The way South Korean children are raised is f*cked up

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It is not a good time to be a child in South Korea.
Here's the video I clipped: • 할 말은 한다. 가식 1도 없는 솔직한 ...
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  • @PaulYuNow
    @PaulYuNow28 күн бұрын

    South Korea is not the only country like this. Whether or not you grew up in this kind of environment, I'd like to hear your take on this.

  • @johnchua812

    @johnchua812

    22 күн бұрын

    Chinese culture is very similar.

  • @jayjasperjp

    @jayjasperjp

    22 күн бұрын

    I grew up in Puerto Rico and it was very similar

  • @Pra-dt3sy

    @Pra-dt3sy

    21 күн бұрын

    I mean india is same as well.....competing in population of 1.2 billion people is no joke.....most of the high end jobs requires kids to go through very competitive exams with only successes rates of less than 1%.... and societal pressure is immense

  • @sleefy2343

    @sleefy2343

    21 күн бұрын

    @@johnchua812yeah majority don’t even mind because working hard = success Just take a look at chinas space station so many experts.

  • @johnchua812

    @johnchua812

    21 күн бұрын

    @@sleefy2343 Yeah, true, but lets not overlook the mental and physical toll of this kind of academic culture, let alone suicides.

  • @glassycreek1991
    @glassycreek199114 күн бұрын

    "They don't die" -Statistics says otherwise

  • @emeraldspark8794

    @emeraldspark8794

    6 күн бұрын

    They don't die immediately

  • @todoroki3781

    @todoroki3781

    6 күн бұрын

    Omds

  • @joseurbanos.domingo6344

    @joseurbanos.domingo6344

    6 күн бұрын

    ​@@emeraldspark8794 they do suffer instantly 😬

  • @Ggggg1gggg

    @Ggggg1gggg

    5 күн бұрын

    Fr like why do y’all have the highest suicide rate💀

  • @GDEevee

    @GDEevee

    5 күн бұрын

    Agreed

  • @RylandMalcolm-nl2vn
    @RylandMalcolm-nl2vn8 күн бұрын

    >I want my son to be 6ft average Korean mans height is 5.7 >I want him to be sociable activities other than studying is forbidden >I want him to be confident environment of constantly being compered to unrealistic standards >I want them to find a partner While sending them into a notoriously bad work life balanced industry

  • @sayantanmazumdar3

    @sayantanmazumdar3

    7 күн бұрын

    These moms are psychotic!

  • @noneedtoknow2731

    @noneedtoknow2731

    7 күн бұрын

    🥰🥰🥰

  • @FracturedGrinningMan

    @FracturedGrinningMan

    7 күн бұрын

    I wonder, what are they studying?

  • @kellykusumoto8717

    @kellykusumoto8717

    7 күн бұрын

    Other than the height thing (cause im a girl) this is basically my childhood

  • @MissBarbieKush

    @MissBarbieKush

    7 күн бұрын

    I heard Koreans literally inject their kids with growth hormones to make them tall...and the reason why some koreans are so obsessed with "wealth" is because their country was in poverty due to the war and shit LOOL ...nobody wants to go back eating shit from the ground. Hence, when they make it a little it becomes a head in the ass attitude 😂

  • @bevbevbev_
    @bevbevbev_17 күн бұрын

    study focused KINDERGARTEN??? EXCUSE ME???

  • @laeticialana

    @laeticialana

    10 күн бұрын

    I feel so bad for the kid who went there. I only got my first burnout when I was in 6th grade yet that 5-year-old was calling his own bedroom a prison.

  • @Charles-sg9zu

    @Charles-sg9zu

    9 күн бұрын

    Welcome to Northeast Asia

  • @laeticialana

    @laeticialana

    8 күн бұрын

    @@Charles-sg9zu yep

  • @unfreezedfreezer9455

    @unfreezedfreezer9455

    8 күн бұрын

    Very common in Asia, there are lots of them in southeast Asia too except they'll force you to memorize a few religious scripture in addition to the already heavy demands

  • @user-js5mn8zs6n

    @user-js5mn8zs6n

    7 күн бұрын

    Atleast India is better in the matter. Maybe mainland India is a bit harsh, but Northeast India is heaven.​@@unfreezedfreezer9455

  • @mondieu9669
    @mondieu966925 күн бұрын

    So essentially these children aren't getting time to be... children.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    25 күн бұрын

    Exactly. These poor children are robbed of their childhood!!

