Thursday, November 14, 2019

Reminders If You Are In Your 20s & Feel Stuck in Life

"Nothing will ruin your 20s more than thinking you should have your life together already."

Have you ever woken up one day, completely clueless with no direction? We all have gone through such feelings before. Everywhere you look, you come across people who you think are at a better place in life than you are, and that suffocating feeling just drags you down further. Stuck in life, at a job, at home, or at relationships, the feeling of being less than what you expect yourself, just pulls you apart. These are some feelings that every 20-something has gone through in their life. In this haphazard way of life, we often forget to form meaningful relationships, find something that means a lot to us, and a place where we can actually be happy. If this is what you also go through, then remember it is okay, it is a process you go through to reach a better place. But before that, you need to remind yourself that everything is going to be okay. So, every one of you, who is looking at their life right now, and wondering if it will ever get better or not, here are 20 things to remind yourself.

1. You are enough. 
2. Your circle of friends gets smaller, but the quality of people gets better.
3. You are your own greatest asset, and it’s probably time you started giving yourself more credit.
4. Avoid comparing yourself to what you see on social media. The grass always looks greener on the other side.
5. People will judge you anyway, so do what makes you happy.
6. Let go of toxic relationships and anything that doesn’t help you grow.
7. You still have a long way to go, don't beat yourself up because of small disappointments or failures.
8. There is no specific age at which you need to have a job, travel the world, have a healthy relationship, or have children. Things will come into your life when the time is right, don't chase after goals set according to other people's achievements. 
9. Stop being fearful of rejection, be courageous and tell people how you feel. 
10. Shitty people will say and do shitty things, and the best thing you can do is ignore it.
11. No one has the right to make you feel guilty about the life choices that you have made so far, be it related to your work, your relationships, or even your sex life.
12. When your job gets really tough, that’s when you have to realise how much you care about your work, or how much you need to find a different job.
13. Remember that you work to live, you don’t live to work.
14. Get a hobby that makes you feel good about yourself and follow it with all your heart.
15. Laughter is the greatest form of therapy. So do it often, alone or with people who make you feel good about yourself. Laugh and let go.
16. A stable relationship does not have to necessarily mean having a romantic partner.
17. Losing love is better than never having that love at all. So don't ever stop yourself from falling in love. Take the plunge, my friend.
18. Document your journey and important events in life so that you can be more self-reflective. You will notice things about yourself that you never did before.
19. Call your parents and don’t be too proud to ask them for advice. They may be wrong sometimes, but their experience in life may turn out to be helpful. 
20. Be passionate, be fearless, and go after what you want in life.

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Crash Landing on You Upcoming Drama - Hyun Bin & Son Ye Jin


tvN’s upcoming drama “Crash Landing on You” has shared its first teaser poster of Son Ye Jin and Hyun Bin.

The drama will tell the story of chaebol heiress Yoon Se Ri (played by Son Ye Jin) and North Korean officer Ri Jung Hyuk (played by Hyun Bin). They fall in love after Yoon Se Ri is forced to land in North Korea during a paragliding trip due to high winds and Ri Jung Hyuk who falls in love with her while hiding and protecting her.


The first teaser poster features Hyun Bin and Son Ye Jin in front of a bonfire under a night sky full of stars. They gaze deeply into each other’s eyes with a romantic atmosphere in the air. Viewers are already looking forward to their on-screen chemistry as they portray forbidden love between a South Korean woman and North Korean soldier.

The actors filmed in Switzerland and Mongolia, and the teaser captures the breathtaking landscape of these beautiful countries as the two characters crossed paths with each other. Then the second teaser video unveiled the comical first meeting between them, which prompted much excitement.


The new teaser video shows the moment Yoon Se Ri and Ri Jung Hyuk meet for the very first time, where she literally crash lands into him. She calls out for help as she’s stuck in a tree and though she’s glad to see a soldier at first, she takes in his attire and realizes he’s a North Korean soldier. He gets ready to fire on her when she falls on top of him, allowing her to have a safe landing.

