Seonghae Kim
February 9, 2022
limited
Ever
since I moved to South Korea from North Korea, I have felt I am an alien. To the
uninitiated people about Korea, the Korean peninsula has been divided for over
a half-century and is similar to Germany in the past. South Korea is capitalist
and North Korea is ruled by a dictatorship and closed to communists. Due to the
economic crisis, and freedom, many people have been moving to South Korea from
North Korea for decades. There are many undeniable factors that make me
different from others in South Korea: I have a Northern accent, and I do not
know many words that South Korean people generally use. Furthermore, I went to
the South as a refugee, and have been
living in the US. All these factors have affected my sense of who I am and how
I fit into both South Korea and the United States.
I lost my comfort of speaking, while
I was adjusting to the new environment in South Korea. I was often asked where
I was from because I have a local accent. I convinced myself that it’s okay to
be different. In the face of reality, however, it did not work out well because
people often left such a strong impression on me because I was speaking
differently. I worked at several places in South Korea while preparing to apply
for college. I worked at a bar responsible for serving and placing orders. One
day on a night shift, without knowing what I was saying, I unintentionally used
my Northern accent, and for that I was
laughed at by a few young boys. For a moment, I was frozen and chills started
trickling down my back. They continuously asked me many disrespectful questions,
but I had no idea how to deal with the uncomfortable situation. Although my
life was not devoted to prayer, I sincerely whispered to God to get me out of
that place since my boss was watching over me with eagle eyes. A few days later
I was replaced as a result of my accent. The boss did not say anything, yet it
seemed self-explanatory. After that, I have tried harder to adjust to the South
Korean accent and tried to maintain my Northern dialect too because it still holds emotional
sentiment in my heart.
I also completely lost my sense of humor
and self-esteem while living in South Korea. People in the South, unlike in the
North, have used many words that originated from other countries that made me
more nervous when I spoke. As might be expected, the nervousness just changed
my talkative and humorous character. One morning, I took a bus to attend school, and soon I recognized it was the wrong bus. However, I had no guts to ask the
driver where it was because the word “driver” was different from one that I
used in the North. I waited until lunchtime at which the bus usually stopped
riding. Finally, the driver asked me to leave, and I asked him nervously where
I was. He told me indifferently to use my GPS. I just nodded instead of saying yes, but I had no idea what the GPS was. Funny enough, I didn’t know the word for
driver. Neither did I know how to take public transportation or use a phone. As
time has passed, I have overcome these difficulties little by little, but still, I am nervous to speak to a person in a bank or store. Eventually, it feels like
I have become less talkative and less funny.
Last semester in Pop Culture class,
the students were assigned a few times to present something that represents
their culture. It was the first time I shared K-Pop music and famous
celebrities in South Korea. Later I found myself guilty of pretending to be
familiar with Southern culture. However, in lieu of dwelling on that kind of
burden, I wanted to move on. Worst of all, the final project was to present my
cultural identity which made me reconsider my identity. I confessed to the
professor that I had no clue about my identity and she suggested that I present
something about North Korea. Anyway, I did my final project on North Korean
culture, but I have still been struggling to find my identity. Every time I
introduce myself, I have no idea where to begin, or how to make the conclusion
about my identity.
I lost my sense of belonging from having a unique background and accent, and of which I was ashamed. Throughout these times I learned my lesson that as long as I am staying active in my life and ready to be a better person in the present, where I was born and from, and what kind of language I used to speak are less important. It is a universal fact that people are not able to choose their parents, and countries to be born, but they can choose how to live today and make things better than yesterday.

I like the word "ready to be a better person in the present", I really want to be better.
ReplyDeleteAngela it is great,I like it, thank you for share, you are brave I feel admiration for you. The end is the best !
ReplyDeleteYou are so cool and incredibly strong. Thank you for sharing and hopefully I can be as talkative like you and stop pretending things that I'm not.
ReplyDeleteWhat stupid boys at the bar! I liked your last presentation very much in pop culture class since I could learn about North Korean culture from you. I'm also happy that we are still classmates because not only are you so funny also influence me to work hard.
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ReplyDeleteAngela, you are the best. I like your perseverance of making things better than yesterday. I feel when someone speaking Korean with North Korea accent is very handsome and cool, so I like North Korea accent!
DeleteI can teach you if you like it haha
DeleteAngela you have been brave in every aspect of your life. I am glad that you figured out how to work in your identity.
ReplyDeleteI think the braveness is not from my ability, it is from the circumstance. If the circumstances require us to be brave, we would figure things out well.
DeleteAngela I would love to say you are such a stronge person. Also I exprienced this too, that people judge me because of my background. In the past I was feeling sad but then I realized that judgment come from lacking knowledge of that person and this is not my problems but the problems is in people that not educated themselves.
ReplyDeleteThat's so so true.
DeleteHello Songhae, you are brave enough and I love your story. I think you are very optimistic about yourself. You will have a great future. Just BE YOURSELF!!!
ReplyDeleteHello Songhae, you are brave enough and I love your story. I think you are very optimistic about yourself. You will have a great future. Just BE YOURSELF!!!
ReplyDelete