  • @berrymint6384

    @berrymint6384

    5 күн бұрын

    to be alive you mean because adult should mean EVEN BETTER not a worse life adults does not have any less basic needs than children

  • @damsen978

    @damsen978

    5 күн бұрын

    @@berrymint6384 ???????????????

  • @AJTheGreat2010

    @AJTheGreat2010

    3 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow That’s very messed up. How do them parents now know they are robbing them of a Childhood?

  • @leo0o736

    @leo0o736

    3 күн бұрын

    ​@@damsen978They mean that adults also need time for distraction and relaxation

  • @mannamedman
    @mannamedman26 күн бұрын

    This is so disturbing. The way they are treating these tactics as quirky and funny is so sick.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    26 күн бұрын

    Exactly!! I was feeling sick watching them laugh about these twisted methods of theirs

  • @richardguttierez9038

    @richardguttierez9038

    21 күн бұрын

    ⁠@@PaulYuNowYeah that’s why people are on a me first attitude, a lot of twisted thinking nowadays. You’re probably an American as well, and see how great this country’s future generation is. Keep this up and you’ll be included in the part of America’s downfall. Before you look at and worry about how Koreans raise their kids or how other countries do, look at yours first bruh. There’s a lot more issues going on here. The obvious wrong things are accepted and how did this started? With no discipline and it’s about me, my feelings are hurt mentality, that people like you allowed, you probably haven’t been in Korea or lived there, but you act like this must be put to an end. Before doing that help put an end first here. Last I checked people around the world have this negativity about Americans the negative image of this country . Funny how concerned you are about the horrible up bringing Korean parents do with their children, but you don’t address or have no concern about how most parents raise their children here nowadays, plus how much negative influence most schools have on your child.

  • @arizonagirl6474

    @arizonagirl6474

    18 күн бұрын

    Why do you think the suicide rate amongst young people is so high? That is why. They also have an obsession with aging and being stick thin. I would never want to live there. Craziness.

  • @jinlee2617

    @jinlee2617

    12 күн бұрын

    So you wanna have your grow up to embrace LGBTQ, BLM and do Onlyfans to pay rent?

  • @arielslack7015

    @arielslack7015

    9 күн бұрын

    I say this once, and I say this again when you’re when you have been part of a system that encourages this, you don’t think anything is wrong with it until somebody from outside the system pointed out to you in the brainwashing over there is so deep that’s ridiculous

  • @cooliipie
    @cooliipie21 күн бұрын

    That's not raising a child. That's literally starving them from a normal life. No wonder their society has fallen

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    21 күн бұрын

    Indeed that is starving them from their childhood. I wonder how the kids will be as adults.

  • @cooliipie

    @cooliipie

    21 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow We're already seeing it. Worst birthrate, no social skills, highest rate of su*cide, etc etc

  • @thecarpediem17

    @thecarpediem17

    16 күн бұрын

    Declining human birth rate and making humans as a working machine.

  • @wendi2607

    @wendi2607

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@PaulYuNowyou know the rumor where korean men is really bad on women? Looks like this is one of the major reason, highly stressful environment make people cope aggressively. And the say that korean man/woman has obsessive type kind of relationship, now i understand why. This is the root of it

  • @jinlee2617

    @jinlee2617

    12 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂 Bro, they are one of the advanced nation in the world. They are free of nonsense like LGBTQ, BLM and snowflake Gen Z who barks of nonsense like depression and anxiety. And plus men there do 2 year mandatory military service. This is how you create real men and women in society.

  • @dewdrop6404
    @dewdrop640421 күн бұрын

    Bruh they’re literally bragging and laughing about child abuse… That thing with removing their doors and grooming them into thinking it’s ok at a young age is 100% abusive and so disgusting. These poor children will grow up not understanding boundaries. And having your 5 year old literally get depressed to the point of saying “thank you for saving me”…

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    18 күн бұрын

    Agreed.

