Based on Mok sitting outside the homestay making that little bracelet, I’m pretty sure that’s gonna be a birthday…
I’m CONVINCED Peach is slowly but surely falling for him! Like during that lighting test?? He’s literally getting lost in Thee’s gaze – completely forgot the camera even EXISTS and is just full-on staring at Thee! The man is GONE! 😭💕✨
Him in that fitted black outfit, gun in one hand, covering Peach’s ears with the other – and YES I absolutely clocked that gold ring with the black stone! Like the DETAILS! 🔥💍
Based on Mok sitting outside the homestay making that little bracelet, I’m pretty sure that’s gonna be a birthday…
Every single time he gets all smug and cocky, then gets all shy and turns away with that little giggle – I SWEAR my cheeks are working OVERTIME! Like they’re getting their full cardio in! 😭💕
Babe, why are we literally obsessing over the CLOTHES right now?! And don’t even get me started on those elephant pants – I’m DYING! 😂💀
Wait wait WAIT – THAT cardigan, if I’m not totally losing my mind here, is literally PUWIN’S! I swear I remember him wearing it at his birthday party! Like I’m pretty sure I’m right about this?? 👀✨
Based on Mok sitting outside the homestay making that little bracelet, I’m pretty sure that’s gonna be a birthday…
Okay but like, HOW is this BL just stabbing us right in the feels more and more each episode?? And it’s giving COMPLETELY different vibes from Burnout Syndrome – like not even in the same universe!
I’m literally PRAYING for Thee to have some completely unhinged idea where all four of them throw a mini concert to promote their fragrance line! Like honestly – the man already went and shot a commercial in episode 4, so like… what CAN’T he do at this point?? The possibilities are literally endless! 😂✨
Damn, Pond's getting more and more gorgeous and is absolutely slaying Thee's character, I love it! His lines are…
Based on Mok sitting outside the homestay making that little bracelet, I’m pretty sure that’s gonna be a birthday present for our nephew and honestly?? My heart can’t TAKE this level of cute! 🥺💕
Our nephew is BACK and he gives Mok this absolutely RADIANT smile! Okay but like… is it too much to hope that in Thee’s whole imaginary musical brain theater, this kid’s gonna break out into a full singing number?? Because I’m lowkey expecting it and I won’t apologize! 😭✨
OMG wait – Thee literally had me cackling one second and BAWLING the next?? What is wrong with me??
This man’s brain is literally a 24/7 musical production – whether it’s full Bollywood or Disney vibes, his imagination is so ridiculously extra that I’m laughing so hard my cheeks are getting a whole workout! 😭
And don’t even get me STARTED – I was SO mad we didn’t get to see him absolutely wreck Wiwid! Plus that whole orphanage bit with Peach? I was sitting there like “okay why is this dragging on” – BUT THEN. Oh my GOD. It ALL made sense! They were literally building up to the most EPIC payoff!
The mafia boss thing? Obsessed. Fully obsessed. And Peach’s backstory literally DESTROYED me – like I was genuinely tearing up. But then Thee just goes full vigilante justice and honestly?? I’m SO here for it! Like yes king, go OFF! And I’m sitting here actually CRYING happy tears about it!
Seriously though – am I okay?? Like what even IS this?? 💀✨
Episode 6 is basically one long setup fest. The mass murder case shuffles forward, the main couple’s storyline gets dragged along, and the second couple suddenly slams the gas with a full soundtrack moment like the show just remembered it’s also a romance. It’s stuffed to the brim, for better and for worse.
Because they crammed so much in, the main plot is actually crawling at a snail’s pace. On top of that, Singha’s room turning out to be the exact same set as Inn’s room from My Magic Prophecy is hilariously on brand for this production’s budget priorities.
This episode moonlights as a Thai vocab lesson. Our hero Singha has a sister named Maysa; in Thai, Singha means August and Maysa means April, so apparently their parents just opened a calendar and went, “Yes, that’s the vibe.”
We finally get crumbs of backstory on why Singha has a statue of ghost king Thao Wessuwan in his house. The working theory: years ago, Maysa came to stay, got possessed, heard some ghost calling her outside, walked out the door, and just never came back. Peak tragic backstory unlocked with zero mercy.
That disappearance is obviously Singha’s core trauma. Then Mom shows up with a Thao Wessuwan statue as a supernatural home security system for her son, though the timeline is still fuzzy enough that the show can rearrange it later if it wants extra melodrama.
