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#ja-yoon shim
y0oni3 · 1 year
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    ⨳  ∴  ∮  ▨  💒
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@koosuvi | yabadadoo
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capapers · 2 years
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꒰⠀⠀✿⠀𝗌𝗍𝖺𝗒𝖼 𝗂𝗌𝖺 𝖺𝗇𝖽 𝗒𝗈𝗈𝗇 : 니닁 ꒱ 𝗌𝗂𝗆𝗉𝗅𝖾 !
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀♡ 𝗈𝗋 𝗋𝖾𝖻𝗅𝗈𝗀
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀𝖽𝗈𝗇'𝗍 𝗋𝖾𝗉𝗈𝗌𝗍 𝗆𝗒 𝖾𝖽𝗂𝗍𝗌
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wetdarkandcold · 1 year
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happy yoon day!!
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happy birthday(생일 축하해요) to yoon/ ja-yoon hope she has an amazing day!!!🎁❤️🎉🎊🎂🥳🍰
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newbornrpg · 8 months
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shuxiii · 1 year
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Everyday pt. 9
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Hanni Pham x reader pt1, pt2, pt3, pt4, pt5, pt6, pt7, pt8, pt9, pt10, pt11, pt12, pt13
a/n yall ask for a daerin crumb but ill apologize in advance teehee, credits ''every day'' by David levithan
Day 6007
I wake up the next morning in Beyoncé’s body.
Not the real Beyoncé. But a body remarkably like hers. All the curves in all the right places.
I open my eyes to a blur. I reach for the glasses on the night-stand, but they’re not there. So I stumble into the bathroom and put in my contact lenses.
Then I look in the mirror.
I am not pretty. I am not beautiful.
I’m top-to-bottom gorgeous.
I am always happiest when I am just attractive enough. Meaning: other people won’t find me unattractive. Meaning: I make a positive impression. Meaning: my life is not defined by my attractiveness, because that brings its own perils as well as its own rewards.
Shim Ja-yoon’s life is defined by her attractiveness. Beauty can come naturally, but it’s hard to be stunning by accident. A lot of work has gone into this face, this body. I’m sure there’s a complete morning regimen that I’m supposed to undergo before heading into the day.
I don’t want to have any part of it, though. With girls like Yoon, I just want to shake them, and tell them that no matter how hard they fight it, these teenage looks aren’t going to last forever, and that there are much better foundations to build a life upon than how attractive you are. But there’s no way for me to get that message across. My only course of rebellion is to leave her eyebrows unplucked for the day.
I access where I am, and discover I’m only about fifteen minutes away from Hanni.
A good sign.
I log on to my email and find a message from her.
Yn,
I’m free and have the car today. I told my mom I have errands.
Want to be one of my errands?
H
I tell her yes. A million times yes.
Yoon’s parents are away for the weekend. Her older brother, is in charge. I worry he’s going to give me a hassle, but he’s got his own things to do, as he tells me repeatedly. I tell him I won’t stand in his way.
“You’re going out in that?” he asks.
Normally, when an older brother asks this, it means a skirt is too short, or too much cleavage is showing. But in this case, I think he’s saying I’m still dressed as the private Yoon, not the public one.
I don’t really care, but I have to respect the fact that Yoon would care—probably very much. So I go back and change, and even put on some makeup. I’m fascinated by the life Yoon must lead, being such a knockout. Like being very short or very tall, it must change your whole perspective on the world. If other people see you differently, you’ll end up seeing them differently, too.
Even her brother defers to her in a way I bet he wouldn’t if she were normal-looking. He doesn’t blink when I tell him I’m going out for the day with my friend Hanni.
If your beauty is unquestioned, so many other things can go unquestioned as well.
The minute I get into the car, Hanni bursts out laughing.
“You’ve got to be kidding me,” she says.
“What?” I say. Then I get it.
“What?” she mocks me. I’m happy she feels comfortable enough to do it, but I’m still being mocked.
“You have to understand—you’re the first person to ever know me in more than one body. I’m not used to this. I don’t know how you’re going to react.”
This makes her a little more serious.
“I’m sorry. It’s just that you’re this super hot pretty girl. It makes it very hard for me to have a mental image of you. I keep having to change it.”
