As a denizen of the Internet, you’re
probably familiar with the initialism OTP, which
is usually translated as “one true pairing.” People use it when
referring to the fandom couple they most desperately want to live
happily ever after. Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about a clever
alternative translation that has been making the rounds on Tumblr:
“Only Tears and Pain.”
An OTP
can give incredible delight if you’re lucky enough to be sucked in
by the right one. For me, I Hear Your Voice was
a good example: I instantly loved Park Soo Ha and Jang Hye Sung, and
every step the show took toward bringing them together left me giddy
with fangirl joy. Things could have taken a turn for the worse;
unlike most Korean dramas, it wasn’t immediately clear who would
actually be the show’s lead couple. (There were even rumors
midway through that the writers intended to kill off Soo Ha, which
would have also killed me.) But the pairing ultimately worked out, and I was left in a sublimely happy state of OTP realization.
But that’s not
always the case. Falling in love with an OTP is like falling in love
with a person—it’s unpredictable, and quite often regrettable.
Sometimes you’re drawn to a second lead who will absolutely never get the girl, or maybe you even dream of the show’s villain triumphing in
the end. And that’s when the tears and pain come into the picture. Thus, a Woe-TP is born.