  • @everythingisfine9988

    @everythingisfine9988

    16 күн бұрын

    Culture with the longest protracted history of slavery. Only ending in the 1950s 1,500 years of it. That's a lot of cultural baggage that needs to be unwound

  • @laeticialana

    @laeticialana

    10 күн бұрын

    I feel so bad for that little boy. I only got my first burnout when I was in 6th grade.

  • @aphroditesaphrodisiac3272

    @aphroditesaphrodisiac3272

    8 күн бұрын

    4 year old (koreans add 1 year because they count time spent in womb)

  • @benjaminhenderson4786

    @benjaminhenderson4786

    8 күн бұрын

    lol “abuse”

  • @elizabeth3230
    @elizabeth323023 күн бұрын

    What’s surprising is that it seems that young Korean people are obsessed with expensive labels while complaining about their inability to afford buying a house and getting married.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    23 күн бұрын

    Lol their priorities are backwards

  • @tracybannerman5666

    @tracybannerman5666

    22 күн бұрын

    Tell me about it, so materialistic yet complain about childcare cost

  • @MrAntinexus

    @MrAntinexus

    18 күн бұрын

    And they dare to say someone else doesn't have money while they spent everything on Rolex

  • @arizonagirl6474

    @arizonagirl6474

    18 күн бұрын

    ​@@tracybannerman5666 This is why Koreans aren't reproducing. They want luxurious items and don't want to have to deal with children.

  • @wanr5701

    @wanr5701

    17 күн бұрын

    And have the audacity to judge those that didn't wear brand names. Care more about showing off than eating well.

  • @ultrapro8937
    @ultrapro89378 күн бұрын

    "I want my child to be confident." *proceeds to make her children extremely anxious and scared "in the name of making them confident."*

  • @the-je6zn

    @the-je6zn

    Күн бұрын

    ikr

  • @spikey0245
    @spikey024519 күн бұрын

    One of the things that I hate about korean reality talk shows, is that they act comedic about serious topics. Like they just refuse to be negative, as if they are scared that it will make the audience go away or smth.

  • @schurlbirkenbach1995

    @schurlbirkenbach1995

    11 күн бұрын

    But it's better to speak about negative things in your society in reality shows, than to ignore or even ban any discussion about them.

  • @degilz7629

    @degilz7629

    7 күн бұрын

    @@schurlbirkenbach1995I agree, even without actually living in South Korea, I already know about how toxic the culture can get from videos, movies, tv series (some of which are released by South Koreans), and travelling there. It’s a good thing to raise awareness about it, even if they aren’t treating it seriously enough, it is a step in the right direction, cause the info online is international, and if South Koreans refuse to acknowledge it themselves, having more people talk about it may make them change their minds, especially hearing ppl who grew up in South Korea but moved to a country with a vastly healthier culture

  • @Evil_Beauty

    @Evil_Beauty

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@schurlbirkenbach1995 KZread's 'shadowbanning'/censorship/'free speech' control says, hi!

  • @L16htW4rr10r

    @L16htW4rr10r

    5 күн бұрын

    Same with Japan tv show

  • @mstrblik4741

    @mstrblik4741

    5 күн бұрын

    @@schurlbirkenbach1995 its how they speak is the problem.

  • @FiniteMC
    @FiniteMC7 күн бұрын

    I’m a 16 year old South Korean. When I was in 6th Grade, I was going to a school in Daechi-Dong and Hagwons. Life was terrible. Everyone was so on edge, and if anyone was particularly good at something, they would be ripped to shreds. If anyone was nice, they would be called calculating and deceiving. Then one day, my elementary school teacher told me that doing this would kill my creativity. My parents ended up pulling me out and sending me to an international school. Looking back, I want to cry and say thank you. I want to thank my parents for not doing this to me.

  • @user-qw9lo4qv4c

    @user-qw9lo4qv4c

    6 күн бұрын

    Shout out to your elementary school teacher and your parents. Their good deeds have been spread. Thank you for telling this. Wish you a good life

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    6 күн бұрын

    Wow dude it sounds like you escaped a toxic environment. Thanks for sharing. Glad to hear about your teacher and parents. All the best

  • @user-ey5xw2nx9s

    @user-ey5xw2nx9s

    5 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @equanimity1635

    @equanimity1635

    4 күн бұрын

    W parents. #notliekotherparents fr

  • @mahiMuncher

    @mahiMuncher

    4 күн бұрын

    I'm glad your parents pulled you out, who would've known what could've happened if you were still at that school! I hope you're doing great man 👍

  • @victorperrin7295
    @victorperrin729525 күн бұрын

    That's a very toxic environment to grow up in. I feel sorry for those kids.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    25 күн бұрын

    Yeah I feel sorry for them too. Poor kids...