“Picture me however you want to picture me. Because odds are, that’ll be more true than any of the bodies you see me in.”
“I think my imagination needs a little more time to catch up to the situation, okay?”
“Okay. Now, where to?”
“Since we’ve already been to the ocean, I figured today we’d go to a forest.”
So off we go, into the woods.
It’s not like last time. The radio is on, but we’re not singing along. We’re sharing the same space, but our thoughts are spreading outside of it.
I want to hold her hand, but I sense it wouldn’t work. I know she’s not going to reach for my hand, not unless I need it. This is the problem with being so beautiful—it can render you untouchable. And this is the problem with being in a new body each day—the history is there, but it’s not visible. It has to be different from last time, because I am different.
We talk a little about Jiwon; Hanni called her house a second time yesterday, just to see what would happen. Jiwon’s father answered, and when Hanni introduced herself as a friend, he said that Jiwon had gone away to deal with some things, and left it at that. Both Hanni and I decide to take this as a good sign.
We talk some more, but not about anything that matters. I want to cut through the awkwardness, have Hanni treat me like her boyfriend or girlfriend again. But I can’t. I’m not.
We get to the park and navigate ourselves away from the other weekenders. Hanni finds us a secluded picnic area, and surprises me by taking a feast from the trunk.
I watch as she picks everything out of the picnic hamper. Cheeses. French bread. Hummus. Olives. Salads. Chips. Salsa.
“Are you a vegetarian?” I ask, based on the evidence in front of me.
She nods.
“Why?”
“Because I have this theory that when we die, every animal that we’ve eaten has a chance at eating us back. So if you’re a carnivore and you add up all the animals you’ve eaten—well, that’s a long time in purgatory, being chewed.”
“Really?”
She laughs. “No. I’m just sick of the question. I mean, I’m vegetarian because I think it’s wrong to eat other sentient creatures. And it sucks for the environment.”
“Fair enough.” I don’t tell her how many times I’ve accidentally eaten meat while I’ve been in a vegetarian’s body. It’s just not something I remember to check for. It’s usually the friends’ reactions that alert me. I once made a vegan really, really sick at a McDonald’s.
Over lunch, we make more small talk. It’s not until we’ve put away the picnic and are walking through the woods that the real words come out.
“I need to know what you want,” she says.
“I want us to be together.” I say it before I can think it over.
She keeps walking. I keep walking alongside her.
“But we can’t be together. You realize that, don’t you?”
“No. I don’t realize that.”
Now she stops. Puts her hand on my shoulder.
“You need to realize it. I can care about you. You can care about me. But we can’t be together.”
It’s so ridiculous, but I ask, “Why?”
“Why? Because one morning you could wake up on the other side of the country. Because I feel like I’m meeting a new person every time I see you. Because you can’t be there for me. Because I don’t think I can like you no matter what. Not like this.”
“Why can’t you like me like this?”
“It’s too much. You’re too perfect right now. I can’t imagine being with someone like … you.”
“But don’t look at her—look at me.”
“I can’t see beyond her, okay? And there’s also Minj. I have to think of Minji.”
“No, you don’t.”
“You don’t know, okay? How many waking hours were you in there? Fourteen? Fifteen? Did you really get to know everything about her while you were in there? Everything about me?”
“You like her because she’s a lost girl. Believe me, I’ve seen it happen before. But do you know what happens to people who love lost girls? They become lost themselves. Without fail.”
“You don’t know me—”
“But I know how this works! I know what she’s like. She doesn’t care about you nearly as much as you care about her. She doesn’t care about you nearly as much as I care about you.”
“Stop! Just stop.”
But I can’t. “What do you think would happen if she met me in this body? What if the three of us went out? How much attention do you think she’d pay you? Because she doesn’t care about who you are. I happen to think you are about a thousand times more attractive than Yoon is. But do you really think she’d be able to keep her hands to herself if she had a chance?”
“She’s not like that.”
“Are you sure? Are you really sure?”
“Fine,” Hanni says. “Let me call her.”
Despite my immediate protests, she dials her number and, when she answers, says she has a friend in town that she wants her to meet. Maybe we could all go for dinner? She says fine, but not until Hanni says it’ll be her treat.
Once she hangs up, we just hang there.
