A ballad about trying to forget someone who's already gone, but finding their traces everywhere.
Most breakup songs are about the moment it ends.
This one lives in the aftermath, in the quiet where you're supposed to be moving on.
A ballad about trying to forget someone who's already gone, but finding their traces everywhere.
A ballad about trying to forget someone who's already gone, but finding their traces everywhere.
Most breakup songs are about the moment it ends.
This one lives in the aftermath, in the quiet where you're supposed to be moving on.
A ballad about trying to forget someone who's already gone, but finding their traces everywhere.
neoraneun byeoreul nae haneul jeil nopeun gose darassdeon geolkka
Most breakup songs are about the moment it ends. This one lives in the aftermath, in the quiet where you're supposed to be moving on. The lyric doesn't fight the memory; it just watches it persist, which feels more true to how these things actually work.
The repeated 'seoseonggeoryeo' - that whisper-like delivery - carries the whole weight. It's not about shouting the pain, but about murmuring it to yourself, over and over, like a prayer that won't take. 'Geu chueok wie jinaganeun baramcheoreom' - like a wind passing over that memory. The words admit the memory is still there, solid, and all you can do is let things blow across it.
That image of having placed someone like a star in the highest part of your sky. Now the sky's empty, but you still look up. It's a quiet, devastating way to say you built your world around them.
The way 'far away' hangs at the end of each chorus, stretching out. It doesn't sound like distance achieved, more like a wish that keeps drifting.
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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.
eodum soge gil ilheun gieok chueok
huimihae geujeo hollo seoro
apassdeon maeum ilkka nega eopsneun nanal
nae sajin sok nega isseulkka chama
kkeonaebol sudo eopseo neo gieok
chajeul su issdamyeon gwaenchanha jilkka
seoseonggeoryeo geu chueok wie
jinaganeun baramcheoreom
heulleo meollimeolli far away
seoseonggeoryeo nae gieok soge
sarajineun yeongicheoreom
heulleo meollimeolli far away
gaseumsoge neoraneun yeppeun kkocceun
sideureo malla ijen apa
pieossdeon neon hwansangilkka kkumin geolkka
mundeuk tteooreuneun neoui jogakdeureun
yeojeonhi nal michige hae
neoraneun byeoreul nae haneul
jeil nopeun gose darassdeon geolkka
daheul sudo manjil sudo
gieokhal sujocha eopsneunde
uyeonhi bol su issdamyeon
nae nunmuldo heorakhallae
seoseonggeoryeo geu chueok wie
jinaganeun baramcheoreom
heulleo meollimeolli far away
seoseonggeoryeo nae gieok soge
sarajineun yeongicheoreom
heulleo meollimeolli far away
nappassdeon geu gieokdo
nega tteooreun geu saebyeokdo
chajgo sipeo nan geuriwo
gieokhago sipeo neol
ijgo sipeo neol jiuryeo
maeil michyeobeoril deut haesseossgo
apassjiman huimihan neol chaja oneuldo
seoseonggeoryeo geu chueok wie
jinaganeun baramcheoreom
heulleo meollimeolli far away
seoseonggeoryeo nae gieok soge
sarajineun yeongicheoreom
heulleo meollimeolli far away
A ballad about trying to forget someone who's already gone, but finding their traces everywhere. Most breakup songs are about the moment it ends. This one lives in the aftermath, in the quiet where you're supposed to be moving on.
K.Will performs "Lost Her", and this lyric page sits inside the K.Will catalog on LyroVerse.
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "K.Will's Lost Her and the memory that won't fade", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Yes. The related section below points to Those Days and Love is Punishment with a short reason for opening each page next.
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