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Seasons of Blossom: Episodes 7-8

A school event brings up more memories of the past that are part blissful, part painful. Meanwhile, our fake couple are starting to get to know each other on a deeper level than they’d first intended.

 
EPISODES 7-8

Realizing that she hasn’t taken the time to really try getting to know Jin-young, Bo-mi sets about doing just that. While her initial motivation is to make their fake relationship seem more realistic, the result is that she and Jin-young both start warming up to each other more than ever, and maybe even enjoying each other’s company.

Jin-young waits for her on the walk to school, for example, and starts a little game on scraps of paper during class. When he wins said game, Bo-mi’s competitiveness kicks in, and she spends the entire class period demanding rematch after rematch.

Meanwhile, the school gears up for a big sports day. In gym class, badminton pairs are assigned by height, meaning Bo-mi ends up with Jae-min and Sun-hee with Jin-young. Jae-min takes advantage of the alone time to ask Bo-mi what kind of person Jin-young is, and Bo-mi first expresses annoyance at his stubbornness, but then softens and adds that his lack of pretentiousness is reassuring.

The thing about Jin-young is that I feel we’re told about his supposed flaws far more than we actually see them in action. The other students paint him as rude and insensitive, but he’s really just straightforward and matter-of-fact. He even convinces a couple of bullies to leave him alone by calmly laying out the flaws in their logic to show that it would be a waste of time to mess with him.

Sports day arrives, along with the tradition of sending affection in the form of flowers. Bo-mi’s friends tsk that her boyfriend isn’t acting very concerned about all the flowers she’s received, adding that to their list of criticisms against him. Bo-mi seems to agree (at least to a point), but when she goes to support him in the video game competition, she starts to see him in a new light.

He and his friends are clearly in their element here, and greet her enthusiastically for once. Bo-mi listens to the friends’ commentary while Jin-young competes so she can compliment him using their lingo, only for him to deadpan that she needn’t say things she doesn’t mean. But then his face lights up in a huge smile — he was just joking. Aw, he’s genuinely happy she came.

Bo-mi doesn’t get to watch him win since she has to leave for her badminton match, but that means he gets to proudly show her his trophy afterward. Then, as they say goodbye at the school gate and Bo-mi turns to walk home with Jae-min, Jin-young musters his resolve and gives her a flower himself, taking the ones other boys have sent her to give to his little sister instead. Then he calls her familiarly by first name for the first time, breaking into another smile as he does.

Jae-min, after watching all of this, also musters his resolve. Once Jin-young leaves, he asks Bo-mi the million-dollar question: are she and Jin-young really dating?

As for So-mang, the more time she spends with Jae-min, the more she continues to see Ha-min in him. Contrary to his easy smile, Jae-min wrestles privately with the grief and resentment So-mang’s presence has stirred up, while simultaneously hanging on her every word. When So-mang recalls finding Ha-min in tears one afternoon, Jae-min claims there wasn’t anything going on at home at that time, but it’s a lie.

Their parents had decided to send Jae-min (still in elementary school then) to an academy for gifted students. Ha-min had argued against it. Frightened by the resulting screaming match, little Jae-min had begged Ha-min to let it go, and in his anger, Ha-min had pushed Jae-min aside, causing him to fall and hit his head.

Now Jae-min has Ha-min’s diary, which details how guilty Ha-min had felt about it, and how ashamed he’d become of his own duplicity after So-mang saw him crying. Though So-mang had no idea why, he pulled away from her after that, afraid of becoming too dependent on her for support and understanding.

Still, So-mang never gave up on him, and kept offering support in her own way — namely, with an adorable little drawing of a bunny holding an umbrella over a fox and an encouraging note. In the present day, Jae-min finds that picture tucked into Ha-min’s diary and gives it to So-mang. Though So-mang is surprised that Ha-min kept it, Ha-min’s diary entries explain that her gesture acted as an “umbrella” for him, helping him keep going at least a little longer.

That was why, during their own sports day, Ha-min finally reached back out to So-mang. He volunteered her to do face painting (and she got her revenge for the haircut by painting the cutest little fox on his cheek), helping her make a few new friends in the process. Then he admitted he’d kept their friendship secret because he knew everyone would like her once they got to know her — and he wanted her all to himself. And as the other students cheered their teams on from the rooftop, he reached over and held her hand in the middle of the crowd.

The combination of sports day, talking with Jae-min, and the approach of summer — the season of Ha-min’s death — fills So-mang with both happy memories and regret. In hindsight, all the warning signs she’d missed are crystal clear, and she blames herself for not recognizing Ha-min’s silent cries for help.

As she explains to her fellow student teacher, it may be in the past, but the memories and feelings are as fresh and real as if Ha-min were still physically present in the school — and that’s not going to change overnight. If anything, as the anniversary of losing him gets closer, those feelings are probably only going to get stronger.

While the present-day love triangle (quadrangle?) doesn’t have the same emotional pull as the past storyline, I’m thankful for the bits of lightheartedness it brings, like sunshine peeking out from heavy, albeit beautiful, rain clouds. Without it, So-mang’s longing and Seo Ji-hoon’s portrayal of sadness masked with a smile would likely have me in a total emotional mess already.

