*This content was translated by AI.
The "Lee Ho-seon Counseling Center" will be open normally during the Lunar New Year holiday.
On the 17th, the year of the disease, tvN STORY's "Lee Ho-seon Counseling Center" points out the moment when family conversations turn into hell. It dissects the structure of non-communication conversations that are repeated between families with the topic of "uncommunication war," in which wounds build up as the words go back and forth, and even the body ends up collapsing.
The key question posed by the seventh inning of the "Lee Ho-seon Counseling Center" is "Why do we get further away the more we talk?" Under the message, "If the couple communicates well, the garden, and the communication is hell," Professor Lee Ho-seon checks the danger signals that make the relationship sick. In particular, it presents a checklist of risk signals in a relationship that should be suspected, and points out how words and attitudes that grow wounds are repeated.
The first story to be revealed is "Both-punishment War". A working mother who raises a 24-month-old child and works and parenting at the same time appears. The wife expresses her belief that "I want to work hard and I think I'm taking care of my child hard." But the husband said, "Even if you work, pay more attention to your home. Focus on parenting" demands. Furthermore, "The roles of men and women are different. Women should focus on child-rearing, leading to a loud statement that "women should focus on child-rearing" and causing the studio to tremble. In response, Professor Lee Ho-seon directs her husband, asking, "What do you want from your wife?"
This story is not just about the couple. It asks questions about the recognition of gender roles that still remain in a society where double-income is common, the double burden placed on "working mothers," and to whom the responsibility of caring is leaning more. As many couples are experiencing similar conflicts under pressure to do well in both work and childcare, this consultation is expected to deeply sympathize with dual-income couples living in the same era. Whether it is possible to have a relationship centered on "consensus" through "conversation" rather than a role, the clues are found through counseling.
The husband's story is then revealed that he has been vomiting every day for two years. Symptoms that have become routine, such as "I throw up, eat and eat as soon as I wake up." The husband confides that he works with his father-in-law and mother-in-law and that "there has never been a comfortable moment." Regarding her husband's condition, Lee Seon-ho said, "I'm sure there have been times when I vomited. "This man is going to die," he warns strongly, shocking. Attention is focused on whether something accumulated in work and relationships has been revealed by the body and what is the most threatening existence to this couple.
The production team said, "The whole family gathers and harmonizes, but it is also a holiday that maximizes the conflict accumulated so far. I hope that your family will gather together today (17th) on Lunar New Year's Day, check the pattern of communication that gets farther away as you talk, and learn the right way to communicate with each other and end the Lunar New Year holiday happily." It will air at 8 p.m. on the 17th.
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*This content was translated by AI.