  • @user-ey5xw2nx9s

    @user-ey5xw2nx9s

    5 күн бұрын

    Relatable. It's really fucked up

  • @junjae.
    @junjae.23 күн бұрын

    Did those moms also have to go through the same process of having no childhood and only studying/working? It's infuriating when parents try to compensate for their own faiIures by forcing their children to go through fire and brimstone.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    23 күн бұрын

    Since this culture is getting worse and worse I imagine it wasn't as bad when the parents were growing up. Yes, it seems like they want to have their dreams realized through their kids, not fair to the kids.

  • @seagul.7

    @seagul.7

    11 күн бұрын

    My Korean mom had to do the same process, she did many activities when she was younger and studied hard. But she wanted me to have a different life, although I still have to do extracurricular activities but at least I don't have to study as much 😅. I think this only happens for asian americans though.

  • @lilarrin1220

    @lilarrin1220

    8 күн бұрын

    my mom went to uni while taking care of her younger siblings, and my dad had to study super hard to maintain his scholarship since his family was dirt poor. I suspect a lot of the superficial, materialistic view of success in korean culture is the result of them modernizing too quickly - many of them still remember the rural phase they grew up in and are subconsciously scared that if they and their children don't work themselves to death, they'll return to the pre-modern level of poverty.

  • @aphroditesaphrodisiac3272

    @aphroditesaphrodisiac3272

    8 күн бұрын

    Idoubt they experienced the same thing. My mom was very similar to them but slightly less extreme, and while she would never admit to having lived an easier life than me, I know from her conversations with her siblings and relatives that while we are more comfortable from a technological standpoint, my mom had much more freedom, was not forced to do well in school, and played a lot.

  • @gilbertsshorts

    @gilbertsshorts

    8 күн бұрын

    Yup similar processes when they were children, there mindset is "I had it worse and I endured it, so that means you can too". And with increasing societal standards, it only gets worse...

  • @1040baa
    @1040baa19 күн бұрын

    This brings to mind the murder of a young korean woman by her bf, a medical school student who scored #1 on the national college entrance exams. Also brings to mind the time I saw several middle school boys terrorizing a stray cat, barking at it, yelling at it, chasing it under a car. They are all products of parents who completely neglect to teach their kids how to be humans, and only care about their grades.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    19 күн бұрын

    Jesus. That's terrifying man. Fucked up.

  • @wanr5701

    @wanr5701

    6 күн бұрын

    "Raise the kids to be human, not rich" is not in their dictionary, it seems.

  • @todoroki3781

    @todoroki3781

    6 күн бұрын

    Would also explain the severe bullying cases in South Korea. Children become a product of their environment. If their parents give them little empathy it affects them too

  • @marcey4207

    @marcey4207

    5 күн бұрын

    im so glad my neighborhood is full of cats and cat lovers my sister even has a deer ( i am being so serious it lives near our house and it was abandoned it just clung to my sisters smell and we feed it and, it stays away from the city) because this kind of treatment i think id actually go to jail or something man, like animal abuse, the elderly babies it doesn't sit right in my head and id lose my mind seeing it with my own eyes. it's sad nobody is teaching them the right things, priorities are elsewhere (grades and appearance?)

  • @thiccthirty4888

    @thiccthirty4888

    4 күн бұрын

    I've seen the same where I live, but other than korea my country doesnt care about education that much, I believe its less about how the kids are raised and more due to the violent nature of males

  • @roberttoo7783
    @roberttoo77838 күн бұрын

    the really managed to create 2 dystopias in one peninsula

  • @TatraTea-ep9be

    @TatraTea-ep9be

    7 күн бұрын

    North Korea: Starve to death South Korea: *Get so mentally and physically exhausted that you end up killing yourself*

  • @Im-not-alone-Im-full-of-myself

    @Im-not-alone-Im-full-of-myself

    6 күн бұрын

    @@TatraTea-ep9be yeah, both sucks it's better not to be born than to be born in those countries

  • @rezeno5665

    @rezeno5665

    5 күн бұрын

    One is a Orwellian 1984 dystopia, the other is a Corporate Cyberpunk dystopia.