Wanting to deny what’s going on, she says, “You defected, right?” but he replies, “You seem to be misunderstanding this situation. You’re in North Korea.” She’s stunned by the revelation as she says, “How did I get here?” The teaser is quite comical compared to the more cinematic first teaser, and give a glance into the great chemistry between Son Ye Jin and Hyun Bin.

Son Ye Jin and Hyun Bin previously starred in the 2018 film “The Negotiation” together, and fans are looking forward to seeing their chemistry once again as leads of this upcoming melodrama.

Crash Landing on You” is set to premiere in December and is a collaboration between writer Park Ji Eun of “My Love from the Star,” “The Producers,” and “The Legend of the Blue Sea,” and producing director Lee Jung Hyo of “Good Wife,” “Life on Mars,” and “Romance Is a Bonus Book.”

Insecurity & Learning How To Love

I believe this topic is really important in today's society yet rarely being talked directly upon.

Most of us feel insecure sometimes, but some of us feel insecure most of the time. The kind of childhood you had, past traumas, recent experiences of failure or rejection, loneliness, social anxiety, negative beliefs about yourself, perfectionism, or having a critical parent or partner can all contribute to insecurity. Here's three big type of insecurity

Type 1: Insecurity Based on Recent Failure or Rejection
Recent events in our lives can greatly affect both our mood and the way we feel about ourselves. Research on happiness suggests that up to 40% of our “happiness quotient” is based on recent life events. The biggest negative contributor to happiness is the ending of a relationship, followed by the death of a spouse, job loss, and negative health events. Since unhappiness also influences your self-esteem, failure and rejection can deliver a double whammy to your confidence. And those of us who have lower self-esteem to begin with are more reactive to failure. It’s as if an experience like losing your job grabs old negative beliefs about your self-worth and activates them.

Type 2: Lack of Confidence Because of Social Anxiety
Many of us experience a lack of confidence in social situations like parties, family gatherings, interviews, and dates. The fear of being evaluated by others—and found to be lacking—can lead you to feel anxious and self-conscious. As a result, you may avoid social situations, experience anxiety when you anticipate social events, or feel self-conscious and uncomfortable during them. Past experience can feed your sense of not belonging, not feeling important or interesting, or just not being good enough. 

Type 3: Insecurity Driven by Perfectionism
Some of us have very high standards for everything we do. You may want the highest grades, the best job, the perfect figure, the most beautifully decorated apartment or house, neat and polite kids, or the ideal partner. Unfortunately, life doesn’t always turn out exactly the way we want, even if we work extra hard. There is a piece of the outcome that is at least to some degree out of our control. Bosses may be critical, jobs may be scarce, partners may resist commitment, or you may have genes that make it difficult to be skinny. If you are constantly disappointed and blaming yourself for being anything less than perfect, you will start to feel insecure and unworthy. While trying your best and working hard can give you an advantage, other aspects of perfectionism that are unhealthy. Beating up on yourself and constantly worrying about not being good enough can lead to depression and anxiety, eating disorders, or chronic fatigue.
Perfectionists often have conditional self-esteem: They like themselves when they are on top and dislike themselves when things don't go their way. 
After so many years of being single, I found myself involved with someone. The idea of someone new coming into your life is kinda special for me. I thought I was matured enough to handle relationship, to care for someone and being part of each other life. So what was my expectation from a relationship? Thinking hard, I expect a maturity in being together, to grow together either it is physically, mentally, spiritually and financially. I always thought when you love and are happy with yourself, everything else will fall into your life. Then I assumed, when I found my special someone, that means I am happy with my life and will continue to be happy. They said, when you love yourself enough, then love will come to you.

But to be honest, finding your special someone requires you to take a step back, to really analyze yourself whether you are truly happy with yourself. And for my case, I did. I am happy with my life at that point in time. I learn how to be able to enjoy my own companion, to be comfortable with my own self and being my best self without pretending to be someone else. When I met him, I thought I do not need to concern about loving myself anymore. Yet, learning how to love and stay in love with yourself is a lifetime learning. I believe by learning how to love yourself first then you will know how to love others, period. 

