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Do You Know Any Koreans That Didn't Like Your Home Country?
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Dev



Joined: 18 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 9:47 am    Post subject: Do You Know Any Koreans That Didn't Like Your Home Country? Reply with quote

More precisely, do you know any Koreans that immigrated to your country (or another Western country) and moved back to Korea because they didn't like it?

We have a lot of threads on Dave's with foreigners comparing Korea to their own countries (many of them complaining because they're experiencing culture shock), but little on what Koreans think of our countries.

Do you know any Koreans that have moved back? Surely there are some. I'll bet that there are many Koreans that go to the West and wind up disappointed.
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redaxe



Joined: 01 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 10:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

You have to understand that pleasure and enjoyment of one's surroundings are not what motivates Koreans. What motivates them is increasing their childrens' future potential income and status, and they know that education is the way to achieve that. The reason why they emigrate to Western countries is to give their children a better/more prestigious education in English so they will make more money and be more successful when they grow up.

But yes, I work at a Korean company that sends a lot of expats (not immigrants) to western countries, and while overseas they always complain about how terrible the local food is and how they miss Korean food. When they return to Korea they are very happy to once again be able to eat Korean food for every meal.

But they still want to go overseas so their kids can go to international school and learn English. Likewise with the immigrants, a lot of them don't really like living in America or wherever, they're doing it as a sacrifice for their kids.
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laguna



Joined: 27 Jun 2010

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 10:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

redaxe wrote:
You have to understand that pleasure and enjoyment of one's surroundings are not what motivates Koreans. What motivates them is increasing their childrens' future potential income and status, and they know that education is the way to achieve that. The reason why they emigrate to Western countries is to give their children a better/more prestigious education in English so they will make more money and be more successful when they grow up.

But yes, I work at a Korean company that sends a lot of expats (not immigrants) to western countries, and while overseas they always complain about how terrible the local food is and how they miss Korean food. When they return to Korea they are very happy to once again be able to eat Korean food for every meal.

But they still want to go overseas so their kids can go to international school and learn English. Likewise with the immigrants, a lot of them don't really like living in America or wherever, they're doing it as a sacrifice for their kids.


It is apparent when you try to discuss more complicated or groundbreaking ideas with Koreans, like quantum mechanics, they think you are just making the stuff up because they haven't heard about it.

It's the same reason most of their doctors speak English well, all of the research and experience is still with the west. We still take all the risks, we still invent or kickstart all the great ideas.

That being said, nothing kicks more ass than a Korean with an education from a western country, they not only think for themselves, but often think of completely original ideas.
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Newbie



Joined: 07 Feb 2003

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

My Korean wife came to Canada with me 2 years ago. Here are some complaints from her and some of her Korean friends, adults bewtween 30 and 50.

(in no particular order)

Too cold.
Lousy underwear and socks. (?)
Sucks working for Koreans. (bosses screwing them, not following Cdn standards)
Kids are too Western* (cute story to follow)
Long hours at work.
Expensive soju.
Expensive Korean BBQ.
Too many Chinese.
Too many brown people.
Expensive cigarettes.

However, most of them find (living in Toronto) it is still very easy to stay Korean. They can find most any product from back home, lots of Korean churches around, and interenet makes it easy to stay in touch with things back home.

*My wife's boss has an 18 year old son who he felt was becoming too Canadian. In an attempt to remedy this he sent him to Korea for the summer. While there he became fascinated with Korean B-Boys, Korean Hip Hop and other K-pop culture crap. Dad is kicking himself cuz as he put it, "he sent his son to Korea to become more Korean and he ends up becoming more American." I tried not to laugh too hard when he was explaining his frustrations.

I imagine this happens a lot... that kinda disconnect between parents who are still very Korean and their kids who integrate into Western culture.
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jvalmer



Joined: 06 Jun 2003

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I know a lot of Koreans that came pre-80's never intended on staying in the west. But circumstances like marriage (to Korean or non-Korean), job, house and, the big one, kids forced them to stay longer than anticipated. Once you have kids that are half way through elementary, it's really hard to go back to Korea.