“Happy?” she asks.
“I have no idea,” I tell her honestly.
“Me either.”
“When are we meeting her?”
“Six.”
“Okay,” I say. “In the meantime, I want to tell you everything, and I want you to tell me everything in return.”
It’s so much easier when we’re talking about things that are real. We don’t have to remind ourselves what the point is, because we’re right there in it.
She asks me when I first knew.
“I was probably four or five. Obviously, I knew before that about changing bodies, having a different mom and dad each day. Or grandmother or babysitter or whoever. There was always someone to take care of me, and I assumed that was just what living was—a new life every morning. If I got something wrong—a name, a place, a rule—people would correct me. There was never that big a disturbance. I didn’t think of myself as a boy or a girl—I never have. I would just think of myself as a boy or a girl for a day. It was like a different set of clothes.
“The thing that ended up tripping me up was the concept of tomorrow. Because after a while, I started to notice—people kept talking about doing things tomorrow. Together. And if I argued, I would get strange looks. For everyone else, there always seemed to be a tomorrow together. But not for me. I’d say, ‘You won’t be there,’ and they’d say, ‘Of course I’ll be there.’ And then I’d wake up, and they wouldn’t be. And my new parents would have no idea why I was so upset.
“There were only two options—something was wrong with everyone else, or something was wrong with me. Because either they were tricking themselves into thinking there was a tomorrow together, or I was the only person who was leaving.”
Hanni asks, “Did you try to hold on?”
I tell her, “I’m sure I did. But I don’t remember it now. I remember crying and protesting—I told you about that. But the rest? I’m not sure. I mean, do you remember a lot about when you were five?”
She shakes her head. “Not really. I remember my mom bringing me and my sister to the shoe store to get new shoes before kindergarten started. I remember learning that a green light meant go and red meant stop. I remember coloring them in, and the teacher being a little confused about how to explain yellow. I think she told us to treat it the same as red.”
“I learned my letters quickly,” I tell her. “I remember the teachers being surprised that I knew them. I imagine they were just as surprised the next day, when I’d forgotten them.”
“A five-year-old probably wouldn’t notice taking a day off.”
“Probably. I don’t know.”
“I keep asking Minji about it, you know. The day you were her. And it’s amazing how clear her fake memories are. She doesn’t disagree when I say we went to the beach, but she doesn’t really remember it, either.”
“Soobin, the twin, was like that, too. He didn’t notice anything wrong. But when I asked him about meeting you for coffee, he didn’t remember it at all. He remembered he was at Starbucks—his mind accounted for the time. But it wasn’t what actually happened.”
“Maybe they remember what you want them to remember.”
“I’ve thought about that. I wish I knew for sure.”
We walk farther. Circle a tree with our fingers.
“What about love?” she asks. “Have you ever been in love?”
“I don’t know that you’d call it love,” I say. “I’ve had crushes, for sure. And there have been days where I’ve really regretted leaving. There were even one or two people I tried to find, but that didn’t work out. The closest was this girl Danielle.”
“Tell me about her.”
“It was about a year ago. I was working at a movie theater, and she was in town, visiting her cousins, and when she went to get some popcorn, we flirted a little, and it just became this … spark. It was this small, one-screen movie theater, and when the movie was running, my job was pretty slow. I think she missed the second half of the movie, because she came back out and started talking to me more. I ended up having to tell her what happened, so she could pretend she’d been in there most of the time. At the end, she asked for my email, and I made up an email address.”
“Like you did for me.”
“Exactly like I did for you. And she emailed me later that night, and left the next day to go back home to Maine, and that proved to be ideal, because then the rest of our relationship could be online. I’d been wearing a name tag, so I had to give her that first name, but I made up a last name, and then I made up an online profile using some of the photos from the real girl’s profile. I think her name was Haerin.”
“Oh—so you were a girl?”
“Yeah,” I say. “Does that matter?”
“No,” she tells me. “I guess not.” But I can tell it does. A little. Again, her mental picture needs adjustment.
“So we’d email almost every day. We’d even chat. And while I couldn’t tell her what was really happening—I emailed her from some very strange places—I still felt like I had something out there in the world that was consistently mine, and that was a pretty new feeling. The only problem was, she wanted more. More photos. Then she wanted to Skype. Then, after about a month of these intense conversations, she started talking about visiting again. Her aunt and uncle had already invited her back, and summer was coming.”
