A solo ballad about looking back at younger versions of yourself and realizing how little you understood.
Most breakup songs fixate on the other person.
This one turns inward, addressing the earlier versions of himself he left behind.
A solo ballad about looking back at younger versions of yourself and realizing how little you understood.
A solo ballad about looking back at younger versions of yourself and realizing how little you understood.
Most breakup songs fixate on the other person.
This one turns inward, addressing the earlier versions of himself he left behind.
A solo ballad about looking back at younger versions of yourself and realizing how little you understood.
apeugido apasseossji eoriseokgedo han beonigo du beonigo
Most breakup songs fixate on the other person. This one turns inward, addressing the earlier versions of himself he left behind. The lyric doesn't offer wisdom or closure, it just sits with the fact that some days feel heavier for no clear reason, and that's enough.
The phrase "eoriseokgedo han beonigo du beonigo", once, then twice, keeps returning. It's not just repetition; it's the way regret piles up in ordinary moments. He's watching his younger self from a distance, noticing how that person didn't know what was coming, and there's no judgment, just a quiet recognition that you can't go back and explain anything.
That simple, almost clumsy phrasing, it hurts, it hurt, once, then twice, captures how pain returns in waves, not as drama but as ordinary recurrence. There's no grand metaphor, just the blunt fact of feeling it again.
The way his voice tightens slightly on "apeugido apasseossji", it hurts, it hurt, like he's pressing on a bruise to see if it still aches.
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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.
nae jageun maeume jitge geueojin
sangcheodeuri amuneun dekkajin
naega saenggakhaessdeon geosbodan
geuri gilji anhassne
geoureul bomyeo saraganeun nae moseup
gwaenseure usgon issjiman waenji sugyeonhan
naega saenggakhaesseossdeon geosgwaneun
dareuji anhassne
apeugido apasseossji eoriseokgedo
han beonigo du beonigo nareul pihaegassji
georeumi deo mugeowojimyeo
galpi eopsi hemaeeosseossji
apeugido apasseossji geuttaeneun
ajik eorin naldeurui geu chueok soge
geujeo jageun geureon naega isseossgo
mwoga mwonji mollassji
apeugido apasseossji eoriseokgedo
han beonigo du beonigo seulpeo ureosseossji
eokkaega jeomjeom mugeowojimyeo
jujeoanjgoman sipeosseossji
maeiri ssahindago na mideosseumedo
harureul jikiji moshaessdeon gomini
nae jeonbuyeossdeon
yasokhagiman han sigandeuri
ije wa ireohge
geuriwojil jureul mollasseoseo
apeugiman han geot gata eoriseokgedo
han beonigo du beonigo bulpyeongman haessji
gojak oneulman beotyeoboryeo haessdeon
geureon mojaran naui sigandeuri
ije dwido eopsi jinagabeorin geoji
doragal su eopsneun nal
A solo ballad about looking back at younger versions of yourself and realizing how little you understood. Most breakup songs fixate on the other person. This one turns inward, addressing the earlier versions of himself he left behind.
Han Dong Geun performs "As Time Goes", and this lyric page sits inside the Han Dong Geun catalog on LyroVerse.
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "Han Dong Geun's quiet reckoning with time", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Yes. The related section below points to Anniversary and Arctic Sun with a short reason for opening each page next.
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