Turning Over to The Other Side

Turning Over to The Other Side

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WpMetadataReadMatureOngoing56m
WpMetadataNoticeLast published Fri, Apr 24, 2015
STORY IS NOT A FANTASY! Donghae is a cute guy with a identity to hold and he is liked by everyone, they all see him as the shy type which is true but he does have his times. He and his friends goes to a nightclub to celebrate one of their birthdays there. Eunhyuk is the son of the CEO who owns Eunpyeong University and due to his mindset his father is giving the company to his sister Sora. So he tends to act 'freely' with his friends. These two groups meet, find out how this ends. Rated M: Because of some content. Thanks to -Beats for the beautiful poster.
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This is a slow-burn romance about class and kindness, online cruelty and offline courage, and how love sometimes means learning to knock without breaking the door. No grand promises-just steady, human choices: a hotline instead of headlines, a replaced lightbulb, a bowl of miyeokguk, and the quiet code of two people who decide not to leave. In Seoul, a steel-schooled CEO, Lee Donghae, survives every corporate storm with a single anonymous letter signed LHJ-a teenage benediction he's carried for fifteen years. A chance encounter with Lee Hyukjae, a gentle restaurant server from his old high school, turns a brief two-hour conversation into a fault line: gossip explodes, Hyukjae is forced to resign, and the letter's author is revealed. As Hyukjae shoulders triple shifts and a mother's failing health, Donghae confronts what power is for, building protections for service workers while unlearning his polished indifference. When Hyukjae's mother dies, Donghae shows up-not as a savior, but as presence: pouring water, closing windows, lifting the modest coffin. Grief lowers the volume of pride, and the two men begin again in a street tent, where apologies sound truer than declarations. This is a slow-burn romance about class and kindness, online cruelty and offline courage, and how love sometimes means learning to knock without breaking the door. No grand promises-just steady, human choices: a hotline instead of headlines, a replaced lightbulb, a bowl of miyeokguk, and the quiet code of two people who decide not to leave.

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