The monk explains that the spirit is not human or a spirit, but a "computer-like" one. The monk is ashamed of his behavior, and wishes that he were a normal child. He says that he has been given a special fate, and that he is envious of the dalighter. He worries where he is, and asks why he came to the temple. He wonders if the master monk would have known that the woman who came to pray with him was the mother of Noona's father, or that the gramps would have been adorbs. He adds that he will have to stay at the temple for a while, for he will need to become a human.
The monk explains that the spirit is not human or a spirit, but a "computer-like" one. The monk is ashamed of his behavior, and wishes that he were a normal child. He says that he has been given a special fate, and that he is envious of the dalighter. He worries where he is, and asks why he came to the temple. He wonders if the master monk would have known that the woman who came to pray with him was the mother of Noona's father, or that the gramps would have been adorbs. He adds that he will have to stay at the temple for a while, for he will need to become a human.