I lived in South Korea from 2008 to 2013. After five years of life in Korea (and almost five years away from Korea), the country still has a special place in my heart. It’s where I got my start as a blogger. It’s where I caught the travel bug that I still have today. It’s where I met my now-wife, and where we traveled during weekend-long dates while getting to know each other.
From 2009 to 2012 I wrote several ‘You Know Korea Is Your Home When…’ types of posts — similar to the classic ‘You might be a redneck if…’ joke. It doesn’t really fit the Worthy Go style any more, but they were too funny to delete. I’ve decided to move them to a single post and organize them by category for the sake of posterity.
Table of Contents
You Know Korea Is Your Home When…
Alcohol
- You chase the guys in suits away to sit in the plastic chairs outside of convenience stores.
- Watching drunk ajosshis stumble down the street is a form of entertainment.
- If you no longer groan when climbing the stairs to your favorite 3rd floor bar.
- If you love the watery eyes of flushed look when Koreans drink.
- Korean beer starts tasting good.
- The wine selection at E-mart looks like a treasure trove of possibilities after awhile.
- While out with friends, you notice the sun coming up – then follow them when they go for breakfast.
- When you drink beer while walking on the street (BONUS POINTS: while dressed in the same clothes you taught in)
- Cass has become your staple beer.
- You end up at a Nigerian bar with two Iranians and a Filipino at 6am.
Eating / drinking / food
- You’re no longer tempted to reach into the fish tanks outside of restaurants and grab one.
- You can name more than 3 brands of ramen.
- You’ve memorized how much your favorite drink and snack cost at the convenience store. [Author’s note: 2,350 won = 500ml Coke and that small box of stacked chips…]
- American businesses around you (Starbucks, McDonalds, Burger King) stop surprising you.
- If you happily eat soup from a shared bowl.
- If you’ve figured out how to eat cake with chopsticks.
- You stop picking off corn or sweet potato on a pizza.
- Your grande Caramel Macchiato cost more than your average Korean lunch.
- You’ve mastered the art of eating a cake with chopsticks.
- You eat noodles with a 70-year-old woman and twigs found in the forest.
- The kimchi you made is preferred to your Korean friend’s mom’s kimchi.
- When the staff at your favorite restaurant know your order without your even saying it.
- You go to a Western restaurant and ask ‘where are the side dishes?’
- You argue with a restaurant’s staff over why they can’t serve you something – in Korean.
- Pigs promoting pork products no longer seems unusual.
- You prefer the 300 won coffee from a machine to the 4,000 won cup from Starbucks.
- When you finish your kimchi and ask for more.
- You’re better at cutting food with scissors than a knife.
- If you can’t remember life before kimchi.
- If you take pictures of your food before you eat.
- When you crave Korean food but need someone to go with you
- You think more about the banchan (side dishes) or service than the main course
Korean language
- When you accept Konglish and stop trying to fix it.
- You can type in hangeul better than English.
- You understand Konglish better than English.
- Hearing any language other than Korean or English almost shocks you.
- Your English has actually gotten worse while in Korea.
- You accidentally use more than two Korean words while talking with friends back home.
- You can transliterate an English word to Korean without a second thought.
- You use more Korean curse words than English ones.
- You see a product with no Korean on it and you do a double-take.
- You create your own Korean slang.
- People stop complimenting you on how well you read hangeul.
- You’ve caught yourself about to say something in Konglish
Koreans
- When Korean women stop looking anorexic.
- Seeing a woman wearing flat shoes almost looks weird
- You’ve ever thought about marrying a Korean just to get the F-2 visa.
- You’re no longer surprised that Koreans can dance the Swing, Lindy Hop, Jitterbug, or Argentine Tango.
- You become oblivious to Korean staring at you
- Your shoes get slipped off faster than the Koreans you’re going out to eat with.
- When your knowledge of Korean history makes a Korean gasp in amazement.
- You actually begin to get along with the ajummas around you.
- You see a Korean woman with B-cups and think ‘My God those are huge!’
- You win an argument with an ajosshi.
- You say ‘my friend’ instead of ‘my Korean friend’.
- You’ve fought with an ajumma for cardboard boxes.
- Your gadgets / technology make a Korean feel inadequate.
- When women in their twenties no longer look like teenagers.
- A Korean ever says “you use chopsticks better than I do!”
- A Korean tells a joke (in Korean) and you get it.
- You’ve ever found yourself running to work – and you’re not alone.
- Women hiking in heels no longer seems dangerous
- People spitting on the streets is something you’ve gotten used to
Life in Korea
- When you instinctively know which can is for trash and which is for recycled.
- When you don’t move for the car but you move for the motorcycle.
- When you know the choreography to a K-pop song.
