Yeon-woo is a 24-year-old youth working at the post office in a small town. She's in the golden age ...
Yeon-woo is a 24-year-old youth working at the post office in a small
town. She's in the golden age of her days, except she has an innocent
and introverted personality, and she's far from the usual storm and gale
of life.
She's hasn't even tried drinking yet, let alone coffee and those around
her consider her still young. However, she's completely different from
her family.
She has an irresponsible father, an impossible brother, a shameless
grandfather and a very young brother. All they ever care about
is...women.
Her father is already head over heels for a woman from out of town and
her brother is also after the girl working at the coffee shop.
Her grandfather, who's after a granny at the nursing home and her
youngest brother whose heart is out to the teacher, are nothing compared
to her father and brother. The only person who deserves to be called
the breadwinner of the family is her mother who runs a salon.
There's never a quiet day in the house but Yeon-woo's family make it
through thanks to the women of the family who are responsible. Then one
day, love finds Yeon-woo who never thought she would even hold a guy's
hand her whole life. She finds an anonymous, analog letter in the sack
of letters she delivers and finds more every day from then on. She is
curious who the writer is and finds out it's her senior In-gyu. She
falls for In-gyu but unfortunately, he's married with a wife and kids.
First love creeps up on her for the first time in 24 years, but he's married. Her reality is just too cruel.
Yeon-woo suffers from the love she can't have and her mother finds a new
boyfriend, her brother's friend. His devotion for her awoke the passion
inside her and the whole family is now out in the open.
To make things worse, the woman Yeon-woo's father had devoted body and
material love to turned out to be a fraud and the family faces the
biggest crisis of their lives. Will Yeon-woo and her family overcome
this chaos?