I thought I was done.
I had survived the silence.
I had survived the distance.
I had even survived random clips without falling back in.
Or at least, that's what I believed.
Then one night, while scrolling, I saw an edit.
It wasn't dramatic.
No slow music.
No romantic captions.
Just a clip from one of his live videos.
Seo Juhan looked tired.
A little flushed.
He was laughing awkwardly and saying something like—
"The reason I want to talk about this thing is… the moment I talk about this, the company will freak out again… If I say anything about cigarettes or something… it's not something I should talk about…"
He looked slightly embarrassed.
Human.
Not polished. Not perfectly scripted.
Just human.
And then I read the comments saying he deleted that live because he was drunk.
I don't know why that detail hit me.
Maybe because for the first time in a long while, he didn't look like an edited comfort character.
He looked flawed.
Real.
I should have scrolled.
I did scroll.
Then another edit came.
Then another.
I skipped them.
I told myself, "Don't do this. Don't go back."
I even searched the full video for a second.
Then stopped.
Closed it.
Locked my phone.
I wasn't trying to protect my image.
I was trying to protect my progress.
But that night, something inside me felt restless.
Not because I wanted him more.
But because I realized something uncomfortable—
Even after all this time, even after quitting, even after growing up—
I was still capable of being pulled back.
That scared me.
So I did something I had never done before.
I searched his account.
I didn't follow him.
I couldn't.
Because following meant daily exposure.
And I knew myself well enough to know that daily exposure would bring daily attachment.
But I opened the message box.
My hands were steady.
My heart wasn't racing.
I wasn't crying.
I just typed.
"I know you'll never read this.
And I don't even love you the way people think fans love idols.
But no matter how much I try to stay away, I still get pulled back.
I don't want to be obsessed. I don't want to be unrealistic.
But somewhere inside me, there's still a selfish part that wishes you were mine.
I know I don't deserve you. I know that's stupid.
I don't even want you in real life.
I just needed to admit that part of me still hopes sometimes."
I read it twice.
It looked dramatic.
It looked childish.
It looked honest.
And then I sent it.
I knew he would never see it.
My message would drown under millions of others.
I wasn't expecting a reply.
I wasn't even expecting acknowledgment.
I just needed it out of my chest.
After sending it, I stared at the screen for a few seconds.
There was no relief explosion.
No breakdown.
Just… quiet.
Then I deleted the chat.
Not because I was ashamed.
But because I didn't want to turn it into a habit.
That message wasn't an invitation.
It was a confession to myself.
I didn't send it to reach him.
I sent it to understand me.
Because the truth was—
I didn't love Seo Juhan.
But I loved the idea of being chosen.
And that's something much harder to let go of.
That night, I slept without scrolling again.
Not because I was strong.
But because I had finally said the part out loud that I had been pretending didn't exist.
And sometimes, admitting your selfish hope is the first step toward truly letting it go.