- You’re no longer surprised by the TV’s in vending machines, buses, or subways.
- When a holiday in your home country passes and you barely even notice.
- You leave Korea and actually miss K-pop
- If you’ve ever had more than one ‘dangly’ thing on your cell phone.
- Can instinctively find the English language section in any bookstore.
- You take bathrooms in stairwells for granted.
- If you play with Korean kids outside the classroom without a second thought.
- You miss the freedom and sensation of driving, but wouldn’t dare to drive in Korea.
- If you can name three Korean newspapers in English – without the word ‘Korea’ in it.
- See someone welding or cutting metal on the sidewalk barely merits a second glance.
- You become immune to the ajumma stare.
- You advocate the use of ‘same same’ to your friends back home.
- Your conversation with a local is interrupted by a lost tourist.
- You instinctively start taking discounts into account when using a credit card.
- You have more gyopo and Korean friends than non-Korean friends.
- The guy sweeping the floor at E-mart has an smartphone.
- You’re oblivious to the ‘no smoking’ sign right next to the ashtray in the bathroom.
- A ‘grand opening’ involves more flowers than four weddings and a funeral combined.
- The ‘homeless’ person sitting on the stairs in the subway has a smartphone and a brand-name pair of shoes.
- Not knowing your blood type is considered unusual.
- You can hum all six or seven standard Korean cell phone ringtones.
- Almost every appliance or electronic device in your apartment plays a melody.
- You find it almost impossible to walk a straight line unless you’re following the yellow footpath.
- You consciously avoid using the red marker for anything other than negative numbers.
- You wear a short skirt out in the cold, then put on your significant other’s jacket.
- Your eyes light up whenever you see a new product from your home country.
- Someone asks you where you’re from and you say somewhere in Korea.
- You walk around the naked part of the jimjilbang with total confidence.
- You know how to make kimchi without needing written directions.
- You use the sound of construction at 8am as your alarm clock.
- You enjoy the smell of kimchi wafting from your downstairs neighbors.
- You see a group of foreigners and conclude they look fat.
- You think seeing teenage girls in school skirts at 10pm is normal.
- If you’ve ever played ‘chicken’ with a motorcycle on the sidewalk.
- If one of your passwords is a Korean word or uses Korean letters.
The subway
- You can actually make a call while on the subway, in the subway station, in the elevator, or while on water.
- When kids walking or riding the subway by themselves no longer worries you.
- Someone tells you a subway name, and you look it up in hangeul.
- You naturally wake up right before your subway station.
- You have zero moral guilt about hopping the turnstile to change directions.
- You can tune out any subway seller.
- You know the location of every trash can at the subway station.
- You know a two-transfer trip across town will take exactly 47 minutes.
- If you can make a two-transfer subway trip without ever looking at the map
- If you’ve ever offered a Korean directions
- When you jostle for a subway seat with the best of them
- When you actually understand the entire subway or bus announcement
Teaching
- If you own more English / ESL / educational books than your school.
- Jumping in and getting started at a new school is preferable to sitting through a long training course.
- You accept the fact that seven-year-olds often have nicer cell phones than you do.
- Taking a sick day means you’re giving birth or you were run over by a car.
- You’ve learned more about the English language while teaching it than you ever remember learning in school.
- You unconsciously correct the English of complete strangers.
- You keep a toothbrush in your desk at school.
Traveling
- All the palaces look alike.
- Going to Itaewon is a culture shock.
- When you look both ways before crossing the sidewalk.
- You find a place in Korea that doesn’t have hand phone coverage.
- You’re able to stay balanced on the bus, despite holding two bags and not holding the pole or handle
- The event you went to last weekend was one your Korean friend had never heard of.
Other
- When pink isn’t just for girls anymore.
- When toilet paper isn’t just used in the bathroom.
- When you have mastered the Korean squat.
- If you prefer the Korean squat toilet to the Western-style toilet.
- If, on second thought, you decide to type in English instead of hangeul.
- Your camera has a foot-long lens.
- The TV on your phone goes out and you’re outraged.
- You think you look good wearing a shiny tie.
- If you’ve figured out how to watch TV on your cell phone.
- You stop and realize how fast ‘normal English speaking speed’ really is.
- When you think it’s fashionably acceptable to wear a shiny tie with a shiny suit.
- You move home and begin to miss the ‘four distinct seasons’ Korea used to offer you.
- It takes more than a minute to think of something you miss from home.
- It’s normal to see kids walking on the streets unaccompanied after 10pm on a school night.
- You hit your legs or hips to loosen them up.
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via One Weird Globe – bizarre destinations and life as an expat.
Nice post, there are really weird places around the globe and some are still unknown, among the known there are adventure places for trekking