This review may contain spoilers
I’m finally brave enough to accept the ending
Watching Twenty-Five Twenty-One again years later made me realize that the ending was actually perfect.
The first time I watched it, I was focused on whether Hee-do and Yi-jin would end up together. Like many viewers, I wanted the fairytale ending. But after revisiting the series, I realized that the story was never really about two people being destined to stay together forever. It was about how deeply they loved each other during a specific chapter of their lives.
What makes the ending so powerful is that it reflects reality. Not every great love story ends in marriage or happily-ever-after. Sometimes people meet at exactly the right moment, help each other become who they are meant to be, and then move in different directions. That does not make their love any less real or meaningful.
Hee-do and Yi-jin were each other’s comfort, strength, and source of growth during some of the most important years of their lives. Their relationship shaped them, even if it wasn’t permanent. The heartbreak of the ending is precisely what makes it memorable—it honors the idea that some relationships are meant to be treasured rather than preserved forever.
Years later, I no longer see the ending as sad. I see it as honest. We didn’t get to watch a love story that lasted forever; we got to watch a love story unfold. And that’s what makes Twenty-Five Twenty-One so special.
The first time I watched it, I was focused on whether Hee-do and Yi-jin would end up together. Like many viewers, I wanted the fairytale ending. But after revisiting the series, I realized that the story was never really about two people being destined to stay together forever. It was about how deeply they loved each other during a specific chapter of their lives.
What makes the ending so powerful is that it reflects reality. Not every great love story ends in marriage or happily-ever-after. Sometimes people meet at exactly the right moment, help each other become who they are meant to be, and then move in different directions. That does not make their love any less real or meaningful.
Hee-do and Yi-jin were each other’s comfort, strength, and source of growth during some of the most important years of their lives. Their relationship shaped them, even if it wasn’t permanent. The heartbreak of the ending is precisely what makes it memorable—it honors the idea that some relationships are meant to be treasured rather than preserved forever.
Years later, I no longer see the ending as sad. I see it as honest. We didn’t get to watch a love story that lasted forever; we got to watch a love story unfold. And that’s what makes Twenty-Five Twenty-One so special.
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