“Uh-oh.”
“Yup—uh-oh. I couldn’t figure out a way around it. And the more I tried to dodge it, the more she noticed. All of our conversations became about us. Every now and then, a tangent would get in there, but she’d always drag it back. So I had to end it. Because there wasn’t going to be a tomorrow for us.”
“Why didn’t you tell her the truth?”
“Because I didn’t think she could take it. Because I didn’t trust her enough, I guess.”
“So you called it off.”
“I told her I’d met someone else. I borrowed photos from the body I was in at the time. I changed my fake profile’s relationship status. Danielle never wanted to talk to me again.”
“Poor girl.”
“I know. After that, I promised myself I wouldn’t get into any more virtual entanglements, as easy as they might seem to be. Because what’s the point of something virtual if it doesn’t end up being real? And I could never give anyone something real. I could only give them deception.”
“Like impersonating their girlfriends,” Hanni says.
“Yeah. But you have to understand—you were the exception to the rule. And I didn’t want it to be based on deception. Which is why you’re the first person I’ve ever told.”
“The funny thing is, you say it like it’s so unusual that you’ve only done it once. But I bet a whole lot of people go through their lives without ever telling the truth, not really. And they wake up in the same body and the same life every single morning.”
“Why? What aren’t you telling me?”
Hanni looks me in the eye. “If I’m not telling you something, it’s for a reason. Just because you trust me, it doesn’t mean I have to automatically trust you. Trust doesn’t work like that.”
“That’s fair.”
“I know it is. But enough of that. Tell me about—I don’t know—third grade.”
The conversation continues. She learns the reason I now have to access information about allergies before eating anything (after having been nearly killed by a strawberry when I was nine), and I learn the origin of her fear of bunny rabbits (a particularly malevolent creature named Swizzle that liked to escape its cage and sleep on people’s faces). She learns about the best mom I ever had (a water park is involved), and I learn about the highs and lows of living with the same mother for your entire life, about how no one can make you angrier, but how you can’t really love anyone more. She learns that I haven’t always been in Maryland, but I move great distances only when the body I’m in moves great distances. I learn that she’s never been on an airplane.
She still keeps a physical space between us—there will be no leaning on shoulders or holding hands right now. But if our bodies keep apart, our words do not. I don’t mind that.
We return to the car and pick at the remains of the picnic. Then we walk around and talk some more. I am astonished at the number of lives I can remember to tell Hanni about, and she is amazed that her single life bears as many stories as my multiple one. Because her normal existence is so foreign to me, so intriguing to me, it starts to feel a little more interesting to her as well.
I could go on like this until midnight. But at five-fifteen, Hanni looks at her phone and says, “We better get going. Minji will be waiting for us.”
Somehow, I’d managed to forget.
It should be a foregone conclusion. I am a seriously attractive girl. Minji is a typically jerk.
I am hoping that Hanni’s theory is right, and that Yoon will only remember what I want her to remember, or what her mind wants her to remember. Not that I’m going to take this far—all I need is confirmation of Minji’s willingness, not actual contact.
Hanni’s picked a clam house off the highway. True to form, I confirm that Yoon doesn’t have any shellfish allergies. In truth, Yoon has tricked herself into thinking she’s “allergic” to a number of things, as a way of narrowing down her diet. But shellfish never hit that particular watch list.
When she walks into the room, heads actually turn. Most of them are attached to men a good thirty years older than her. I’m sure she’s used to it, but it freaks me out.
Even though Hanni was concerned about Minji having to wait for us, she ends up coming ten minutes after we do. The look on her face when she first sees me is priceless—when Hanni said she had a friend in town, Yoon was not what she pictured. She gives Hanni her hello, but she’s gaping at me when he does.
We take our seats. At first I’m so focused on her reaction that I don’t notice Hanni’s. She’s receding into herself, suddenly quiet, suddenly timid. I can’t tell whether it’s Minji’s presence that’s making this happen, or whether it’s the combination of her presence and mine.
