by JJ Byun
•
20 January 2026
Some films entertain, and some stay with you long after the credits fade - settling quietly in your body, stirring thought, even discomfort. Park Chan-wook’s latest satirical black comedy, No Other Choice (2025) , belongs to the latter. The heaviness isn’t just in what is shown on screen, but in what the story mirrors back to us - the silent pressures we carry, often unnoticed, often unnamed, without pause or permission to acknowledge them. At the centre of the story is a man who appears to have done everything “right.” He is a devoted breadwinner, a loving husband, a father, a homeowner in the countryside, and a loyal employee of twenty years. At his core, he defines himself through his skills, his devotion, and the invisible weight of keeping everything together. And then, unexpectedly, he loses his job - a shift that becomes more than career disruption; it mirrors his inner world. What unfolds is not just a search for new employment, but a slow unravelling of self, revealing the immense social pressure, unspoken expectation, and emotional suppression that so many carry silently. When the Inner Voice Gets Louder One scene, in particular, stayed with me. The man attends a group therapy session. He taps his temples repeatedly, reciting affirmations: “ I’m the head of the household. I’m reborn. I’m willing to do anything to feed my family. I'll have a new job within 3 months. I feel great. ” On the surface, this looks like mental fitness - positive self-talk, visualisation, determination. And yet, if you watch closely, something feels misaligned. His body tells a different story. Tension in his jaw. Desperation in his eyes. A tightness that refuses to soften. Park Chan-wook captures this through intimate close-up shots, almost pulling us into the character’s internal world. What we witness is not calm resolve - it is pressure layered upon pressure, willpower stacked on fear. Saboteurs at Work Through the lens of neuroscience-based Positive Intelligence, this moment becomes a clear illustration of saboteur energy quietly taking over. Several inner voices seem to be running the show: The Hyper-Achiever, tying self-worth entirely to success and identity The Controller, believing survival depends on force and relentless effort The Judge, harshly evaluating himself for “failing” The Stickler, demanding perfection and endurance at all costs Although the words he repeats sound positive, they are driven by fear - fear of inadequacy, fear of loss, fear of being unworthy of love if he can no longer provide. And fear, when it dominates for more than a few seconds, always comes at a cost. When Emotions Are Suppressed, Not Processed Any emotion or sensation that lingers in the body without awareness - shame, guilt, panic, anger, despair - begins to erode wellbeing. It narrows perception and limits choice. It impacts performance, decision-making, and relationships. We see this happening in real time. His presence becomes rigid. His choices grow extreme. His inner world contracts. This is what happens when we rely solely on the left brain - the survival-oriented, fear-based part of the mind - to solve deeply human challenges. A Different Way Was Possible Positive Intelligence reminds us that mental fitness isn’t about forcing positivity or overriding emotion. It’s about shifting from fear to awareness, from reactivity to presence. Had he paused - truly paused - and met his experience with curiosity, another path might have opened. Instead of repeating who he must be, he might have asked: What am I afraid of right now? What do I actually need in this moment? What would compassion look like - for myself? By engaging the right brain - the part wired for empathy, creativity, and connection - he could have accessed more choice, not less. And here lies the paradox. There Is Always Another Choice Despite the film’s title, No Other Choice , life almost always offers alternatives - even when they are subtle, internal, and uncomfortable. We may not be able to control circumstances. But we can choose how we meet them: presence over panic; curiosity over self-judgement; alignment over force. The film unsettles us because it mirrors not only personal beliefs but also the invisible weight of cultural systems - the unspoken expectation to perform without pause, endure without question, and measure worth by output and visible success. Across many societies, slowing down is subtly discouraged, vulnerability is read as weakness, and self-care is often considered secondary to duty. And yet, mindfulness reminds us that another way is possible: even in pressure, small shifts of attention can open the door to wiser choices. When we pause, breathe, and truly listen, new choices emerge - not louder, not faster, but wiser. Sometimes, the most radical choice is not to push harder, but to soften… and come home to ourselves. A Gentle Reflection As you sit with this story, you might ask yourself: Where in my own life do I feel there is “no other choice” - and what might become possible if I paused, softened, and listened before pushing forward? A PQ Rep (1–2 minutes) Take a moment to pause. 1. Ground Place your feet on the floor. Gently press your fingertips together and notice the sensation - the temperature, the pressure, the texture. 2. Breathe Take three slow breaths. On each exhale, allow your shoulders and jaw to soften. 3. Observe Notice any tension, emotion, or urgency present right now. Without trying to change it, name it silently: pressure, fear, tightness. 4. Invite Choice Ask yourself gently: What would a wiser, calmer part of me choose in this moment? Stay with whatever arises - even if the answer is simply to pause a little longer. Sometimes, that pause is the choice.