I'm not used to these kind of dramas because its really ridiculous the things that happened in episode 3... its just a bunch of scenes connected to each other randomly and they just... walk out? Like... you're in the middle of a contest, you just ran out? then you're in a car chase, you somehow lose him and then are seamlessly merged into a car race thing? and then you get money, what??? WHAT????
I'm looking forward to this one! Such a fresh take on both lead's being transmigrated, reminds me a little of a dream within a dream with the author and the FL
poor jeaoh dies, basically for no reason they don't actually use his death for anything, junseo also decides to ruin ajin and die together but only he dies.... -_-
That was an ending for sure. It was ok, I truly did not know what I was expecting.Jun Seo also needed to face…
Jaeoh's death was the thing that made me the saddest, couldn't care less about anyone else. Which hits harder because with that ending Jaeoh's death was for nothing. And the real people who were supposed to get punished (A-jin and her husband) didn't get what they truly deserved
just on episode 8... wow... i genuinely dislike the female lead, it was okay in the beginning, but she really has no saving grace... nothing at all. I was two-hearted in the beginning because of what she has been through but now I actually want to see her downfall now. and seeing some of the spoilers from further episodes gives me hope
yes, end of ep4. A real doozy of a bodyswap, over the top, actually.
for this one its ike: oh they weren't in any danger... everything was fine... then she said something and they just... slipped. BOOM now for some magical reason because they were in the same body of water: SOUL SWITCH! oh and they were basically both conscious, not immediately injured and not DEAD, just suddenly drowning for no reason. ORIGINALITY AT ITS FINEST!
Sociopaths are the ones driven by emotional reactivity and environmental factors. Their actions are impulsive…
Psychopathy doesn’t mean a person never feels anger or fear. It means those emotions don’t disrupt their planning, or ability to strategically calculate consequences. So they have emotions but they are mostly ego-centric, it's all about their own gratification. Sociopathy, in contrast, is marked by impulsivity and emotional volatility, where emotions override logic and lead to chaotic, inconsistent behavior. That’s the key differentiation factor. I never said they are incapable of planning.
Also, there is a common misconception that psychopaths are all just mindless serial killers who kill for the fun of it. Not all serial killers are psychopaths and not all psychopaths are serial killers. In reality, psychopaths are simply more susceptible to that path because of a biological lack of emotional warmth and most importantly a total lack of guilt/remorse.
Just because a writer says a character is one thing doesn't make it clinically correct. As a doctor, I see the mistakes writers make with these subjects constantly. It's understandable, they aren't psychiatrists, they write what they think is correct and most dramatic. In this case, the writer gave Ah-Jin a sociopathic backstory (trauma-induced) but psychopathic symptoms (low fear, high impulse control, cold calculation). Her behavior simply doesn't match the physiology of a high-arousal, reactive sociopath.
Think of it this way: If you insult a sociopath, they will probably punch you in the face right then and there because they are hurt and angry. If you insult a psychopath, they will smile, buy you a drink, wait three months, and then frame you for a crime you didn't commit.
And based on what you said: If she was truly acting out of fear (like a sociopath would), she physiologically wouldn't have been able to actively put herself in a situation for the stalker to try and assault her or let her father beat her to death just to set a trap. That requires a biological lack of fear response (hypo-arousal) that sociopaths don't possess.
Edit: But as I said, these aren't official diagnoses, so they do overlap a lot. Her character is a bit inconsistent in her mental problem lol
wait... I knew that title was familiar.... THIS IS FROM THAT WEBTOON WITH THE BLONDE EMPRESS OMG... but... I'm not sure I like the actors... especially the main couple...
I DIDN'T KNOW THIS EXISTED!
Also, there is a common misconception that psychopaths are all just mindless serial killers who kill for the fun of it. Not all serial killers are psychopaths and not all psychopaths are serial killers. In reality, psychopaths are simply more susceptible to that path because of a biological lack of emotional warmth and most importantly a total lack of guilt/remorse.
Just because a writer says a character is one thing doesn't make it clinically correct. As a doctor, I see the mistakes writers make with these subjects constantly. It's understandable, they aren't psychiatrists, they write what they think is correct and most dramatic. In this case, the writer gave Ah-Jin a sociopathic backstory (trauma-induced) but psychopathic symptoms (low fear, high impulse control, cold calculation). Her behavior simply doesn't match the physiology of a high-arousal, reactive sociopath.
Think of it this way: If you insult a sociopath, they will probably punch you in the face right then and there because they are hurt and angry. If you insult a psychopath, they will smile, buy you a drink, wait three months, and then frame you for a crime you didn't commit.
And based on what you said: If she was truly acting out of fear (like a sociopath would), she physiologically wouldn't have been able to actively put herself in a situation for the stalker to try and assault her or let her father beat her to death just to set a trap. That requires a biological lack of fear response (hypo-arousal) that sociopaths don't possess.
Edit: But as I said, these aren't official diagnoses, so they do overlap a lot. Her character is a bit inconsistent in her mental problem lol