Bad Thinking Diary -

One of the reasons Bad Thinking Diary resonates so deeply with its audience is its clinical accuracy regarding anxiety and attachment styles. The protagonist’s behavior mirrors that of someone with an anxious-preoccupied attachment:

The narrative cleverly uses the visual medium of the webtoon to differentiate between reality and perception. Panels drawn from the diary are often darker, more cramped, and overly dramatic, while the "real" scenes are nuanced and ambiguous. This visual cue teaches the reader to question the narrator’s voice—a rare and sophisticated technique in romance fiction.

While the Bad Thinking Diary is powerful, it is not meant to be read on a bad day.

Best times to write:

Do NOT write:

Given the lack of specifics, let's hypothetically review "Bad Thinking Diary" as if it were a manga that explores themes of mental health, personal struggles, and the facade people often keep.

Review: "Bad Thinking Diary" presents a compelling exploration of the human psyche, delving into the darker aspects of thought patterns and emotional struggles. The narrative skillfully weaves the protagonist's internal conflicts with their external life, offering a relatable and sometimes uncomfortable look into the mind of someone battling their own thoughts.

The artwork, vibrant yet jarring at times, complements the mood of each scene, effectively conveying the turmoil and complexity of the protagonist's emotions. Character development, particularly of the protagonist, is well-executed, showing gradual growth and a complex interplay of vulnerability and resilience.

This manga isn't just about bad thinking; it's a nuanced exploration of how such thoughts intersect with our lives, relationships, and perceptions of self. While not always an easy read, "Bad Thinking Diary" offers valuable insights and could serve as a conversation starter on mental health and the importance of seeking help. Bad Thinking Diary

Rating: [Insert Rating]

Recommendation: For fans of psychological explorations, character-driven stories, and those interested in mental health narratives.

Since Bad Thinking Diary is a popular yuri manhwa known for its intense drama, stunning art, and complicated relationship between Minji and Yuna, your post should lean into those themes.

Depending on where you are posting (Instagram, Twitter/X, or a community like Reddit), here are three draft options:

Option 1: The "Visual Appreciation" Post (Best for Instagram/X) Focus: Highlighting the art and character designs.

Caption: Can we just talk about the art in Bad Thinking Diary for a second? 🎨✨ Whether you’re Team Yuna or just here for the drama, you can’t deny how gorgeous every panel is. Key Points:

The "Visuals vs. Stress" struggle (the art is 10/10, but the miscommunication is 100/10). Tagging the creator/artist @rangrarii.

Hashtags: #BadThinkingDiary #BTD #YuriManhwa #MinjiYuna #Rangrarii One of the reasons Bad Thinking Diary resonates

Option 2: The "Guilty Pleasure" Review (Best for Reddit/TikTok) Focus: Discussing the "toxic" but addictive plot.

Caption: Just finished Bad Thinking Diary and I have... thoughts. 📓 It’s definitely a "junk food" read—super toxic and full of misunderstandings, but I couldn't put it down. Prompts for Discussion:

Did anyone else find Hye-ra to be the perfect "chaos" villain?

How did you feel about the ending? Was it too abrupt or just right?

Is the miscommunication trope frustrating or part of the charm?

Option 3: Character-Focused / Cosplay Draft (Best for Facebook/TikTok)

Focus: Roleplaying or celebrating specific characters like Minji or Hyera.

On my way to manipulate Minji so I can make Kang Yuna cry. [ Hyera The narrative cleverly uses the visual medium of

Title: Bad Thinking Diary

Premise: Maya has always been the "good girl"—reliable, positive, and the emotional anchor for everyone around her. But underneath the polished veneer, she is exhausted by the pressure to always look on the bright side. On a particularly bad day, she buys a cheap, leather-bound notebook with a singular rule: she is only allowed to write in it when she is thinking "bad thoughts." It starts as a harmless vent, but soon, the diary becomes a confessional for the darker, pettier, and more dangerous parts of her psyche—parts she didn't know she had.

Genre: Psychological Thriller / Drama


Part I: The Vent Maya starts the diary after a terrible week. Simon steals her design for a community center, and Elena ruins Maya’s rare Friday night off by bringing home a date who mocks Maya’s apartment. Maya writes her first entry. It’s petty. “I wish Elena would just choke on her own self-absorption. I hope Simon’s building falls down (without anyone in it, maybe).” It feels good. She sleeps better than she has in years. The diary becomes an addiction. Every time she swallows a rude comment or forces a smile, she rushes home to transcribe the ugly truth. She begins to feel lighter, sharper, and more confident. She thinks she has found a healthy outlet.

Part II: The Manifestation The "coincidences" begin. Maya writes: “I wish Simon would just slip and fall off his pedestal.” The next day, Simon misses a crucial meeting because he slipped in the gym and broke his ankle. Maya writes: “Elena doesn’t deserve that promotion. She’s lazy. I wish they’d see her for what she really is.” Two days later, an email leak exposes Elena’s time fraud at work, leading to her firing. Maya is unsettled. She tries to tell herself it’s just luck. But the power is intoxicating. For the first time, her life is running smoothly. Her obstacles are removing themselves.

Part III: The Escalation With Elena unemployed and depressed, she becomes clingy, leaning on Maya harder than ever. Maya feels trapped again. The "good girl" instinct wants to help, but the "diary brain" wants her gone. Simon returns to work early, bitter and vindictive. He targets Maya for a harsh performance review. Maya writes a new entry, fueled by wine and rage: “I hate them. I hate how they drain me. I wish they would just disappear. I wish they were gone forever.”

Part IV: The Twist The next morning, both Elena and Simon are missing. Police arrive at Maya’s work and home. They are asking questions. Maya is terrified—not just of the situation, but because she realizes she might be responsible. She rushes to burn the diary. But when she opens the book to tear out the pages, she finds new handwriting that isn't hers. The entries detail a physical attack on Simon and Elena. The handwriting is messy, erratic. Maya realizes she has been sleepwalking. Or rather, the diary has been writing itself through her. The "bad thoughts" weren't manifesting magically; they were commanding her subconscious body to act. She wasn't releasing the anger; she was training a attack dog inside her own mind.

Part V: The Climax The police close in. Maya finds evidence in her own closet—the "disappearance" was orchestrated by her own hands during a blackout state. She has trapped Elena in the basement storage unit and sabotaged Simon’s car. She is faced with a choice: Call the police and turn herself in, saving her friends but destroying her life... or write one final entry to "fix" it.

Epilogue: Maya sits in an interrogation room. She looks calm, polished—the "good girl" again. She tells the police she has no idea where Elena is. She claims she was home all night. The detective leaves, frustrated. Maya asks for a notepad to write down her statement. She clicks the pen. Her inner monologue is silent. She doesn't need the diary anymore. She is the diary now.


Describe the moment that sparked the bad thinking. Be factual, not emotional.