On the investigation side, last episode already tied the case to the spiritual retreat center and the cursed dolls, so that’s old news. This time, Sey and Darin discover all the victims died with the same bamboo shoot dish in their stomachs, which is basically the retreat center’s deadly house special.
Singha sends his team to collect cursed dolls from each victim’s home and zooms in on Ta Khuean, the finance director, as the prime suspect. Naturally, every officer who goes near a doll either has an “accident” or bumps into a ghost, while King is over there cosplaying Rational Cop of the Year and refusing to admit anything weird is happening.
When Singha orders Khem to secure the evidence, Khem immediately runs into the slit-mouthed woman, who tries to make him swallow a cursed doll and choke himself to death. Thankfully, Thup gets ghost-notified and sprints to the evidence room like he’s doing a horror speedrun.
After Singha scares the slit-mouthed woman off, King is visibly rattled but still clings to his “there are no ghosts” agenda like it’s his only personality trait. Thup suggests Singha take the evidence box home since he’s the one guy the ghosts won’t latch onto, and King reacts like someone just handed the killer the master key to the evidence locker.
Later, Singha and Thup go pick up Darin from the hospital and bump into Jump and his sister from the YouTuber ghost-hunting squad. Jump is now half gone, mumbling ghost-summoning incantations and nonsense like a broken horror podcast on loop.
When Thup follows out of morbid curiosity, the slit-mouthed woman pops up again and threatens to eat seven people, including him, because apparently she’s on a murder meal plan with a quota. Singha shows up, flexes Thao Wessuwan’s protective buff, and scares her off without breaking a sweat.
The slit-mouthed woman calls Thao Wessuwan a yaksha, which slots neatly into the lore: Thao Wessuwan lines up with Vaishravana, the guardian king whose entourage is made up of yaksha demons, and yaksha demons literally treat other ghosts as snacks. No wonder she books it the second he’s in range.
When Singha, Thup, and Darin talk it over, Darin guesses that “seven people” means the slit-mouthed woman still has seven more to eat. Right on cue, Jump shows up babbling about Wednesday, and Darin casually mentions that’s his birthday, which might as well be the show stamping TARGET across their forehead.
King then storms in with backup to arrest Thup and frame him as the suspect. The official excuse is that both Thup and Ta Khuean are from Si Sa Ket, so he’s an easy scapegoat, but the real reason is King’s jealousy has gone fully off the rails. Give that man a therapist and a journal, not authority and a gun.
The script makes it painfully clear that King has never actually changed. All that decent behavior last episode was just PR; the second a real love rival appears, he snaps right back to violent and petty, like muscle memory but for toxicity.
The second couple gets a ton of screen time here, which should be a win, except their usual spark is weirdly missing. After a few episodes of solid chemistry, this one feels like someone forgot to plug their ship back into the emotional outlet.
In the end, Sey decides to go back to what he knows instead of auditioning more chaos for his love life. Post-hospital, Darin has their own moment of clarity, they get back together, and we’re rewarded with a soft, beautifully shot bathroom heart-to-heart that almost makes up for the stress.
Next episode looks ready to deliver a full love scene, which is nice and all, but the real main course is going to be King getting smacked in the face by consequences. May the narrative drag him thoroughly.
The way they used the acting-within-acting as a mirror for emotional growth hit different, honestly. That whole concept of learning to show emotions through their roles and then actually applying it to their own relationship? Chef’s kiss. And you’re right about the binge—waiting week to week would’ve killed the momentum of watching them actually work on their relationship instead of just… having one. Rare to see a continuation that doesn’t just rehash the first season’s formula.
The side couple really did carry, you’re so right about that. And yeah, the finale had that classic “we ran out of time so here’s fanservice instead of proper resolution’” energy 😭 Still enjoyed the ride though.
When Yai interferes, it’s like watching someone spend reserves they don’t actually have.
The lighter stuff, just being around or showing up briefly in Kaew’s space, he can handle. But the second he does something physical or really forceful, like when he actually stops that art professor, you can see it completely wreck him. He looks absolutely wiped, unstable, like he’s barely keeping it together. And then he just disappears. He won’t even let Kaew see him after, because he’s that drained.
But honestly, it goes way deeper than just being tired. The show keeps reminding us that Yai is stuck. He can’t move on to his next life, and the only thing keeping him here in any real way is Kaew’s merit. There’s even promotional material that talks about him “using his life and future lives” for Kaew, which suggests that every big intervention isn’t just burning through his current energy. It’s actually messing with his karmic situation, making it harder, maybe even impossible, for him to ever break free and reincarnate.