We’ve been so wrapped up in our own day that we haven’t really prepared for this. So when Minji starts asking the obvious questions—how do Hanni and I know each other, and how come she hasn’t heard about me before—I have to jump into the breach. For Hanni, fabrication is a ruminative act, whereas lying is a part of my necessary nature.
I tell her that my mother and Hanni’s mother were best friends in high school. I’m now living in Los Angeles (why not?), auditioning for TV shows (because I can). My mother and I are visiting the East Coast for a week, and she wanted to check in on her old friend. Hanni and I have seen each other off and on through the years, but this is the first time in a while.
Minji appears to be hanging on my every word, but she isn’t listening at all. I brush her leg “accidentally” under the table. She pretends she doesn’t notice. Hanni pretends, too.
I’m brazen, but careful with my brazenness. I touch Hanni’s hand a few times when I’m making a point, so it doesn’t seem so unusual when I do it to Minji. I mention a Hollywood star that I once kissed at a party, but make it clear that it was no big deal.
I want Minji to flirt back, but she appears incapable. Especially once there’s food in front of her. Then the order of attention goes: food, then Yoon, then Hanni. I dip my crab cakes in tartar sauce, and imagine Yoon yelling at me for doing so.
When the food is finished, she focuses back on me. Hanni comes alive a little and tries to mimic my movements, first by holding her hand. She doesn’t move away, but she doesn’t seem all that into it; she acts like she’s embarrassing Hanni. I figure this is a good sign.
Finally, Hanni says she has to go to the ladies’ room. This is my chance to get her to do something irredeemable, get her to see who she truly is.
I start with the leg move. This time, with Hanni gone, she doesn’t move her leg away.
“Hello there,” I say.
“Hello,” she says back. And smiles.
“What are you doing after this?” I ask.
“After dinner?”
“Yeah, after dinner.”
“I don’t know.”
“Maybe we should do something,” I suggest.
“Yeah. Sure.”
“Maybe just the two of us.”
Click. She finally gets it.
I move in. Touch her hand. Say, “I think that would be fun.”
I need her to lean in to me. I need her to give in to what she wants. I need her to take it one step further. All it takes is a yes.
She looks around, to see if Hanni is near, and to see if the other guys in the room are seeing this happen.
“Whoa,” she says.
“It’s okay,” I tell her. “I really like you.”
She sits back. Shakes her head. “Um … no.”
I’ve been too forward. She needs it to be her idea.
“Why not?” I ask.
She looks at me like I’m a complete idiot.
“Why not?” she says. “How about Hanni? Jeez.”
I’m trying to think of a comeback for that, but there isn’t one. And it doesn’t even matter, because at this point, Hanni returns to the table.
“I don’t want this,” she says. “Stop.”
Minji, fool that she is, thinks she’s talking to her.
“I’m not doing anything!” she protests, her leg firmly back on his side of the booth. “Your friend here is a little out of control.”
“I don’t want this,” she repeats.
“It’s okay,” I say. “I’m sorry.”
“You should be!” Minji yells. “God, I don’t know how they do things in California, but here, you don’t act like that.” she stands up. I steal a glance at her slight flush ears and see that despite her denials, my flirtation did have at least one effect. But I can’t really point it out to Hanni.
“I’m gonna go,” she says. Then, as if to prove something, she kisses Hanni right in front of me. “Thanks, baby,” she says. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
She doesn’t bother saying goodbye to me.
Hanni and I sit back down.
“I’m sorry,” I tell her again.
“No, it’s my fault. I should’ve known.”
I’m waiting for the I told you so … and then it comes.
“I told you that you don’t understand. You can’t understand us,” she says.
The check comes. I try to pay, but she waves me off.
“It’s not your money,” she says. And that hurts just as much as anything else.
I know she wants the night to end. I know she wants to drop me off at home, just so she can call Minji and apologize, and make everything right with her again.