Some of the things I've been told:
- If they would have known Korea would develop so fast, they would have left.
- Their families and friends were envious of them, but they didn't have the heart to tell them it wasn't as great as they made it out to be.
- One guy visited Korea a few weeks after that Gwangju mess was over. But nobody outside of that region even knew it happened. That's when he realized how much propaganda he was exposed to when he was in Korea. He decided then he wouldn't come back until Korea fully democratized. Which happened surprisingly fast.
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madoka



Joined: 27 Mar 2008

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Newbie wrote:

I imagine this happens a lot... that kinda disconnect between parents who are still very Korean and their kids who integrate into Western culture.


Whenever someone immigrates to the U.S., at that point time stops for them. For example, if a Korean goes to the U.S. in 1975, his home country is frozen in time in his mind. Therefore, he may still have attitudes that date to 1975, and is often surprised at how liberal and changed his home country is. That's why a lot of Korean immigrants are significantly more conservative than those in Korea.
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redaxe



Joined: 01 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 12:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

madoka wrote:
Newbie wrote:

I imagine this happens a lot... that kinda disconnect between parents who are still very Korean and their kids who integrate into Western culture.


Whenever someone immigrates to the U.S., at that point time stops for them. For example, if a Korean goes to the U.S. in 1975, his home country is frozen in time in his mind. Therefore, he may still have attitudes that date to 1975, and is often surprised at how liberal and changed his home country is. That's why a lot of Korean immigrants are significantly more conservative than those in Korea.


On the flip side, Korean restaurants in America are often better than the restaurants in Korea for the same reason. The ajummas still cook the food the same way they did back in 1975 when they first came to America.

Meanwhile the ajummas in Korea are now loading the food with cheese, corn, mayonnaise, and high-fructose corn syrup.
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Dev



Joined: 18 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 2:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Newbie wrote:
My Korean wife came to Canada with me 2 years ago. Here are some complaints from her and some of her Korean friends, adults bewtween 30 and 50.

(in no particular order)

Too cold.
Lousy underwear and socks. (?)
Sucks working for Koreans. (bosses screwing them, not following Cdn standards)
Kids are too Western* (cute story to follow)
Long hours at work.
Expensive soju.
Expensive Korean BBQ.
Too many Chinese.
Too many brown people.
Expensive cigarettes.

However, most of them find (living in Toronto) it is still very easy to stay Korean. They can find most any product from back home, lots of Korean churches around, and interenet makes it easy to stay in touch with things back home.

*My wife's boss has an 18 year old son who he felt was becoming too Canadian. In an attempt to remedy this he sent him to Korea for the summer. While there he became fascinated with Korean B-Boys, Korean Hip Hop and other K-pop culture crap. Dad is kicking himself cuz as he put it, "he sent his son to Korea to become more Korean and he ends up becoming more American." I tried not to laugh too hard when he was explaining his frustrations.

I imagine this happens a lot... that kinda disconnect between parents who are still very Korean and their kids who integrate into Western culture.


Thanks for your post. What a great story! Easy to imagine. Laughing

BTW, I have a Korean-Canadian friend in Toronto and he remarked that the Korean community is so big there that many of them aren't interested in mingling outside of that community.

I recently chatted with a young Korean woman who was working in a magazine store in Toronto. She said that she liked Toronto and had a lot of Korean friends at her church. She was planning to move back to Korea a month later because of economics. Toronto's cost of living is very high - too high for her to live a comfortable life.