And then there’s the emotional side of it. When he has to use anger or violence to protect Kaew, even though it comes from love, he suffers so badly afterward that he just pulls back. It feels less like he’s worried Kaew will think he’s some kind of monster, and more like he’s in so much pain, spiritually and emotionally, that he doesn’t want Kaew to see it or worry about him. So after he saves him, he retreats and carries all that hurt by himself.
Every time he protects Kaew, he’s basically choosing Kaew’s physical safety over his own spiritual wellbeing and over any real chance at honest closeness. Love asks for sacrifice, but the sacrifice just creates more distance between them. The more you sit with that, the more heartbreaking it gets.
I’m definitely sticking with Melody of Secrets even though the first episode didn’t quite click for me yet - but honestly, I’m kind of fascinated by the symbolism they’re building with the characters’ names and professions, which feels promising!
Botphleng apparently translates to something like “poem” or “verse” in Thai, and that’s such a cool choice for a crime journalist with amnesia. Like, poems are these carefully constructed pieces of language that create meaning through deliberate arrangement - and here’s Botphleng, someone whose job is literally shaping narrative and uncovering truth, but he can’t access his own story. He’s a living poem with missing stanzas. There’s something really compelling about a character whose name means “crafted text” when he’s struggling to read his own life.
Tankhun has connotations around firmness or stability, which makes sense for a criminologist who finds patterns and creates certainty from chaos. But what I love is how that plays against the situation - he’s TELLING Botphleng “I’m your solid ground, I’m the thing you can trust,” but from Botphleng’s perspective with zero memories to verify anything, Tankhun is actually the biggest unknown in the room. Especially with, you know, the whole dead body situation.
The names also set up this interesting dynamic where they SHOULD complement each other - Botphleng as Tankhun’s poem, Tankhun as Botphleng’s anchor - but the circumstances have completely scrambled that symmetry, and I’m curious to see how they navigate back (or don’t) to what those names promise.
The parallel world angle goes way deeper than a simple “fake it till you make it.” Kano realizes the split between these two worlds traces back to his own choices, not some random cosmic reset button. This isn’t wish-fulfillment he’s passively watching unfold—the better reality exists because he literally does things differently this time. His coworkers’ attitudes shift, events cascade in new ways, and the entire atmosphere tilts because of him. It’s a butterfly effect that keeps hammering home that this is a two-way street, not a dream he can just coast through.
You have to actually look at what’s in front of you and face yourself before anything can change. He pegs Okami as a natural-born salesman from day one, but that snap judgment says as much about Kano as it does about Okami. Maybe he’s been slapping unexamined assumptions onto himself and everyone around him without noticing. As he slowly starts catching new angles and perspectives in this timeline, that evolving self-awareness feels like the real miracle Kagami is offering him, more than any parallel-world gimmick.
Romance-wise, the slow-burn tension is chef’s kiss. The height difference gives every small physical beat between them a visual impact that’s hard to look away from. Episode three builds on the color contrasts from episodes one and two, cranking up that sense of emotional and sensory whiplash. The score in their bedroom scene drifts in at exactly the right moments, wrapping everything in a dreamy, slightly surreal haze. Then the cut to complete silence for the chocolate-feeding moment makes the scene land even harder, letting micro-expressions and body language do all the work. Performance, sound design, and visuals are all locked in and pulling in the same direction.
LOL! I've got much more (good) marriage years under my belt, but I still remember my father in law advice: Son,…
😂 Your FIL and this show’s lead would be best friends - both masters of saying the quiet part out loud. That “your turn now” energy is EXACTLY what makes this show so good!
I’m kind of obsessed with how this show does so much with so little. It’s got that minimalist thing going on: few characters, sparse dialogue, lingering shots. But instead of just looking pretty, it uses that simplicity to dive deeper emotionally.
The first two episodes are all gray and washed out, urban and isolated, everyone so guarded. But then Il-jo goes back to his countryside hometown and Jeong Han follows him, and suddenly the palette shifts to these lush, living greens. It’s not just a change in scenery; you can feel their walls coming down, like they can finally breathe again. The director’s use of green (the nature, Jeong Han’s shirt) feels so intentional, as if it’s tracing their emotional thaw.
Episode 4 completely wrecked me. When Jeong Han sees Il-jo’s bruised face and quietly says he’s not ugly, he’s beautiful, then asks if they can date, it’s such a tender moment, shattering all the defenses Jeong Han has been clinging to. It hits harder than any big dramatic confession could. It’s salvation in the mundane: nothing grand, just real.