  • @TatraTea-ep9be

    @TatraTea-ep9be

    5 күн бұрын

    It really concerns how the parents are talking about *basic privacy and mental wellbeing of their children* in such a lackadaisical manner.

  • @worldprops333

    @worldprops333

    3 күн бұрын

    @@TatraTea-ep9be Japan: get so stressed from ridiculously hard work that you die of a stroke

  • @ingssem
    @ingssem20 күн бұрын

    I’ve given Spanish lessons to Korean kids and it was the first time in my entire life that I heard a 8 year old kid say “I’m tired”. In Spain, kids have so much energy and just want to play, run and jump all day, and parents BEG them to take a nap lol. That was what shocked me the most, I had literally NEVER heard a kid say “I want to sleep” . I feel so bad for Korean kids. All this and it’s not even good quality education, it’s just intentionally made hard to drive competition and elitism. Such a waste 😔 And the “mothers” in this video made me boil with anger, how can they be laughing about CHILD ABUSE? Taking away your kids door and privacy will make them hate and resent you forever. They will grow up with trust issues 🤬 These parents are gonna find out the hard way when their children don’t wanna have any contact with them as adults.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    Man, it sounds like Spain children are raised to be kids. That's what they should be like, boundless energy and playing all day. What a stark contrast from Korea. Yeah I didn't include a part where one mom who took off the door of her daughter said they fight less now that daughter is in boarding school. Seems like when they live together they fight. Thanks for sharing your experience.

  • @macewindow4642

    @macewindow4642

    4 күн бұрын

    Personally, though i could be wrong, I think it is the environment they grow up in. If consumerism, individualism and competition are strong factors then no wonder you have the problem where kids have extreme studying, selfishness and push towards valuing someone based on how big their wallet it and if they flaunt it. I think that the system they live under facilitates said problems and many more. No greater picture than my country, the US. While we don’t have the extreme study culture, we have many similar problems. If i am incorrect please correct me kindly.

  • @mychannel-rt2gn

    @mychannel-rt2gn

    4 күн бұрын

    @@macewindow4642I’m pretty sure Korea doesn’t have a problem with too much individualism, it’s literally the opposite. Everyone wants to fit into the collective. It’s okay to not try to paint the US as hell on earth or anything close. It’s really not that bad compared to a lot of other countries and you guys have more freedoms and privileges than a lot of the countries you think are better than you. Speaking from experience, “free” healthcare and lots of “free” stuff doesn’t a good society make

  • @zDefaultX_quit

    @zDefaultX_quit

    3 күн бұрын

    um did you know thats the price of how korea is the number 1 education

  • @R1IY2N

    @R1IY2N

    Күн бұрын

    @@zDefaultX_quit at this point its not even education its endurance

  • @denden2935
    @denden293520 күн бұрын

    The K government tried to enact laws to limit how much time kids can spend in cram schools but ironically parents didn't like it and found ways to circumvent the laws so in the end the focus on extreme studying has continued.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    holy shit that's crazy dude, I didn't know that

  • @omekapo

    @omekapo

    9 күн бұрын

    its sucks how it's a cultural problem and not easy to change with regulations💔💔

  • @jessn.3851

    @jessn.3851

    8 күн бұрын

    Of course they'll find a way around it. The competition to get into a good university is so fierce that parents will do anything to make it happen. If you don't go to one of the top 3 universities, you won't have good prospects, not only for your job, but also for dating and marriage. China also tried to eliminate or control their version of hagwons and they're having the same issues, because the college entrance exam is the most important event of their lives that can determine their entire future. That's an insane amount of pressure.

