Ji Sub
The subjects are brought to individual cabins, set in different parts of a forested area and they are given various tasks through the days. These tasks are actual experiments in helping them discover happiness and calm in the everyday.
Our celebrity subjects are then required to do these tasks and share their honest experiences on how effective these experiences were for their overall well-being.
The tasks are simple yet really soothing to watch, but what makes the show fun is the distinct personalities of the celebrities.
The Guests:
Subject A, Park Shin Hye is cheerful, likes playing music when she's cooking, loves to eat and is a thorough maximalist (her weekly pantry that she gets from the city is proof of this).
USP: Park Shin Hye's attention to food is superb to watch. She thoughtfully plans her meals and ravishes them with respect and contentment. She cooks up the coolest menus and is quite proud of her flavors.
Subject B, Ji-Sub is a quick contrast to Shin Hye. He's quiet, unintentionally funny, likes to eat but isn't ballistic about it and needs very little to live well (his luggage i.e. a medium sized rucksack is proof that he's probably a modern day monk in hiding).
USP: Ji Sub surprises you with his sensitivity to things. At first, I did confuse his introverted personality for aloofness but he's brilliantly creative. He has this knack of building things out of thin air, such as a simple towel rack, a footstool and my favorite, a hammock.
I love him more because ramen is his favorite meal in the whole world (*take all the brownie points*)
We also have some random cuties who appear on the show. One of them is Bong, the cloud-white dog who will only follow human orders if there's food involved in the bargain. He's shamelessly selfish and won't chill around with the guests even when they ask him to stay for company. He likes sunny, windy days while sitting in grass and is also quite fond of flowers.
Side note: He has a hilarious first encounter with Ji-Sub where the two of them take offense and depart with sorry disappointment.
Then there are the cows. Yes, cows. These creatures of the nearby forests wander into the meadows that surround our guests' cabins and they often take a liking towards the camera.
However, when our guests get friendly with them, they find themselves and their homes surrounded by an entire herd that refuses to leave (oops).
And last but not the least, the narrator that comes in with a calming synopsis of the tasks, explains their meanings and pulls you in to try them as well.
The Tasks:
I especially enjoyed the experiments of happiness our celebrities received. A few of my favorites among them were:
1. Decorating a part of the cabin with your own unique art: Shin Hye painted a flower meadow around her window â€
2. Taking 3 hours to prep, cook and enjoy lunch: Ji-Sub had a slow, barbeque style meal outdoors and enjoyed it with the surrounding mountains and clouds.
3. Capturing the colors of the rainbow through photographs of objects around them: The two of them traveling through the surrounding woods to notice flowers, dew drops and streams to capture these colors is very beautiful to watch.
4. Building a little something for the cabin as a goodbye gift: I loved Shin Hye making a cute bird nest outside hers for creatures to come and give the cabin company in her absence.
5. Turning off your smartphone post 6 p.m.: Ji-Sub was a stud as had switched his off from the morning itself (lol) while Shin Hye almost had a panic attack without hers for the evening.Â
6. Going for a solo picnic.
There were a total of 44-46 tasks that the guests performed and there were glimpses of the omitted ones in the last episode (the director's cut).
What I Liked:
1. I loved the theme of the show in itself. It is positive, nourishing and very beautiful to see simple living in action.đŒ 2. The celebrity guests, who with their contrasting personalities make the tasks so much more fun to watch. đŒ 3. Bong the doggo.đŒ 4. The various happiness tasks that can be done even when if you're living in a city. đŒ 5. The resourceful nature of Ji-Sub who lives calmly even when he spends a winter night without electricity. đŒ 6. Shin-Hye's meal combos and her manner of eating. đŒ 7. The beautiful, simple and well-structured cabins in the woods. đŒ 8. The woods. đŒ
What I Didn't Like:
1. I feel they could have shown more tasks rather than just the select few.
My Learnings:
1. Happiness is not faraway. It is right here.
This is the biggest message that the show gives out. It displays how happiness is day to day affair and how we can welcome it where we are, without needing to head off to a cabin to look for it.
2. Who you are is enough and you deserve rest.
Both our celeb guests warm up to the idea of rest which for them, is such a stark contrast given their hectic lifestyles. I love Ji-Sub's evolution through the show: how he slowly gets more comfortable showing who he is onscreen, sheds off much of his shyness yet is naturally himself.
3. Listening to yourself requires you to sit down with yourself first.
If you really want to get in touch with your feelings, you have to let go of the mental clutter of thoughts and sit down with yourself. Letting go of excess to focus on what's important enhances your time and gives it an enriching, peaceful quality.
My last thoughts:Â
This is a BEAUTIFUL show. One that deserves your time and one that is perfect if you want a feel-good watch. It adds value and purpose and helps you make better choices to live more fully.đ
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Image Credits: 1 - burnsocial.com | 9: Channel Korea |
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~ I wanted to do a little appreciation look-book of Jin Su-Kyungâs super pretty, prints, hair bands and bows, from âDo Do Sol Sol La La Solâ. So here it is! đŒ ~
~ Someone please bury my heart with this show because I just finished watching it and I canât. I just canât. ~
~ Favorite stills from Episode 2 of Traveler (S2). I think I fell as hard for Tango as the three boys and for some reason, it was so believable that Kang Ha Neul would shop a turquoise charm necklace and carry it like it belonged to his body. †~
~ Current drama watch is âItaewon Classâ. I love those off-the-road, traditional Asian food joints. I love the vibe: the portable stove that holds a pot of ramen or soup, bottles of soju and tiny glasses, pickled radishes and kimchi in small, porcelain white dishes. I couldnât help screengrabbing these stills and this beautiful quote from the first episode. †~