It’s only four episodes, but it tells a complete story of mutual healing. Jeong Han makes it impossible for Il-jo to stay invisible, and Il-jo becomes the one person who can unchain Jeong Han. The silence and restraint make it resonate even more. The less they say, the more deeply you feel it.
Okay so I never read the original manga, but after finishing episode 6, it just hit me that all those little gut feelings I had been totally validated.
The show’s called Therapy Game, which is pretty meta when you think about it. So it starts with Shizuma, this straight guy nursing a broken heart, and he randomly hooks up with Minato (who’s gay) at this LGBT bar. They’re both drunk, things happen, they sleep together. But then the next day Shizuma’s like “nope, didn’t happen” and basically denies it to his face. Minato’s pissed, obviously, so he decides to flip the script – he’s gonna make Shizuma fall for him and then dump his ass. His own little therapy game, you know? Healing Shizuma’s heartbreak while getting revenge.
But by episode 6? They’re not playing games anymore. They’re genuinely into each other. Shizuma, who was giving off major red flags at first, has turned into this total green flag guy. And here’s the clever part – he’s studying to be a vet, right? It’s like the perfect metaphor. He’s basically treating Minato like this wounded little animal that needs care.
Because of his family stuff, especially his mom, Minato’s got serious trust issues with love. He’s like a skittish animal, always ready to bolt, refusing to depend on anyone. And only someone as patient and gentle as Shizuma – this vet student who knows how to handle scared creatures – could slowly get past those defenses and teach him to trust again.
There’s even this moment in bed where Minato jokes about having “fangs,” and the English translation really drives it home. Like yeah, he IS that wounded animal who needs healing.
Then when Shizuma goes away for his three-week vet internship? That separation becomes its own kind of therapy. Minato has to learn to miss someone, to wait, to not just run away. It’s such a smart narrative choice.
And that bent cosmos flower at the end when they reunite? Minato breaks off the damaged part but keeps the stem that can still grow, waiting for the bud to bloom someday. The symbolism is 🤌. That’s him. That’s their relationship. The damage happened, but life goes on, and love can still bloom.
The whole episode is just this quietly powerful emotional progression. No wonder people are so hooked on this show.
This man’s brain is literally a 24/7 musical production – whether it’s full Bollywood or Disney vibes, his imagination is so ridiculously extra that I’m laughing so hard my cheeks are getting a whole workout! 😭
And don’t even get me STARTED – I was SO mad we didn’t get to see him absolutely wreck Wiwid! Plus that whole orphanage bit with Peach? I was sitting there like “okay why is this dragging on” – BUT THEN. Oh my GOD. It ALL made sense! They were literally building up to the most EPIC payoff!
The mafia boss thing? Obsessed. Fully obsessed. And Peach’s backstory literally DESTROYED me – like I was genuinely tearing up. But then Thee just goes full vigilante justice and honestly?? I’m SO here for it! Like yes king, go OFF! And I’m sitting here actually CRYING happy tears about it!
Seriously though – am I okay?? Like what even IS this?? 💀✨
Because they crammed so much in, the main plot is actually crawling at a snail’s pace. On top of that, Singha’s room turning out to be the exact same set as Inn’s room from My Magic Prophecy is hilariously on brand for this production’s budget priorities.
This episode moonlights as a Thai vocab lesson. Our hero Singha has a sister named Maysa; in Thai, Singha means August and Maysa means April, so apparently their parents just opened a calendar and went, “Yes, that’s the vibe.”
We finally get crumbs of backstory on why Singha has a statue of ghost king Thao Wessuwan in his house. The working theory: years ago, Maysa came to stay, got possessed, heard some ghost calling her outside, walked out the door, and just never came back. Peak tragic backstory unlocked with zero mercy.
That disappearance is obviously Singha’s core trauma. Then Mom shows up with a Thao Wessuwan statue as a supernatural home security system for her son, though the timeline is still fuzzy enough that the show can rearrange it later if it wants extra melodrama.
On the investigation side, last episode already tied the case to the spiritual retreat center and the cursed dolls, so that’s old news. This time, Sey and Darin discover all the victims died with the same bamboo shoot dish in their stomachs, which is basically the retreat center’s deadly house special.
Singha sends his team to collect cursed dolls from each victim’s home and zooms in on Ta Khuean, the finance director, as the prime suspect. Naturally, every officer who goes near a doll either has an “accident” or bumps into a ghost, while King is over there cosplaying Rational Cop of the Year and refusing to admit anything weird is happening.