I agree that this city is very expensive. If you don't have a good salary, living there is not fun.
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ticktocktocktick



Joined: 31 Mar 2009

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 3:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I took my lady to Britain for a month in January. She wasn't exactly keen. These were her main complaints over 30 days:

Too cold (it was during that nasty cold snap)
Too hideously expensive (agreed)
Terrible food (yet she still whines I don't appreciate Korean food)
Everything closes at 5.30pm
Anything Korean is unavailable outside London or Manchester (even then, it's a serious hassle)
That I kept telling her to watch her purse


Things she liked:

Primark
Real ale and cider
Chicken and mushroom pot noodle
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eamo



Joined: 08 Mar 2003
Location: Shepherd's Bush, 1964.

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 3:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The Koreans I know who spent more than just a week or two in western countries mostly just talked about the food.....how heavy and oily western food is and how they totally, physically and spiritually, missed Korean food.

I've heard the anecdote about the Korean who returned to the motherland after 10 years in Canada........he described Canada as "boring heaven" and Korea as, "exciting hell".........I think there's a lot in that. Koreans like there to be a lot going on......My wife is so shocked when she visits my home country at just how much people sit around doing not very much.
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chellovek



Joined: 29 Feb 2008

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 3:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

ticktocktocktick wrote:
I took my lady to Britain for a month in January. She wasn't exactly keen. These were her main complaints over 30 days:

Too cold (it was during that nasty cold snap)
Too hideously expensive (agreed)
Terrible food (yet she still whines I don't appreciate Korean food)
Everything closes at 5.30pm
Anything Korean is unavailable outside London or Manchester (even then, it's a serious hassle)
That I kept telling her to watch her purse


Things she liked:

Primark
Real ale and cider
Chicken and mushroom pot noodle


There are Korean things in Manchester? Perhaps I need to give Britain's 4th city another look.
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Slowmotion



Joined: 15 Aug 2009

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 4:04 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Do you guys really use the term 'oily' ? I thought only Koreans used that. I can only remember people using greasy
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PatrickGHBusan



Joined: 24 Jun 2008
Location: Busan (1997-2008) Canada 2008 -

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 4:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

We moved to Canada in 2008 and here is what my wife complains about or mentions...

Winter is long and cold
Lots of over weight people (can't really deny that one sadly)
Misses the open markets around our old place in Busan
Lack of good public transits
Cabs are expensive.
Korean restaurants are sometimes pretty bad (food quality).
People are selfish
Discrimination at work
Air Canada
Trains being late
Shopping is less interesting due to such limited opening hours
Having to be careful with her purse

On the flip side she likes

Food variety
Schools
Daycares
Ethnic mix in the larger cities
Lower levels of pollution
The big lakes for swimming
Variety in the supermarket
Public Healthcare


Overal she is happy in Canada but she obviously misses Korea (heck I often do as well).
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ticktocktocktick



Joined: 31 Mar 2009

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 4:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

chellovek wrote:
ticktocktocktick wrote:
I took my lady to Britain for a month in January. She wasn't exactly keen. These were her main complaints over 30 days:

Too cold (it was during that nasty cold snap)
Too hideously expensive (agreed)
Terrible food (yet she still whines I don't appreciate Korean food)
Everything closes at 5.30pm
Anything Korean is unavailable outside London or Manchester (even then, it's a serious hassle)
That I kept telling her to watch her purse


Things she liked:

Primark
Real ale and cider
Chicken and mushroom pot noodle


There are Korean things in Manchester? Perhaps I need to give Britain's 4th city another look.


There's one tiny Korean market in south Manchester, near the hospital, bus 50 stops outside. There's one restaurant too, near Salford Central stn. A few of the shops in Chinatown carry a small selection of Korean stuff. Not a lot though.
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redaxe



Joined: 01 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2010 4:50 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

PatrickGHBusan wrote:

On the flip side she likes

Food variety
Schools
Daycares
Ethnic mix in the larger cities
Lower levels of pollution
The big lakes for swimming
Variety in the supermarket
Public Healthcare


You're a lucky man, your wife sounds very open-minded for a Korean
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