@dizilerfan_15@CemreE53475 Sadakatın Zeynep’te yaptığı gibi başkasından olan çocuğa tepkisi kötü olacak. Şimdilik benimsemesi Cihan’ın olduğunu düşünmesinden dolayı. Sonunda elinde patlaması için yine yanlış ata oynaması gerekiyor.
Alt tarafı el tutuşması demek istiyorum ama diyemiyorum… Çünkü onlar ne yaparsa yapsın, muhteşem ötesi bir görüntü oluyor ve insanda anlatılamayacak kadar güzel bir his bırakıyor. ANLADINIZ MI? 🫠
The sf actually validates Alya's fears regarding Meryem. And ironically, the past and it's burdens (Meryem and her lies) become the reason Alya is forced to leave.
Cihan has this blindspot regarding people. If he trusted them once, he finds it difficult to believe they might turn around and stab him in the back.
We see this with Sadakat, with Mine, with Boran, and Meryem.
Ciho tends to believe that once he's settled something according to his standards, it loses power.
Alya, otoh, feels the insidious pull of the past in Meryem's actions.
She understands that while the past maybe a closed chapter for Cihan, it doesn't stop it from interfering in their future.
And she almost hits the bulleye in her conversation with Cihan in their room when she warns him that Sadakat and Meryem are up to something.
But Cihan refuses to see. Until the very thing he tells Sadakat he won't allow happens.
The past with its unending burdens reaches out and tears away the one thing Cihan can't live without.
This is why it's imperative that Cihan learns the truth about why Alya left. And how his own inability to see things as they truly are contributed to it.
If Alya's 'leaving' is one cycle that needs to break, Cihan's 'blindspot' problem needs to be resolved too.
He needs to see that his judgement regarding people and his excessive trust always hurts not just him, but the one he loves the most.
#CihAl #UzakŞehir