When Singha orders Khem to secure the evidence, Khem immediately runs into the slit-mouthed woman, who tries to make him swallow a cursed doll and choke himself to death. Thankfully, Thup gets ghost-notified and sprints to the evidence room like he’s doing a horror speedrun.
After Singha scares the slit-mouthed woman off, King is visibly rattled but still clings to his “there are no ghosts” agenda like it’s his only personality trait. Thup suggests Singha take the evidence box home since he’s the one guy the ghosts won’t latch onto, and King reacts like someone just handed the killer the master key to the evidence locker.
Later, Singha and Thup go pick up Darin from the hospital and bump into Jump and his sister from the YouTuber ghost-hunting squad. Jump is now half gone, mumbling ghost-summoning incantations and nonsense like a broken horror podcast on loop.
When Thup follows out of morbid curiosity, the slit-mouthed woman pops up again and threatens to eat seven people, including him, because apparently she’s on a murder meal plan with a quota. Singha shows up, flexes Thao Wessuwan’s protective buff, and scares her off without breaking a sweat.
The slit-mouthed woman calls Thao Wessuwan a yaksha, which slots neatly into the lore: Thao Wessuwan lines up with Vaishravana, the guardian king whose entourage is made up of yaksha demons, and yaksha demons literally treat other ghosts as snacks. No wonder she books it the second he’s in range.
When Singha, Thup, and Darin talk it over, Darin guesses that “seven people” means the slit-mouthed woman still has seven more to eat. Right on cue, Jump shows up babbling about Wednesday, and Darin casually mentions that’s his birthday, which might as well be the show stamping TARGET across their forehead.
King then storms in with backup to arrest Thup and frame him as the suspect. The official excuse is that both Thup and Ta Khuean are from Si Sa Ket, so he’s an easy scapegoat, but the real reason is King’s jealousy has gone fully off the rails. Give that man a therapist and a journal, not authority and a gun.
The script makes it painfully clear that King has never actually changed. All that decent behavior last episode was just PR; the second a real love rival appears, he snaps right back to violent and petty, like muscle memory but for toxicity.
The second couple gets a ton of screen time here, which should be a win, except their usual spark is weirdly missing. After a few episodes of solid chemistry, this one feels like someone forgot to plug their ship back into the emotional outlet.
In the end, Sey decides to go back to what he knows instead of auditioning more chaos for his love life. Post-hospital, Darin has their own moment of clarity, they get back together, and we’re rewarded with a soft, beautifully shot bathroom heart-to-heart that almost makes up for the stress.
Next episode looks ready to deliver a full love scene, which is nice and all, but the real main course is going to be King getting smacked in the face by consequences. May the narrative drag him thoroughly.
The lighter stuff, just being around or showing up briefly in Kaew’s space, he can handle. But the second he does something physical or really forceful, like when he actually stops that art professor, you can see it completely wreck him. He looks absolutely wiped, unstable, like he’s barely keeping it together. And then he just disappears. He won’t even let Kaew see him after, because he’s that drained.
But honestly, it goes way deeper than just being tired. The show keeps reminding us that Yai is stuck. He can’t move on to his next life, and the only thing keeping him here in any real way is Kaew’s merit. There’s even promotional material that talks about him “using his life and future lives” for Kaew, which suggests that every big intervention isn’t just burning through his current energy. It’s actually messing with his karmic situation, making it harder, maybe even impossible, for him to ever break free and reincarnate.
And then there’s the emotional side of it. When he has to use anger or violence to protect Kaew, even though it comes from love, he suffers so badly afterward that he just pulls back. It feels less like he’s worried Kaew will think he’s some kind of monster, and more like he’s in so much pain, spiritually and emotionally, that he doesn’t want Kaew to see it or worry about him. So after he saves him, he retreats and carries all that hurt by himself.
Every time he protects Kaew, he’s basically choosing Kaew’s physical safety over his own spiritual wellbeing and over any real chance at honest closeness. Love asks for sacrifice, but the sacrifice just creates more distance between them. The more you sit with that, the more heartbreaking it gets.
Botphleng apparently translates to something like “poem” or “verse” in Thai, and that’s such a cool choice for a crime journalist with amnesia. Like, poems are these carefully constructed pieces of language that create meaning through deliberate arrangement - and here’s Botphleng, someone whose job is literally shaping narrative and uncovering truth, but he can’t access his own story. He’s a living poem with missing stanzas. There’s something really compelling about a character whose name means “crafted text” when he’s struggling to read his own life.
