Review: This is a review article written after watching the broadcast.
On "Shinsang chulsi - Pyeonstorang," Yano Shiho confessed the pain of a miscarriage.
On the 27th, KBS2TV's "Shinsang chulsi - Pyeonstorang" featured Yano Shiho.
She proceeded to cook earnestly for Ayumi, and Ayumi said, "I've been so busy with childcare I couldn't eat a single meal; I'm looking forward to the dish," so Yano Shiho said, "I prepared food that will make you feel fortified," and prepared soup curry, a popular Hokkaido dish.
Yano Shiho asked Ayumi, "How is it after giving birth?" Ayumi, saying it has been a year and she is thinking about a second child, said, "I had a late pregnancy at 40. I can't afford to be lax at this age," and "I'm planning for a second child but I am very worried about whether to have one." When Yano Shiho said, "Do it quickly" and asked if she had not tried yet, Ayumi answered, "I froze my eggs in advance for in vitro fertilization and took out insurance." In response, Yano Shiho encouraged her, saying, "Still, natural is better; there's no time to hesitate" and "Try for a natural pregnancy quickly."
When asked whether Choo Sung Hoon did not want a second child, Yano Shiho mentioned, "He kept saying it's okay because he spent a lot on Sarang," and conversely, Yano Shiho, who wanted a second child, said there had been a second pregnancy. Moreover, Yano Shiho said that her daughter Sarang also did not want a sibling, "My husband and daughter rejected it so I was the only one who wanted it," and surprised everyone by saying, "Actually, I was pregnant with a second child at 40."
Yano Shiho confessed the pain that no one knew, saying, "I became pregnant via in vitro fertilization when Sarang was 4, but I ultimately had a miscarriage," and explained the reason she stopped thinking about having a second child, saying, "Because it was in vitro fertilization, not a natural pregnancy, I felt the miscarriage was my fault and was so shocked I couldn't continue."
Yano Shiho recalled the time when both her body and mind were exhausted. She said she moved to Hawaii to sort out her feelings. Thanks to her family who stayed with her, she overcame the pain, saying, "I don't think the family really said anything; it felt like they stayed by my side without talking about it," and reflected, "In Korea and Japan it was just work; in Hawaii I learned how to live without thinking about work."
[Photo] 'Pyeonstorang'
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