That said, I don’t necessarily care which boy Bo-mi ultimately ends up with (or if she ultimately ends up with either one) — as long as whatever decision she makes is made in honesty to herself and to them, and it’s what she really wants, not just what she thinks everyone else would prefer.

 
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That rooftop scene nearly killed me

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Wasn’t it the sweetest thing, hiding their love in plain sight❤️

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It was everything 💚

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So-Mang and Ha-Min's scenes are beautiful, they give butterflies in the tummy but in the same time it hurts.

Can't they change the past like in the Japanese movie/manga Orange?

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@mistyisles thank you for the weecap. I loved that conversation with the bullies too and the friends who disappeared without him noticing but took up their assigned roles, from the safety of the bushes.

Somang’s colleague seems to think when he loves someone once they know they should reciprocate then all then all their previous love interests will pale into insignificance. I wonder why those carrying unrequited love never apply their logic to their own situation as apparently it is really simple to do; ‘why don’t I just stop loving her, then I can move on to someone who loves me back’😐

I think I know why the contrast between the two brother’s storylines is so stark. Love triangles are nothing new so who cares about the noble idiocy of people we haven’t invested in? However, getting to know a lonely boy who was loved and special and yet we know this didn’t prevent him from dying, we feel it deeply. It is unusual for us to see the backstory play out like this so we know there is a ticking time bomb about to explode in this family.

Both timelines are about young people with limited life experience and control over their lives being unable to problem solve; they both feel sacrificing their own happiness is the ONLY option. They are both popular on the surface but limited in genuine relationships and therefore they were prepared to sacrifice everything for the sake of those they hold dear. We are being shown that the repercussions of the decisions that are made in teenage years can continue into adulthood. We can also see quite clearly that adult decision making skills are often limited too.

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Well said!

I was so disappointed in her colleague, but hopefully he'll learn from her response and grow into a more empathetic person.

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I need a freaking plot twist where they say "oops, Ha Min is alive". Even if it would be unfair to Jae Min and So Mang that have been feeling pain, guilt, all this years and they're trying to heal a little I DON'T CARE. I need him back. I think it's unfair to him to just fie like that, I would prefer a "running away" story of Ha Min finally being able to live the way he wanted, no need to be fake, no pressure; just him being him.

I know it won't happen but let me dream, okay? It's my stupid and irrational wish. I know it doesn't make sense, but let me be. 🥺
Ha Min-ah~~~ 😭

So Mang and Ha Min holding hands was everything. Highlight of the week.

I also love our fake couple. It's nice to see their dynamic. My favorite scene was them playing in class. Just adorable.

Ps. For me Jae Min isn't in the picture tbh. It would be super weird to see them ending up together. He's really chill and treats her as a friend. And he's super busy with his brother's past.
That's one of the reasons why I was so annoyed at Sun Hee, because Jae Min was chill with the situation while she was making such a big deal out of it. Like a mother trying to marry her daughter with her friend's son.

The webtoon did better with the love square thing. This one doesn't work for me.

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The webtoon manages to get the tone right with each season. I loved it and can’t wait for the final instalment. That’s why I am confused that they made the drama when the source material is ongoing.

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I think the show is going to have a season 2. Viki says "8 episodes" wich means the show should end next week? But I feel like we're only halfway.

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Maybe then the final season will be done so they can include it in the drama.

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I have seen two places mention sixteen episodes and it ending in November so let’s see as next week are 9-10.

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Ohh. Thanks!
LOL I guess I got confused with another show or something. 🤦😂

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I posted my comment before I read this, and it was too good not to reply to. Here's my headcanon for "if Ha Min survived":
So, So Mang manages to stop Ha Min from committing suicide, and the homeroom teacher helps him get the therapy he needs. In the meantime, he decides he needs to be away from his parents for his own mental health, so he leaves home after he graduates high school. His parents cut him off, and they don't tell Jae Min anything, so Jae Min thinks he's been abandoned - Ha Min doesn't call him because he doesn't want his parents turning on his brother.
Years later, Ha Min's girlfriend of six years, Han So Mang comes home to their flat at the end of her first week of teacher training at their old school and says one of the students in the class she's been assigned looks just like Ha Min...

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Love it. Can’t they be at least engaged if they have been together 6 years?

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Well, I figured he needs a few years to get everything sorted out. He is planning to propose, has the rings and everything, but then So Mang meets Jae Min. So then they have an emotional reunion and now Jae Min is involved in the proposal.

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I want this version 🥺

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As an avid fanfiction reader, I've developed a habit (for better or worse) of continuing stories in my head after they've ended on the screen or of rewriting scenes or story arcs when I wish they'd gone a different way. I did that with Heirs as it was airing, as I've mentioned on this site before.
So, it's already heartbreaking enough to see So Mang and Ha Min's relationship blossom when we know how it ends, and now my brain is just making it worse by showing me what they could have been if Ha Min had gotten the help he needed and hadn't taken such a drastic step.
I think the show has done such a great job of showing how they slowly opened up to each other and how they grew closer that I can see the bare bones of what they would have been like had they had chance to develop a permanent relationship...spoiler, they would have been adorable and it would have been glorious.
Still, in a weird way, this has made the show more enjoyable for me.

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Yes, I can see it too! They would happily married with children and Jaemin would love his sister in law and adore his niece/nephew like his brother did him.

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