Now Veir and Kelvin are no longer together, and Kelvin has decided to stop bothering Veir and just focus on himself. But Veir still canāt seem to mind his own business š
Whatās interesting is that it feels like Veir still loves Kelvin, even now. Meanwhile Kelvin looks like he has completely stepped back, not just to protect his peace, but to let Veir leave his life.
But even with that distance, it still feels like the emotions between them are not completely gone š
Just finished episode 7 and my thoughts still stand š This is not a review, just my own analysis.
Weāre still mostly seeing things from one perspective, and until we truly understand Kelvinās side of the story, I feel like judging him is still too early š¤
Also, the story keeps going back and forth, and the supporting characters keep getting a lot of screen time too, which sometimes makes the main situation even more confusing š It feels like the show is slowly hiding something bigger that hasnāt been fully revealed yet.
I will keep an eye on your comment while watching the series.
šsure! š Iām also curious to see how things unfold as the story goes on. Maybe when Kelvinās side is finally shown, a lot of things will start making more sense š¤
Point well made.Hopefully Kelvin part of story that has lead up to this will be explained. Heck what Kelvin father…
Exactly! Thatās why I feel like Kelvinās side of the story is really important. What his father did to his mother (and to him) was honestly just pure selfishness and greed for her money š
So it makes sense that Kelvin would grow up with a lot of trauma. If we finally get his point of view, I think it will explain a lot about why he acts the way he does now.
Everyone keeps saying Kelvin is obsessive, maybe even a psycho⦠and yeah, he does look intense š³ But the wild part? Weāve never seen the story from his point of view. So how do we really know what heās thinking? Makes me wonder if weāre just judging him based on what Veir sees š
Watching Yesterday got me thinking⦠is it really just Kelvin being crazy, or is there something deeper we donāt know yet? Because the way Veir keeps forgetting things feels like something really traumatic happened in the past⦠like his mind blocked it out. It feels like the truth is hidden somewhere in those memories.
Jay is still the most irritating kind of brother/friend the type that knows things but pretends he doesnāt. That fake calm attitude when everything is burning? Toxic.
But what really shocked me was fai telling Jay to decide whether Champ or cher should die first. That moment was very annoying.
Because fai isnāt just a victim anymore ā sheās carrying trauma, anger, and revenge in her voice. You can feel how broken she is. And Jay being the one forced to decide? That tension was insane. And Cher⦠the tears, the confusion, the switching energy ā messy. I was so annoyed I had to skip some scenes. Iāve never reacted like that to an episode before. But hereās the truth: The fact that it made me this angry means the writing worked. The characters are flawed. Morally gray. Frustratingly human. And the rest of the episode? Actually good. Just remember: Hate the character, not the actor. This drama will make you question everyoneās morals ā and your own.
āPlease remember ā Ahājin is just a character. The actors and actresses portraying her are real human beings. You can hate the character, but donāt confuse that with hating the people playing her.ā
Trauma explains some behavior but doesnāt automatically excuse all actions.
Ahājin clearly made conscious, manipulative choices even as a child and later as a grown-up.
People who only blame trauma miss the fact that she had agency ā she acted deliberately in many situations, like framing her stepmother or lying about her mom.
āEven as a child, Ahājin was already manipulative ā she staged a fall from the building to make her stepmother look guilty. Trauma didnāt make her do it; she chose it.ā
Now Veir and Kelvin are no longer together, and Kelvin has decided to stop bothering Veir and just focus on himself. But Veir still canāt seem to mind his own business š
Whatās interesting is that it feels like Veir still loves Kelvin, even now. Meanwhile Kelvin looks like he has completely stepped back, not just to protect his peace, but to let Veir leave his life.
But even with that distance, it still feels like the emotions between them are not completely gone š
Weāre still mostly seeing things from one perspective, and until we truly understand Kelvinās side of the story, I feel like judging him is still too early š¤
Also, the story keeps going back and forth, and the supporting characters keep getting a lot of screen time too, which sometimes makes the main situation even more confusing š It feels like the show is slowly hiding something bigger that hasnāt been fully revealed yet.
Really curious to see how everything connects in the next episodes š§©
So it makes sense that Kelvin would grow up with a lot of trauma. If we finally get his point of view, I think it will explain a lot about why he acts the way he does now.
Jay is still the most irritating kind of brother/friend the type that knows things but pretends he doesnāt. That fake calm attitude when everything is burning? Toxic.
But what really shocked me was fai telling Jay to decide whether Champ or cher should die first.
That moment was very annoying.
Because fai isnāt just a victim anymore ā sheās carrying trauma, anger, and revenge in her voice. You can feel how broken she is. And Jay being the one forced to decide? That tension was insane.
And Cher⦠the tears, the confusion, the switching energy ā messy.
I was so annoyed I had to skip some scenes. Iāve never reacted like that to an episode before.
But hereās the truth:
The fact that it made me this angry means the writing worked. The characters are flawed. Morally gray. Frustratingly human.
And the rest of the episode? Actually good.
Just remember: Hate the character, not the actor.
This drama will make you question everyoneās morals ā and your own.
Ahājin clearly made conscious, manipulative choices even as a child and later as a grown-up.
People who only blame trauma miss the fact that she had agency ā she acted deliberately in many situations, like framing her stepmother or lying about her mom.