Baek Ji Young
Lyric guide

Ignore

A Korean ballad about the deeper ache that comes after the formal farewell.

Baek Ji Young visibility24 visits Editor's note live Video on page
person Curated by Ethan Walker LyroVerse team
Quick meaning

A fast read before the full lyric

A Korean ballad about the deeper ache that comes after the formal farewell.

Most breakup songs fixate on the goodbye itself.

'Ignore' acknowledges that the formal separation is just paperwork, the real injury is the phantom limb pain that follows, the 'ibyeol boda deo apeun ge' that keeps throbbing when nobody's watching.

Editor's note

Baek Ji Young's 'Ignore' and the pain after goodbye

A Korean ballad about the deeper ache that comes after the formal farewell.

ibyeol boda deo apeun ge

Most breakup songs fixate on the goodbye itself. 'Ignore' acknowledges that the formal separation is just paperwork, the real injury is the phantom limb pain that follows, the 'ibyeol boda deo apeun ge' that keeps throbbing when nobody's watching.

The repeated plea 'nun mureul gam chueoyo nun mureul akkyeoyo', close your eyes, open your eyes, feels less like instruction and more like a desperate attempt to control a body that won't cooperate. It's the physical rebellion against a mind trying to enforce calm, that gap between what you tell yourself to do and what your nerves actually allow.

That phrase flips the script. It admits the actual farewell was manageable compared to this lingering, unnamed hurt that settles in afterward.

The way 'musiro musiro' gets whispered then stretched, it sounds like someone trying to swallow a sob before it escapes.

edit_note Ethan Walker · LyroVerse team · Apr 16
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LyroVerse editor's notes are interpretation guides, not final truth. If something looks off, use comments, reporting, or Contact.

Listen for

What to keep in your ear

the pull of "ibyeol boda deo apeun ge" how "nun mureul gam chueoyo nun mureul akkyeoyo" turns into a mantra the pull of "musiro musiro"
Lyrics

Ignore

The lyric stays readable and compact here; the note and related paths sit nearby so you do not lose the song while looking for context.

imiwa beorin ibyeo rinde seul peodo ulji marayo

imittaeneu jeun ibyeo rinde miryeo neun duji marayo

nun mureul gam chueoyo nun mureul akkyeoyo

ibyeol boda deo apeun ge oerou minde

musiro musiro geuriul ttae geu ttae ureoyo

imidora seon nimi ramyeon miwodo miwo marayo

imiyak sokdoen ibyeo rinde amu mal haji marayo

nun mureul gam chueoyo nunmureul akkyeoyo

ibyeol boda deo apeun ge oerou minde

musiro musiro geuriul ttae geu ttae ureoyo

nun mureul gam chueoyo nun mureul akkyeoyo

ibyeol boda deo apeun ge oerou minde

musiro musiro geuriul ttae geu ttae ureoyo

Quick answers

What this page can answer fast

What is "Ignore" by Baek Ji Young about?

A Korean ballad about the deeper ache that comes after the formal farewell. Most breakup songs fixate on the goodbye itself. 'Ignore' acknowledges that the formal separation is just paperwork, the real injury is the phantom limb pain that follows, the 'ibyeol boda deo apeun ge' that keeps throbbing when nobody's watching.

Who performs "Ignore"?

Baek Ji Young performs "Ignore", and this lyric page sits inside the Baek Ji Young catalog on LyroVerse.

Does LyroVerse have an editor's note for "Ignore"?

Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "Baek Ji Young's 'Ignore' and the pain after goodbye", followed by the full lyric and related songs.

Are there related songs to explore after "Ignore"?

Yes. The related section below points to And and See You Again (feat. Richard Yongjae O’Neill) with a short reason for opening each page next.

Where can I find more songs by Baek Ji Young?

Use the artist link near the top of the page or the related paths section below to keep moving through Baek Ji Young's lyric pages.

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