Once in a while, my insecurity comes and sometimes I forget how I value myself. One of the cases is when I thought I was mature enough not to think about his ex-girlfriend or any other girls, but after looking at social media consistently, I found myself unconciously comparing myself to them. That's not healthy I know. I thought I won't care much about the past, but sometimes those feelings would just come. It was hard for me to process those thoughts.

I kept thinking, why those thoughts come across occasionally? Is that because of he does not treat me in a good way or does not show his love for me? What was lacking in our relationship? 

I realized that everything is good actually. That's me being subjective and assume that he does not care for me, even though he cares for me a lot. I assumed that I am not important to him. I assumed myself that I am not good enough, that he will leave me alone one day.  

Those kind of inner critic and negative self-talk is something I need to get rid of. I always thought that my insecurity comes from being rejected from my past experience, yet if one day I finally found my special someone, everything would be alright. But let me tell you one important thing, THAT'S NOT THE CASE. Your insecurity do not come from outside situation or condition. It's within you that you have to look inside.

I realize those insecure feelings usually stems from my low self-esteem which comes from all the insecurities and constant comparing. But why should you compare an apple to a banana? It does not have any point, right?

"What's not so good about you that is good about other person?" That's when I realize, there is nothing not good about me. Then what's the point of comparing now?


The past is already in the past and that person may no longer part of your life and you should instead do not bother with its existence anymore. That person was in the past, so there is a great deal of reasons why the relationship ends and why he/she choose to be with you now. And I need to trust that. Then I read this and it resonates with me the most;

“I learned that one of the most vulnerable parts of loving someone is trusting that they love you back, and I need to be generous in my assumptions.” (Brene Brown, Rising Strong)

That left me that if I like someone, means I need to trust that other person that he likes me too. And to be generous in my assumption is that by trusting the best possible scenario instead of worrying about the worst.

I used to keep all thoughts in me and never speak out what I wanted or needed. But he managed to get me to speak out what I feel and why I feel like that. By being open and vulnerable, I told him what I have been feeling and what I hope for the future. 

I realize that instead of making a lot of assumptions, I need to be able to communicate better what I want and learning how to love.
I realize then that I have to tame down my self critic and let the past be my lesson instead of my enemy. I learn it the hard way that;

I am worthy.
I do not need someone else's opinion about me.
I am good and complete.
I accept my imperfect self.
I love myself.
I feel happy by being my own self.
I feel loved and cared for.
I am important.

That's when I think working on self-esteem issues is really important. Try to focus on what you can do better as a person instead of comparing to others. Here is what you can do:

1. Stop Comparing and Start Believing in Yourself.

Everyone's life is different. You cannot compare an apple to an orange. Comparison is unfair to start with. You cannot compare your beginning to someone's middle. Even if you compare strength to strength, there will always be those who are better, and those who are worse.

Try to be aware of when you start comparing yourself to others … once you’ve developed this awareness, try this trick: stop yourself. Tell yourself, “Stop that!” And then start thinking about all the things you DO have, the things you love, the people you have, the blessings that life has given you. Make this a regular practice, and you’ll start to be happier with your life.



2. Accept Yourself for What You Really Are


Can you learn to like yourself even when you are not doing well? Focus on inner qualities like your character, sincerity, or good values, rather than just on what grades you get, how much you get paid, or how many people like you.

3. Count Your Blessings

A better focus is on what you do have, on what you are already blessed with. Count what you have, not what you don’t. Think about how lucky you are to have what you have, to have the people in your life who care about you, to be alive at all.

4. Be OK with imperfection. 

No one is perfect — intellectually, we all know that, but emotionally we seem to feel bad when we don’t reach perfection. You aren’t perfect and you never will be. I certainly am not, and I’ve learned to be OK with that. Sure, keep trying to improve, but don’t think you’ll ever be the “perfect person”. If you look at it in a different way, that imperfection is what makes you who you are, you already are perfect.

