why did they put these wigs on these men? Ji & Duan... their hair is awful. They both have hairstyles of senior citizens who get their hair done on Saturday and the cosmetology school. 😂 The hair alone makes me not take these 2 seriously. loland did Ji have face work? or maybe the wig is drawing more attention to his face than usual...
ep 31 Ji carrying that bag with that wig, lol 🤣😆😂 I just felt like He must be wearing heels 😂 👠👠👠👠👠👠👠👠
some writers think that adding extra drama makes a series more interesting. but it can also cause a disconnect. because too much foolishness can agitate some viewers. that's what the presence of mi YU's parents do for me.
the series didn't actually need her parents at all. they are so ignorant, selfish and uncouth. when I think of her parents, I think... Don't let the dog out, it doesn't know how to behave, it might bite someone
I think people forget to rate after watching it...or I don't know what grudge does MDL have against Ren Jialun...no…
I'm not complaining about his acting. I'm just describing it. I don't really have an issues with his acting. I just know what to expect. I think he is always typecasted to fit his acting.
but i dont know, if im at ji feng place, i also will go there, coz there was sui**de attempt from chun, no matter…
he didn't know it was a suicide attempt. that wasn't a suicide attempt. that was an attention attempt. he simply got a call stating she was being cyber bullied. and the rest... we'll leave for today's episode.
The platforms sure know how to keep the wealth shared. LOL VIKI is always late - I can probably watch it with the comments. But that voice is so annoying. I have restarted it 3 times on Youku... Come on Viki
Damn. The depiction of a desperation if it was a kiss...Also, rare in dramaland but somehow not surprising with…
These are some grown people, with some growing needs, and they have been longing for each other for some time now. - The thirst is real and ain't nothing wrong with that.
Ep 30 - The Mi-Ji-Chun Tic-Tac-Toe: 4 Corners of Messy & 1 Suspicious Wig
I am officially over this love square. It’s really not even a square or a circle; it’s just four useless corners of emotional messiness, and I’m sick of it
1. Ji: The Man Who Can’t Say "Not My Problem" Let’s be real: Ji is just being a freaking fool. There’s no deep "debt of gratitude" here; he’s just a man who is fundamentally incapable of telling his ex, "That’s not my problem."
He lets Chun pull these stunts in the name of "business and friendship," but he’s really just a pawn.
Walking out of her apartment right after his night with Mi Yu was the ultimate fumble. He thinks he’s being a "good guy" by helping Chun through her career meltdown, but he’s actually just being a professional door-mat.
2. Chun: The "X" That Won't Be Erased Chun is the ultimate "EX" on the board. She doesn't care about Ji’s feelings; she only cares about what Chun wants.
Her company is dumping her and her fans are turning on her, but she’s using the crisis to force Ji into her corner.
She views Mi Yu as "side interference," but she’s forgetting that she’s the one trying to delete ten years of reality to claim a man who is already over her.
3. The Secret Player (Duan in Donna's Wig?) Chun’s downfall seems a little too perfectly timed. There is definitely a Secret Player in the wings getting revenge because Chun helped Ji and the hotel. Is it Duan wearing Donna’s wig? Is it a ghost from the business deals past? Whoever it is, they are the only ones actually playing 4D chess while Ji is playing checkers.
4. Mi Yu: Moving Out of the "Safe-Scape" Mi Yu was right: "If you can’t control this relationship with your ex, check your feelings." FACTS. * She’s spent these episodes using Tan as a "safe-scape" because she was too hurt to fight.
The Turn: Next episode, Mi Yu finally stops forfeiting. She’s committing to the ship and stopping the "Oppa-zone" distractions. She’s realizing that the only way to win the board is to stay on it.
The Scoreboard (Eps 30-32) Tan isn't a player; he’s just a corner for Mi Yu to hide in. The real game is the Mi-Ji-Chun Tic-Tac-Toe.
Chun (The X): Currently 0. She’s an ex trying to reclaim a past that doesn't exist.
Mi Yu: 2. She has the history, the heart, and finally, the backbone to win.
The Verdict Ji needs to learn the phrase "Not my problem," and Mi Yu needs to stop running to Tan every time Ji acts like a fool. Chun gets what she wants? Not if Mi Yu finally decides to play for keeps.