Tankhun has connotations around firmness or stability, which makes sense for a criminologist who finds patterns and creates certainty from chaos. But what I love is how that plays against the situation - he’s TELLING Botphleng “I’m your solid ground, I’m the thing you can trust,” but from Botphleng’s perspective with zero memories to verify anything, Tankhun is actually the biggest unknown in the room. Especially with, you know, the whole dead body situation.
The names also set up this interesting dynamic where they SHOULD complement each other - Botphleng as Tankhun’s poem, Tankhun as Botphleng’s anchor - but the circumstances have completely scrambled that symmetry, and I’m curious to see how they navigate back (or don’t) to what those names promise.
You have to actually look at what’s in front of you and face yourself before anything can change. He pegs Okami as a natural-born salesman from day one, but that snap judgment says as much about Kano as it does about Okami. Maybe he’s been slapping unexamined assumptions onto himself and everyone around him without noticing. As he slowly starts catching new angles and perspectives in this timeline, that evolving self-awareness feels like the real miracle Kagami is offering him, more than any parallel-world gimmick.
Romance-wise, the slow-burn tension is chef’s kiss. The height difference gives every small physical beat between them a visual impact that’s hard to look away from. Episode three builds on the color contrasts from episodes one and two, cranking up that sense of emotional and sensory whiplash. The score in their bedroom scene drifts in at exactly the right moments, wrapping everything in a dreamy, slightly surreal haze. Then the cut to complete silence for the chocolate-feeding moment makes the scene land even harder, letting micro-expressions and body language do all the work. Performance, sound design, and visuals are all locked in and pulling in the same direction.
The first two episodes are all gray and washed out, urban and isolated, everyone so guarded. But then Il-jo goes back to his countryside hometown and Jeong Han follows him, and suddenly the palette shifts to these lush, living greens. It’s not just a change in scenery; you can feel their walls coming down, like they can finally breathe again. The director’s use of green (the nature, Jeong Han’s shirt) feels so intentional, as if it’s tracing their emotional thaw.
Episode 4 completely wrecked me. When Jeong Han sees Il-jo’s bruised face and quietly says he’s not ugly, he’s beautiful, then asks if they can date, it’s such a tender moment, shattering all the defenses Jeong Han has been clinging to. It hits harder than any big dramatic confession could. It’s salvation in the mundane: nothing grand, just real.
It’s only four episodes, but it tells a complete story of mutual healing. Jeong Han makes it impossible for Il-jo to stay invisible, and Il-jo becomes the one person who can unchain Jeong Han. The silence and restraint make it resonate even more. The less they say, the more deeply you feel it.
The show’s called Therapy Game, which is pretty meta when you think about it. So it starts with Shizuma, this straight guy nursing a broken heart, and he randomly hooks up with Minato (who’s gay) at this LGBT bar. They’re both drunk, things happen, they sleep together. But then the next day Shizuma’s like “nope, didn’t happen” and basically denies it to his face. Minato’s pissed, obviously, so he decides to flip the script – he’s gonna make Shizuma fall for him and then dump his ass. His own little therapy game, you know? Healing Shizuma’s heartbreak while getting revenge.
But by episode 6? They’re not playing games anymore. They’re genuinely into each other. Shizuma, who was giving off major red flags at first, has turned into this total green flag guy. And here’s the clever part – he’s studying to be a vet, right? It’s like the perfect metaphor. He’s basically treating Minato like this wounded little animal that needs care.
Because of his family stuff, especially his mom, Minato’s got serious trust issues with love. He’s like a skittish animal, always ready to bolt, refusing to depend on anyone. And only someone as patient and gentle as Shizuma – this vet student who knows how to handle scared creatures – could slowly get past those defenses and teach him to trust again.
There’s even this moment in bed where Minato jokes about having “fangs,” and the English translation really drives it home. Like yeah, he IS that wounded animal who needs healing.
Then when Shizuma goes away for his three-week vet internship? That separation becomes its own kind of therapy. Minato has to learn to miss someone, to wait, to not just run away. It’s such a smart narrative choice.
And that bent cosmos flower at the end when they reunite? Minato breaks off the damaged part but keeps the stem that can still grow, waiting for the bud to bloom someday. The symbolism is 🤌. That’s him. That’s their relationship. The damage happened, but life goes on, and love can still bloom.
The whole episode is just this quietly powerful emotional progression. No wonder people are so hooked on this show.