We tend to be our own harshest critics. My best friend always tells me to be kind to myself and let go certain control and idealism. But that's true, I am the one who used to set such high standard on my own self. My idealistic way of thinking wants every single thing to be under my control. Perfectionism is a really a real deal. I always said to myself that I have to learn how to accept there are things that out of my control and try to be perfect is impossible because no one is perfect. I knew it, yet I might need some reminder, sometimes. 

5. Learn to Love Enough

If you always want what others have, you will never have enough. You will always want more. That’s an endless cycle, and it will never lead to happiness. No matter how many clothes you buy, no matter how many houses you own (seven, in the case of one famous candidate), no matter how many fancy cars you acquire … you’ll never have enough. Instead, learn to realize that what you have is already enough. If you have shelter over your head, food on the table, clothes on your back, and people who love you, you are blessed. You have enough. Anything you have over and above that — and let’s admit that all of us reading this blog have more than that — is more than enough. Be good with that, and you’ll find contentment.


When it comes to your self-worth, only one opinion truly matters — your own. 

In the end, no matter what status you have, no matter what kind of job you do, happiness is something we found within. Our happiness does not depend on someone else or even someone else's opinion about you. We should feel complete by ourself and loving ourself is not a one time off lesson, as it is a lifetime learning. 


Let's have a more positive way of thinking ~
“To love is to stop comparing.” – Bernard Grasset

“Don't think about forever. Think about today. And whenever you are together. Focus on how you can validate, respect, appreciate and care for one another. And what a wonderful love you have created, When you think a love that will last forever, you tend to forget to focus on the now...and that's how love dies. The most important purpose of the relationship is for you to become a more loving person.”

Hotel Del Luna Ending Final


Ever since 49 Days, I think Hotel Del Luna is one of the meaningful drama about life and death. It's truly remarkable to be able to have this kind of drama every once in a while. And thanks to my dear friend, letting me know this drama exists and for sure, I do recommend this drama.

It was clear right from the beginning that there is no such happy ending between Jang Man Wol (played by IU) and Ku Chan Seong (played by Yeo Jin Goo). They both know one day Man Wol has to leave and go to afterlife. To be honest, there was a bit of spoiler that Man Wol has died because she committed suicide after killing so many people, yet I do not see that background story. It's just that her time stopped and she's been living for 1,300 years and never aged.

Man Wol has been punished for her entire life because of her past. She has to attend to ghost who just died and still want to linger in this world with their unfinished business before the time comes for them to go to afterlife. Because once you go to afterlife (crossing the Sanzu River - or we used to call it as the bridge that separate the living and the death), you will forget all the memories during your living time and that's where the reincarnation theory will take place.

Man Wol could not let go of her past and instead dwelling upon it, tried to take revenge before she go to her afterlife. That revenge energy hold her to get punished in the world between the living and the death. Even after 1,300 years, she never once let of of Chung Myung who betrayed her and still want to take revenge on him. So irony, that human life is like that, maybe for some there are still some unfinished business during our living time, yet we still hold onto them - making our journey to the afterlife a bit complicated.

The subject of death is not an easy one to talk about, much less create lovely stories around, but I loved the tales of the hotel’s guests and the lessons they taught. For me, Hotel del Luna wasn’t so much about death as it was about concepts like peace, forgiveness, kindness, good and evil, and appreciating life while you can. Even though it took Man Wol thirteen hundred years to learn how to understand and forgive, she was eventually about to heal once she was willing to let herself be vulnerable, and by healing she enabled herself to move on and be happy. It’s a simple lesson, but an important one, and seeing her become capable of letting go is a help to me to be able to believe by letting myself be vulnerable, healing will take place and letting me be happy instead.


Hotel del Luna has taught us, it’s that parting is inevitable, but that goodbye is never forever. Life and death are a circle, and every ending is also a beginning. And it's our duty to start living and appreciating life as it is, be kind and always learn how to forgive and cherish life.