I don't know who is more exhausting: Ji for being a 'business and friendship' fool, or Chun for acting like she's the lead actress in a drama that ended ten years ago. Either way, I'm just here for Mi Yu to stop 'safe-scaping' and for us to find out if that really is Duan in Donna's wig really trolling Chun 😂
Ji’s Paradox: The Hypocrite with the Right Intentions ugh! 🤪
We’ve talked about Mi Yu’s self-sabotage, but let’s talk about the man driving her (and us) crazy. Ji is the ultimate "Do as I say, not as I do" character. He spends his time lecturing Mi Yu for not protecting herself, while he lets his ex, Chun, walk all over his professional and personal boundaries.
1. The Hypocrisy of the "Business Deal" Ji’s moral compass is weirdly tied to his job title.
The Past: He literally helped cover up Mi Yu’s husband’s affair in Episode 1 just to appease a hotel prospect.
The Present: He is doing the same thing with Chun. He allows her to manipulate his image, stage-manage his dinner, and claim him as her "past lover" on stage—all because he doesn't want to "ruin the deal." He is teaching Mi Yu to stand up for herself while he is currently letting Chun wear him like a prop for her vlog fans.
2. Jealousy vs. Professionalism Ji has a "No Switch" when it comes to Chun, but a "Jealousy Switch" when it comes to Mi Yu.
He lashes out at Mi Yu in the name of being her "Manager" whenever other men show her attention. He can't handle his feelings, so he critiques her "people-pleasing" as a professional flaw.
Meanwhile, he is blind to the fact that his entanglement with Chun is causing more "business interference" than any of Mi Yu's polite interactions with guests ever could.
3. The "Honey-Do" Errand: The Ultimate Fool Move That dinner scene was the peak of frustration. Ji thinks he’s being "balanced" by staying for dinner, but he is actually being played like a fiddle.
When he obediently left the table to get dessert for Chun after only two bites of food, he essentially told Mi Yu: "Chun’s whims are more important than your presence."
He is so focused on the "Clientele" that he is missing the human being standing right in front of him. He is protecting the hotel while sabotaging the woman he claims to care about.
4. Why He Is Still Beneficial (The Weird Balance) Despite being a "freaking fool" where Chun is concerned, Ji is still the only person who disrupts Mi Yu’s cycle.
The Good: He is the only person who doesn't want Mi Yu to save him. He wants her to be selfish.
The Bad: He is currently so bad at being selfish himself that he is creating the very chaos he supposedly hates.
Conclusion: Two Saboteurs in a Trench Coat The tragedy of Ji and Mi Yu is that they are both experts at fixing everyone else’s problems while being absolute disasters at managing their own hearts.
Ji wants to save Mi Yu from her "Savior Complex," but he needs to save himself from his "Business-At-All-Costs" complex first. He is fawning over Mi Yu while accepting every bit of bait Chun throws out. Until he learns to say "No" to a business deal for the sake of his personal life, he is just as trapped as Mi Yu is in her rainstorm.
Mi Yu’s Paradox: Why Safety Feels Like Sabotage Someone asked: Why would Mi Yu accept Tan when she clearly likes Ji and has zero interest in Tan?
It’s been highly frustrating to watch, but there is a simple, realistic, and deeply psychological reason: Mi Yu is trapped in a Subconscious Survival Loop.
1. The Trauma Script Mi Yu has been emotionally traumatized. When that happens, the brain doesn't care about "happiness"—it only cares about Safety.
Her subconscious has entered Self-Protection Mode. It treats a potential relationship with Ji like a threat because the stakes are too high. If she loves him and it fails, the trauma repeats. To her subconscious, "Safety" means blocking the event before it can even start.
2. The "Un-Thought" Process (The Garbage Truck Energy) This isn't a logical choice; it’s an automatic reflex. We saw it when she chased that garbage truck in the rain for a hearing aid.
The Reflex: "I must sacrifice myself to be the Savior/Fixer, or I am not safe." She is smart and resourceful for everyone except herself. She would rather dig through trash in a monsoon than deal with her own internal mess.
3. The Deception of "Letting Loose" When Mi Yu accepted the trip/date with Tan, she told herself: "I thought I could just let loose... relying on my most instinctual impulses to accept the man beside me."
She tried to turn her brain off and use Tan as a "safe" reward. But as she realized: "I can't deceive myself." When Tan leaned in for a kiss, her subconscious didn't flash back to a "logical" reason to stay with him. It flashed back to the accidental "lips-touch" with Ji. Her body literally rejected the "safe" choice (Tan) because her heart had already claimed the "risky" choice (Ji).
4. Self-Protection = Self-Sabotage The tragedy of the subconscious is that it isn’t logical. In an attempt to protect herself from the possibility of pain with Ji, she led herself directly into the certainty of misery with Tan.
She did foolish things in the name of safety, which is the literal definition of self-sabotage.
