A K-pop track about the stubborn ache of a breakup that won't quite end.
Most breakup songs fixate on the moment it ended.
This one is stuck in the aftermath, in the daily machinery of remembrance that feels more like possession.
A K-pop track about the stubborn ache of a breakup that won't quite end.
A K-pop track about the stubborn ache of a breakup that won't quite end.
Most breakup songs fixate on the moment it ended.
This one is stuck in the aftermath, in the daily machinery of remembrance that feels more like possession.
A K-pop track about the stubborn ache of a breakup that won't quite end.
seupgwaniran ge museoun geodeogun
Most breakup songs fixate on the moment it ended. This one is stuck in the aftermath, in the daily machinery of remembrance that feels more like possession. The lyric treats the habit as a separate, active character, the monster, which makes the singer's powerlessness the real subject.
The phrase 'seupgwaniran ge museoun geodeogun', 'this thing called a habit is a frightening monster', does the heavy lifting. It's not a metaphor she's crafting; it's a plain admission that the routine of missing someone has taken on its own life, something ugly and automatic she can't switch off. The fear isn't in the loss anymore, it's in the ritual itself.
Calling a habit a 'frightening monster' flips the script. It's not sadness she's describing, but something that has agency, something that might win.
The way 'annyeong', goodbye, keeps returning in the chorus, each time sounding a little more worn out and less convincing.
LyroVerse editor's notes are interpretation guides, not final truth. If something looks off, use comments, reporting, or Contact.
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.
eolmana manhi gidaryeossneunji
neoreul naegeseo kkaekkeusi jiuneun nal
seupgwaniran ge museoun geodeogun
ajikdo neoui sajineul
mulkkeureomi barabomyeonseo
saranghae oneuldo yaegihae
mideul su eopsgessjiman
annyeong ije geuman neoreul bonaeyaji
geugeon neomu eoryeoun yaegi
cham singihan iriya ireol sudo issgun
neoui moksorido modu da ijeobeoryeossneunde
seupgwaniran ge museoun geodeogun
amu saenggak eopsi
tto jeonhwal geolmyeo usgo issna bwa
saranghae oneuldo yaegihae
mideul su eopsgessjiman
annyeong ije geuman neoreul bonaeyaji
geugeon neomu eoryeoun yaegi
seupgwaniran ge museoun geodeogun
ajikdo neoui sajineul
A K-pop track about the stubborn ache of a breakup that won't quite end. Most breakup songs fixate on the moment it ended. This one is stuck in the aftermath, in the daily machinery of remembrance that feels more like possession.
NC.A performs "Habit (Bye Bye)", and this lyric page sits inside the NC.A catalog on LyroVerse.
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "NC.A's Habit (Bye Bye) and the weight of goodbye", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Yes. The related section below points to My Student Teacher and Oh My God with a short reason for opening each page next.
Use the artist link near the top of the page or the related paths section below to keep moving through NC.A's lyric pages.
Interpretations, questions, memories, and correction notes live together here. The room stays noindex while the best insights are reviewed.
No listener comments on Habit (Bye Bye) yet.
We only count reactions from signed-in listeners so the scores stay clean and trustworthy.
A strong comment here is specific: the phrase you keep hearing, the mood you come back for, or the reason this song stays in rotation.
Sign in to post the first listener note. Reporting stays open to everyone.