Lost Love, Inyeon, and the Threads We Cannot See
There is a word in Korean that has fascinated me ever since I first came across it while writing an essay about karmic connections: inyeon ( 인연 ). People often translate it as fate, destiny, or connection, but none of those quite reach it. Inyeon is softer than fate, deeper than coincidence. It is the unseen thread between people—the quiet belief that meetings are not always random, and that some souls cross paths for reasons we may never fully understand. I first heard Koreans say that even brushing shoulders with a stranger on the street may require thousands of layers of inyeon. If that is true, then what of the people who entered our lives and changed them? What of the ones we loved? Lost love has a way of feeling unfinished. It lingers like a sentence that never found its final word. You replay old conversations while washing dishes, walking home, or lying awake long after midnight. You wonder where it shifted. Where the warmth cooled. Where the roa...