Conclusion: Choosing the Person, Not the Shield While everyone else in Mi Yu's life benefits from her self-sacrificing nature, Ji is the only one who finds it concerning. He doesn't want her to be a "fixer"; he wants her to be a person.
By pushing Tan away and running toward Ji in today's episode, she is finally doing the hardest thing for a trauma survivor: She is choosing the "Risky Joy" over the "Safe Lie." She’s finally stopped chasing the garbage truck. - Now I hope we can really grow from here in business and relationships
ep 31
Ji carrying that bag with that wig, lol 🤣😆😂 I just felt like He must be wearing heels 😂 👠👠👠👠👠👠👠👠
first few minutes
some writers think that adding extra drama makes a series more interesting.
but it can also cause a disconnect. because too much foolishness can agitate some viewers.
that's what the presence of mi YU's parents do for me.
the series didn't actually need her parents at all.
they are so ignorant, selfish and uncouth.
when I think of her parents, I think...
Don't let the dog out, it doesn't know how to behave, it might bite someone
Coming soon
Veil of Shadows
月鳞绮纪
2026
The Mi-Ji-Chun Tic-Tac-Toe: 4 Corners of Messy & 1 Suspicious Wig
I am officially over this love square. It’s really not even a square or a circle; it’s just four useless corners of emotional messiness, and I’m sick of it
1. Ji: The Man Who Can’t Say "Not My Problem"
Let’s be real: Ji is just being a freaking fool. There’s no deep "debt of gratitude" here; he’s just a man who is fundamentally incapable of telling his ex, "That’s not my problem."
He lets Chun pull these stunts in the name of "business and friendship," but he’s really just a pawn.
Walking out of her apartment right after his night with Mi Yu was the ultimate fumble. He thinks he’s being a "good guy" by helping Chun through her career meltdown, but he’s actually just being a professional door-mat.
2. Chun: The "X" That Won't Be Erased
Chun is the ultimate "EX" on the board. She doesn't care about Ji’s feelings; she only cares about what Chun wants.
Her company is dumping her and her fans are turning on her, but she’s using the crisis to force Ji into her corner.
She views Mi Yu as "side interference," but she’s forgetting that she’s the one trying to delete ten years of reality to claim a man who is already over her.
3. The Secret Player (Duan in Donna's Wig?)
Chun’s downfall seems a little too perfectly timed. There is definitely a Secret Player in the wings getting revenge because Chun helped Ji and the hotel. Is it Duan wearing Donna’s wig? Is it a ghost from the business deals past? Whoever it is, they are the only ones actually playing 4D chess while Ji is playing checkers.
4. Mi Yu: Moving Out of the "Safe-Scape"
Mi Yu was right: "If you can’t control this relationship with your ex, check your feelings." FACTS. * She’s spent these episodes using Tan as a "safe-scape" because she was too hurt to fight.
The Turn: Next episode, Mi Yu finally stops forfeiting. She’s committing to the ship and stopping the "Oppa-zone" distractions. She’s realizing that the only way to win the board is to stay on it.
The Scoreboard (Eps 30-32)
Tan isn't a player; he’s just a corner for Mi Yu to hide in. The real game is the Mi-Ji-Chun Tic-Tac-Toe.
Chun (The X): Currently 0. She’s an ex trying to reclaim a past that doesn't exist.
Mi Yu: 2. She has the history, the heart, and finally, the backbone to win.
The Verdict
Ji needs to learn the phrase "Not my problem," and Mi Yu needs to stop running to Tan every time Ji acts like a fool. Chun gets what she wants? Not if Mi Yu finally decides to play for keeps.
I don't know who is more exhausting: Ji for being a 'business and friendship' fool, or Chun for acting like she's the lead actress in a drama that ended ten years ago. Either way, I'm just here for Mi Yu to stop 'safe-scaping' and for us to find out if that really is Duan in Donna's wig really trolling Chun 😂
.my first words were
JUMP JUMP JUMP
bye girl!
that unzip read like this
here viewers women's skin, are you happy 😂
ugh! 🤪
We’ve talked about Mi Yu’s self-sabotage, but let’s talk about the man driving her (and us) crazy. Ji is the ultimate "Do as I say, not as I do" character. He spends his time lecturing Mi Yu for not protecting herself, while he lets his ex, Chun, walk all over his professional and personal boundaries.
1. The Hypocrisy of the "Business Deal"
Ji’s moral compass is weirdly tied to his job title.
The Past: He literally helped cover up Mi Yu’s husband’s affair in Episode 1 just to appease a hotel prospect.