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mystarmyangel · 10 months
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[POLL] 231121 Daily Sports Korea 10th Anniversary Poll - Favorite Celebrity Ranking
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[231121 Daily Sports Korea 10th Anniversary Poll - Favorite Celebrity Ranking]
Full list: 1) Yoo Jae Suk (8.8%) 2) IU (2.9%) 3) BTS (1.9%) 4) Nam Goong Min (1.6%) 5) Lim Young Woong, YoonA (1.3%)
Followed by: -Choi Boolam (1.2%) -Lee Hyori (1.2%) -Jo In Sung, Lee Byung Hyun (0.9%) -Kim Hye Ja, Lee Young Ae, Hyun Bin (0.8%) -Ahn Sung Ki, Han Hye Joo, Ma Dong Seok (0.7%) -Kang Hodong, Song Hye Kyo, Gong Yoo, Han Sun Kyu, Jang Dong Gun (0.6%) -Karina, Kim Hye Soo, Cha Taehyun, Lee Seojin, Song Kang Ho (0.5%) - Park Bo Young, Suzy, Han Gain, SHINee, Kim Sung Kyu, Cha In Pyo, New Jeans, Jang Yoon Jung, Choi Min Sik (0.4%) -AKMU, Shin Ha Kyun, Taeyeon, PSY, Cha Eun Woo, Ahn Yujin, Shin Dong Yup, Lee Soon Jae, Jun Jihyun, Sol Kyung Gu, Han Jimin, Han Yeseul, Kim Ho Joong, Park Eun Bin, Ji Sung, Jennie, Kim Woo Bin, TVXQ, Shin Min Ah, Super Junior, Kim Tae Hee, Kang Dong Won, Lee Seung Chul, Go Doo Shim, Cho Yong Pil, Tak Jae Hun, Shin Hye Sun (0.3%)
*Survey conducted from 3 to 8 Nov on 1,003 people above 18 years old living across the country. The survey method is a mobile web survey, and the sampling error is ±3.1% points with a 95% confidence level.
Source: Link
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shinyempirerpg · 1 year
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A-B-C
An Yu Jin (IVE) — Sugar Rush Cha Eun Woo — sunflower Christopher Bang — bluehour Choi Beom Gyu — LittleJoanna Choi San — sonogong Choi Soo Bin — Bonvoyage Choi Ye Rim — Cherry Choi Yeon Jun — Nahida
D-E-F
Fukutomi Tsuki — Eunoia
G-H-I
Hanni Pham — Kamek Han Yu Jin (ZB1) — Dumpling Hirai Momo — Kamek Hwang Hyun Jin — Némesis Hwang Ye Ji — Dalí
J-K-L
Jake Sim — Darimda Jang Won Young — jellypop Jeon Jung Kook — genos Jeon So Yeon — Bluey Jeon Won Woo — Zag Jeong Yun Oh — Blue Joshua Hong —sonogong Jung Woo Young — wang Kang Seul Gi — bluehour Kang Tae Hyun — shinyland Kim Chae Won — Kamek Kim Jennie — Promqueen Kim Ji Woong — Gaku Kim Ji Soo — Lynx Kim Min Ji— Hype Girl Kim Min Gyu — Than Kim Min Jeong (Winter) — Leixah Kim Seon Woo (Sunoo) — shinyland Kim Tae Hyung (V) — Bonvoyage Kim Yoo Jung — Pebbles Lalisa Manoban — Peach Lee Chae Min — Rotten Lee Chan (Dino) — Gatitos Lee Felix — shinyland Lee Min Ho (Lee Know) — Bonvoyage Lee Hee Seung — badlands Lee Ju Yeon — Nahida
M-N-O
Min Yoon Gi — Gatitos Minatozaki Sana — ReiRei Miyawaki Sakura — soul Myung Jae Hyun — Hype Girl Na Jae Min — poppy Nakamura Kazuha — ReiRei Naoi Rei — Darimda Ning Yi Zhuo — jellypop
P-Q-R
Park Ji Won (ESteem Model) — Gaku Park Jong Seong (JAY) — butch Park Sung Ho — Hype Girl Park Sung Hoon — Dumpling
S-T-U Seol Yoon Ah — kitty Shen Quan Rui (Ricky) — Disaster Shim Ja Yoon — Nahida Shin Yu Na — Peach Sung Han Bin — Sugar Rush Song Yuqi — ReiRei Stephen Yoon (Keeho) — soul
V-W-X
Wang Yi Xiang (Nicholas) — Gaku Won Ji Min — whiskerssmile
Y-Z
Yang Jung Won — caracolcito Yoo Ji Min (Karina) — whiskerssmile Yoon Jeong Han — Darimda Zhang Hao — whiskerssmile Zhou Tzu Yu — darum
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blue-rising · 9 months
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Star To A Young Culture.
