OT Today is a big Korean holiday

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Lanny

Original Season Ticket Holder "Mr. Big Shot"
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Chuseok

My wife is fixing all kinds of Korean food and left flowers on her mother's grave. Her sister and her husband have come over to eat and visit.

If you know any Koreans, they are celebrating today, harvest day.
 
Nice

Happy Chuseok to those who celebrate
 
white guy lecturing the asian guy on asian shit.
What White guy? What Asian guy? Also, does it matter what race a guy is when he makes a comment? How about we stick to commenting on the comment and leave the poster out of it? I think we might even have a rule on that someplace.
 
What White guy? What Asian guy? Also, does it matter what race a guy is when he makes a comment? How about we stick to commenting on the comment and leave the poster out of it? I think we might even have a rule on that someplace.

there's a rule on no personal attacks.
 
my original comment was going to be waaaaaaay more offensive btw, so you should feel lucky i kept it classi
 
I knew a maintenance tech at this apartment complex for a number of years. He was a 65 year old Korean who was a great guy and would so anything for his daughter. The poor fellow passed away from cancer.
 
Koreans are probably the best asians, all things considered. There definitely is a hierarchy, which is why different asians hate each other so much.
 
Chuseok

My wife is fixing all kinds of Korean food and left flowers on her mother's grave. Her sister and her husband have come over to eat and visit.

If you know any Koreans, they are celebrating today, harvest day.

One of these days I will have to visit you during harvest day, buddy!
 
Koreans are probably the best asians, all things considered. There definitely is a hierarchy, which is why different asians hate each other so much.
Chuseok

My wife is fixing all kinds of Korean food and left flowers on her mother's grave. Her sister and her husband have come over to eat and visit.

If you know any Koreans, they are celebrating today, harvest day.
Lanny, I have a daughter in law that is Korean (adopted as a baby) and she is very interested in their customs and even teaching my grandson, which I think is fantastic.
Have you ever read the book "Imperial Cruise"? I just finished, and it blew my mind.
I really hope so day that Peninsula will become one country again someday.
 
I thought that Harvest Day is a brand of bread.
 
I thought that Harvest Day is a brand of bread.
Yeah, it does sound familiar.

In Korea, at least the last time I was there which was about 15 or 20 years ago, bakeries mostly dealt in rice flour treats. I don't think there was too much wheat flour going around. That's always a place where I could get a great cup of coffee and some at least as great conversation. Koreans were always looking for someone who spoke English so they could try out what they had learned.

Now that I think about it, they did have McDonalds which was identical to McDonalds here. So, they were baking wheat flour hamburger buns someplace. They also had some of the best pizza joints I've ever been in. Here's the crazy part. Koreans have alcoholic beverages everywhere and they love to put ground red pepper on and in everything. But at their pizza joints there was no beer and no red pepper to sprinkle on your pizza. Now, that's a real head scratcher I would love to know why.
 
Lanny, I have a daughter in law that is Korean (adopted as a baby) and she is very interested in their customs and even teaching my grandson, which I think is fantastic.
Have you ever read the book "Imperial Cruise"? I just finished, and it blew my mind.
I really hope so day that Peninsula will become one country again someday.
EVERYONE in Korea yearns for reunification.

Here's the Korean alphabet. A great starting place. My Korean teacher in Seattle who served as the translater for the Korean President when he entered at Seattle, used to tell me that the Korean language was considered by linguists to be the most scientific language in the world. I can attest to the fact that it has similarities to German, linguistically and similarities to the deep South culturally. They are also considered to be the Irish of the East.

Here's their alphabet:

http://www.omniglot.com/writing/korean.htm

They are a very polite people and very clean. My wife is a clean freak. She helped me shower today. During their showers they vigorously scrub off old skin.

I once went to a public bath, and they have separate ones for men and women, where they not only have showers but whirlpool tubs to soak in. A young man said something to me in Korean while holding something about the size of a bar of soap, around which was tightly wrapped a wash cloth. He ushered me over to a table and had me lie on my front. He then proceeded to rub me extremely hard getting off probably years of dead skin. I've never felt so clean in my life although my skin was red from the hard work he had done. All this cost me about $10 or $15, I can't recall exactly.

A hair cut was an extremely pleasurable experience. As they're giving you a time consuming and excellent haircut, someone else is shining your shoes, then a hot, wet towel is wrapped around your face and another around your necck. Then, hot shaving cream is applied and first your face is shaved including your forhead and then your neck and the back of your neck is shaved. Meanwhile, a young lady is massaging your feet. As you leave, you are offered either a cigarette or a stick of gum. All this cost somewhere around $10 or $15 . Of course this was about 20 years ago.

I imagine these things cost quite a bit more these days.

Here's a custom: When offered a drink by someone sitting next to you, you must accept. If you drink alcohol, you should empty your cup, refill it and offer the full cup back to your presenter.

When you accept anything or even do a handshake, you hold your left hand under your right wrist as though holding up a loose robe dangling under your wrist. It's a sign that you have what my wife calls a good home education.

There's more than you wanted to know.

TMI?
 
I used to go twice a year, but never got to get out a lot. The alphabet is super-easy for learning a different one, and at least where I've been in (all in the South--Busan, Chinhae, Osan) the people have been very friendly and accommodating.
 
I used to go twice a year, but never got to get out a lot. The alphabet is super-easy for learning a different one, and at least where I've been in (all in the South--Busan, Chinhae, Osan) the people have been very friendly and accommodating.
They love Americans. My wife is from the Taegu, Kyeong ju (sp?) area near camp Walker.

The cutest thing I ever heard was when I passed Korean school children when we were visiting a Buddhist shrine on a mountain top. As we passed group after group of children right when they got behind us I heard this Heh Roe,, heh roe as they practiced their English trying to say hello but not wanting to face me. They were small children. Then there would be giggles.
 
I have a brown belt in Tae Kwon Do
In my school you had to be a brown belt before you could hit with contact. We went white, yellow, purple, brown, black. The only side kick I could do today would be to hit your knee. My great nephew got pretty good at it until he switched to basketball which he is superb at.
 

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