The Present: He is doing the same thing with Chun. He allows her to manipulate his image, stage-manage his dinner, and claim him as her "past lover" on stage—all because he doesn't want to "ruin the deal."
He is teaching Mi Yu to stand up for herself while he is currently letting Chun wear him like a prop for her vlog fans.
2. Jealousy vs. Professionalism
Ji has a "No Switch" when it comes to Chun, but a "Jealousy Switch" when it comes to Mi Yu.
He lashes out at Mi Yu in the name of being her "Manager" whenever other men show her attention. He can't handle his feelings, so he critiques her "people-pleasing" as a professional flaw.
Meanwhile, he is blind to the fact that his entanglement with Chun is causing more "business interference" than any of Mi Yu's polite interactions with guests ever could.
3. The "Honey-Do" Errand: The Ultimate Fool Move
That dinner scene was the peak of frustration. Ji thinks he’s being "balanced" by staying for dinner, but he is actually being played like a fiddle.
When he obediently left the table to get dessert for Chun after only two bites of food, he essentially told Mi Yu: "Chun’s whims are more important than your presence."
He is so focused on the "Clientele" that he is missing the human being standing right in front of him. He is protecting the hotel while sabotaging the woman he claims to care about.
4. Why He Is Still Beneficial (The Weird Balance)
Despite being a "freaking fool" where Chun is concerned, Ji is still the only person who disrupts Mi Yu’s cycle.
The Good: He is the only person who doesn't want Mi Yu to save him. He wants her to be selfish.
The Bad: He is currently so bad at being selfish himself that he is creating the very chaos he supposedly hates.
Conclusion: Two Saboteurs in a Trench Coat
The tragedy of Ji and Mi Yu is that they are both experts at fixing everyone else’s problems while being absolute disasters at managing their own hearts.
Ji wants to save Mi Yu from her "Savior Complex," but he needs to save himself from his "Business-At-All-Costs" complex first. He is fawning over Mi Yu while accepting every bit of bait Chun throws out. Until he learns to say "No" to a business deal for the sake of his personal life, he is just as trapped as Mi Yu is in her rainstorm.
but Wearing Donna's wig makes him look like someone's 👵 Grandma
Someone asked: Why would Mi Yu accept Tan when she clearly likes Ji and has zero interest in Tan?
It’s been highly frustrating to watch, but there is a simple, realistic, and deeply psychological reason: Mi Yu is trapped in a Subconscious Survival Loop.
1. The Trauma Script
Mi Yu has been emotionally traumatized. When that happens, the brain doesn't care about "happiness"—it only cares about Safety.
Her subconscious has entered Self-Protection Mode. It treats a potential relationship with Ji like a threat because the stakes are too high. If she loves him and it fails, the trauma repeats. To her subconscious, "Safety" means blocking the event before it can even start.
2. The "Un-Thought" Process (The Garbage Truck Energy)
This isn't a logical choice; it’s an automatic reflex. We saw it when she chased that garbage truck in the rain for a hearing aid.
The Reflex: "I must sacrifice myself to be the Savior/Fixer, or I am not safe."
She is smart and resourceful for everyone except herself. She would rather dig through trash in a monsoon than deal with her own internal mess.
3. The Deception of "Letting Loose"
When Mi Yu accepted the trip/date with Tan, she told herself: "I thought I could just let loose... relying on my most instinctual impulses to accept the man beside me."
She tried to turn her brain off and use Tan as a "safe" reward. But as she realized: "I can't deceive myself." When Tan leaned in for a kiss, her subconscious didn't flash back to a "logical" reason to stay with him. It flashed back to the accidental "lips-touch" with Ji. Her body literally rejected the "safe" choice (Tan) because her heart had already claimed the "risky" choice (Ji).
4. Self-Protection = Self-Sabotage
The tragedy of the subconscious is that it isn’t logical. In an attempt to protect herself from the possibility of pain with Ji, she led herself directly into the certainty of misery with Tan.
She did foolish things in the name of safety, which is the literal definition of self-sabotage.
Conclusion: Choosing the Person, Not the Shield
While everyone else in Mi Yu's life benefits from her self-sacrificing nature, Ji is the only one who finds it concerning. He doesn't want her to be a "fixer"; he wants her to be a person.
By pushing Tan away and running toward Ji in today's episode, she is finally doing the hardest thing for a trauma survivor: She is choosing the "Risky Joy" over the "Safe Lie." She’s finally stopped chasing the garbage truck. - Now I hope we can really grow from here in business and relationships
self sabotage
a realistic reaction to someone who has been emotionally traumatized