Moon Hye-Eun, ACSA or ISA. CEO of Blue Rising, producer, song-writer and singer.
2002, ISFJ.
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Bae Su-Min or Sumin. Producer, song-writer and singer.
2001, ISTJ.
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Park Si-Eun or Sieun. Producer, song-writer and singer.
2001, ESTJ.
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Yoon Se-Eun, YunSay or Seeun. Producer, song-writer and singer.
2003, INFP.
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Shim Ja-Yoon, Rockit.Y or Yoon. Producer, song-writer and singer.
2004, ENFP.
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Jang Ye-Eun, JJ or J. Producer, song-writer and singer.
2004, ISFP.
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interkosmos · 2 years
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Name: Shim Ja Yoon / 심자윤 / Yoon Born: April 14, 2004 Birthplace: Gwangju, South Korea Group: STAYC Labels: High Up Entertainment
Positions of Planets Sun 24°30' Aries Moon 19°42' Aquarius Mercury 29°21' Я Aries Venus 9°22' Gemini Mars 15°13' Gemini Jupiter 9°35' Я Virgo Saturn 7°33' Cancer Uranus 5°31' Pisces Neptune 15°05' Aquarius Pluto 22°08' Я Sagittarius Chiron 25°55' Capricorn Juno 21°54' Capricorn Node 11°21' Я Taurus
List of Aspects Moon Conjunction Neptune Orb 4°35' Sun Conjunction Mercury Orb 4°51' Venus Conjunction Mars Orb 5°51' Mars Opposite Pluto Orb 6°54' Venus Square Jupiter Orb 0°13' Venus Square Uranus Orb 3°51' Mars Square Jupiter Orb 5°37' Mars Trine Neptune Orb 0°07' Sun Trine Pluto Orb 2°22' Moon Trine Mars Orb 4°28' Venus Trine Neptune Orb 5°43' Mercury Trine Pluto Orb 7°13' Moon Sextile Pluto Orb 2°26' Sun Sextile Moon Orb 4°48'
For Rectification Purposes Secondary Progressions: Position of the Moon and Pluto on November 12th, 2020 Moon: Virgo 8° 28’ SA Pluto: Capricorn 8° 18’
Rising Sign Options: Virgo - Leo - Sagittarius - Pisces - Gemini
Rising Degree Option: Around 8° or 21°
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y0oni3 · 11 months
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       ⓘ   ⎘    ⧆    ⚺    🌚
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       ⓘ   ⎘    ⧆    ⚺    💀
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obstinatobreath · 2 years
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/ Kang Mina & Shim Ja Yoon
/ i'm genie for your wish
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jardinesdecristal · 3 years
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¥900 . . ★사랑은 원래 이렇게 아픈 건가요%!?🍜🍢🍄
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newbornrpg · 1 year
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★ Bienvenida
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gaecoo · 2 years
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soy una chica mala #$
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2yousvt · 3 years
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♡♡♡ miu miu yoon >ω<) . . it grl
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passionforfiction · 2 years
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Our Blues
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Everyone has a sadness in their lives, but the pain doesn't outlive us when we face the demons, and rely on those that we love and love us back.
I loved how the intro gave us a hint of what story we would be seeing. Each story was connected to an album, reminding us that music triggers our memories because music is the soundtrack of our lives. The vinyl covers reflected the theme of the story of the episode. Each story had its own tone, some stories were harsh, hard to watch, others were just sad, others were full of fear, but the all had one thing in common, they were about love and healing.
I liked the topics because they are usually not addressed with humanity and realism. This series gives a voice to those that suffer depression, gives a voice to those teens who become parents, to husbands who are physically abused by their wives, parents who do anything to make their children's dreams come true, the lives of people with learning disabilities and that of their families, and so on.
These characters were real to me. They were good people that at times hurt others, with words or actions. Their grayish and dimensions made me connect with them, made me feel for them and smile when they found the path to healing.
It is a beautiful series. A must watch!
P.S. And what a cast!
Poster from AsianWiki - runchryroll.com/activate
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