My Bully: Tries To Corrupt My Mother Yuna Introv _top_
A kind-hearted, perhaps slightly naive mother who wants to believe the best in everyone. The Bully (Leo):
Charismatic, wealthy, and cruel. He realizes the best way to hurt you isn't through physical threats, but by dismantling your sanctuary: your home. Plot Points The "Chance" Encounter:
Leo spots Yuna at her workplace or a local cafe. He puts on his "golden boy" act, offering to help her with groceries or a technical problem. The Infiltration:
Leo starts showing up at the house under the guise of "tutoring" or "checking in" on you, claiming he wants to bridge the gap between you two. The Gaslighting: Leo subtly drops hints to Yuna that
are the aggressor at school, painting himself as the victim trying to be a "bigger person." The Breaking Point:
You come home to find Leo and Yuna laughing over tea, realizing she now trusts your tormentor more than she trusts your warnings. Scene Draft: The Uninvited Guest
The smell of fresh tea hit me the moment I opened the front door, but it didn't bring the usual sense of home. It felt like a warning. my bully tries to corrupt my mother yuna introv
"Is that you, honey?" Yuna’s voice drifted from the kitchen, bright and cheerful. "Come in! We have a guest."
I froze in the hallway. Standing by the kitchen island was Leo. He wasn't wearing his usual sneer; he was wearing a sweater I’d never seen, looking every bit the model student. He was helping my mother arrange flowers in a vase.
"Hey," Leo said, his voice smooth as silk. He gave me a small, pitying smile—the kind that screamed I own this space now.
"I was just telling your mom how much I’ve missed seeing you at the study group."
Yuna beamed, resting a hand on Leo’s arm. "He’s such a polite young man. Why didn't you tell me you had friends like this? Leo was just telling me about the 'misunderstandings' you two have been having. I told him we could all use more communication."
My blood ran cold. Leo looked at me over the rim of his teacup, his eyes cold and mocking while his lips stayed curved in a friendly grin. He wasn't just bullying me at school anymore. He was rewriting my life from the inside out. A kind-hearted, perhaps slightly naive mother who wants
"Don't worry," Leo whispered as Yuna turned her back to reach for the kettle. "I'm going to take real good care of her." Should we focus more on Yuna’s realization that she's being played, or would you like to explore a confrontation scene where you try to expose the bully's lies?
Reading Guide: Where to Find the "Yuna Introv" Arc
If you are searching for this specific narrative, note that "Yuna Introv" is often a fan-generated name for an original character (OC) in the "True Beauty" or "Marry My Husband" fanfiction spheres, or a standalone indie webtoon.
Recommended platforms to search:
- Webtoon Canvas: Search tags #PsychologicalThriller #BullyArc #MotherSon
- Archive of Our Own (AO3): Use the filter "Manipulation" + "Protective Mother"
- Novel Updates Forums: Look for Korean web novels with "Corruption" in the summary (titles like "The Bully Who Stole My Mother" or "Yuna's Second Chance").
Warning: This trope often deals with emotional abuse, neglect, and coercive control. Reader discretion is advised.
Phase 3: The Isolation Maneuver
The bully begins showing up when the protagonist isn't there. They bring gifts to Yuna at work. They offer to help with chores. They create a secret language of inside jokes with the mother. The protagonist tries to warn Yuna, but the bully has already framed the child as "jealous" and "possessive."
Twisted Minds and Broken Trust: Deconstructing "My Bully Tries to Corrupt My Mother Yuna Introv"
Yuna Introv: The Mother as a Final Frontier
Why the specific name "Yuna Introv"? In fan culture, names carry weight. "Yuna" suggests grace, beauty, and often fragility in Eastern naming conventions, while "Introv" hints at "introverted" or "internal." She is not a background character; she is the fortress. Reading Guide: Where to Find the "Yuna Introv"
In the standard narrative, Yuna is depicted as:
- A single mother (overworked, lonely, vulnerable to attention).
- Protective but distracted (she wants to save her child from bullying, but doesn't see the trap).
- Possessing a hidden past (perhaps she was popular or wild in her youth, giving the bully a leverage point).
The bully targets Yuna because they realize that breaking the mother is a victory far greater than breaking the child. If the bully can make Yuna doubt her child, ignore the abuse, or worse—side with the bully—the protagonist loses their last safe harbor.
What parents should watch for and do
- Listen before deciding: Hear the child’s side and verify claims independently.
- Avoid quick judgments based on charm: Bullies can be persuasive—look for patterns rather than one-off impressions.
- Ask for evidence: Encourage calm review of messages, witnesses, and incidents.
- Model healthy skepticism: Teach children how to spot manipulation and how to set boundaries.
- Take action proportionally: Use school resources, mediation, or legal measures as required.
4. Dialogue Snippets (Yuna vs. Protagonist)
Bully to Yuna (sweetly, privately):
“I know you work so hard, Mrs. IntroV. It must hurt when your own child lies to you. I’d never lie to you.”
Protagonist to Yuna (desperate):
“He’s the one who broke my arm last year! Why do you believe him over me?”
Yuna (frustrated, manipulated):
“Because he actually talks to me. You just hide in your room and snap at every question. What am I supposed to think?”
What “corrupting a parent” can mean
- Sowing distrust: Spreading lies about the parent’s character or decisions to make the child doubt them.
- Manipulation through charm: Acting overly friendly toward the parent to win favor and isolate the child.
- Financial or legal pressure: Trying to involve the parent in risky schemes or false complaints.
- Emotional sabotage: Encouraging the parent to criticize or punish the child unfairly.
- Gaslighting and coercion: Convincing the parent their perspective is wrong and the bully’s version is truer.
Why the Mother? The Psychology of the Target
In storytelling, the mother is a universal symbol of safety. By making the mother the target of the corruption, the author is effectively pulling the rug out from under the reader.
When a bully steals a protagonist's lunch money, it’s a conflict. When a bully systematically destroys the protagonist's mother's sense of reality, isolates her, and turns her into an antagonist or a victim, it becomes a tragedy. It triggers a primal fear: the fear of losing the one person who is supposed to be on your side unconditionally.