  • @You-ul8qw

    @You-ul8qw

    6 күн бұрын

    One of the best ways to make stuff like this a bit better is to probably just make all the exams and whatnot easier. Whats the point in studying 5 hours a day if you only need to study 1 or 2

  • @jessn.3851

    @jessn.3851

    6 күн бұрын

    @You-ul8qw Making the college entrance exams easier seems like it would be the solution. But parents will just fill their free time with other things. I taught first graders from a private school in Taipei. They go to school until noon, then a studying session there, then several days a week they would have an English class with me. But they had all kinds of other classes, for math, dance, art, martial arts or even magic. They would have classes 6 or 7 days a week and no real days off. Kids who went to public school might have time to play after they finish their homework, but they're probably playing inside, not at the playground. The rich will continue to push their kids whether the test is hard or not. And if less studying is required, that could put kids with less money at even more of a disadvantage, as even studying would not help them. Even in Thailand, where the rich can go to certain schools and get into nearly any college they want in Bangkok, they still need to take a tough entrance exam for three universities, so even money cannot buy everything. Those parents may say they're pushing their kids to have a bright future. But in the end it is an investment. The better their kids do, the better their lives will be in their old age. In some countries like China, there is no social safety net, and the stock market and real estate are not safe investments, so they invest in their kids.

  • @Rain_RC
    @Rain_RC21 күн бұрын

    The innocent minds of these children are TAINTED early on. That’s sad.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    21 күн бұрын

    Sad indeed...

  • @yulgapopova6655
    @yulgapopova665520 күн бұрын

    they want confident and successful children, but they do everything to make them traumatized, insecure and anxious or depressed and dead at the end🥲🥲🥲 the way they talk about this, with smiles, laughing, just made me shocked........................... and like does the government do at least something about it? it's not considered as a kind of violation against children?.............. thank you for showing us this

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    yeah it seems totally counter to the kind of bright outgoing personality parents want to develop. sad that this seems like normalcy

  • @The_void111

    @The_void111

    7 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNowngl it’s disturbing how people would be fake or pretend to agree with another person just for the sake of not being “weird” or be target of criticism 😕

  • @jane_edits13.

    @jane_edits13.

    4 күн бұрын

    as a 15 yo sea, i do wish and want to be successful... at the same time, ive also been thru trauma, insecurities about my appearance and intellect, and anxiety. im not entirely sure about depression but i do cry a lot without anyone knowing in the shower and before i go to sleep, and had suicidal thoughts from 12-14 because the stress from self-competitions, parents and everyone is so surreal and just wanted to end all the stress for good, also because i never told anyone about this so im not so sure if that was depression or not. All my parents, tutors, teachers and friends saw me as the "smart", "happy" and "innocent" girl but i was actually dying on the inside... what made it worse was that i just did badly in my exams. and my mum was saying "the triple pure science stream should be easy so you def can manage it easily". I was like, there is a reason why the course im doing is hard if the requirements was to score an overall of As for your subjects 😭

  • @aeoligarlic4024
    @aeoligarlic40246 күн бұрын

    That clapping and laughing after the other said "they're not gonna die" is so sick. How about you study yourself ladies, i bet you're not THAT smart either!

  • @WeedShaggy

    @WeedShaggy

    3 күн бұрын

    "they're not gonna die" while their country has one of the highest suicide rate in the world. wouldn't surprise me if these parents laughed at that statistic too.

  • @MYT_LocalNaRz

    @MYT_LocalNaRz

    Күн бұрын

    Exactly, I bet their brain malfunction is like “FoCuS TheIr KiDs on StuDy wIth No TiMe to PlaY oR hAngoUt WitH TheiR fRiEnd”

  • @TheYuccaPlant
    @TheYuccaPlant27 күн бұрын

    Lmao the rolex story is pretty crazy, never would've imagined literal kids recognizing the model of a watch from afar. I wouldn't even be able to tell if it's a smartwatch now let alone brands.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    27 күн бұрын

    yeah same here I can't tell any watch from afar. they've got an eye for CHA CHING this watch means money

  • @prettynerd4779

    @prettynerd4779

    18 күн бұрын

    me either.. I never look at people's watches.. or If I do see a brand like a Jaegar LeCoutre, Patek Phillipe, or something like that.. I am like Oh cool.. look at them baller and then I move on.. ROFL.. I am very American..

  • @degilz7629

    @degilz7629

    7 күн бұрын

    Which is so sad, like do parents not realise that this is not teaching them anything about getting rich only to LOOK rich, which may lead to bad financial decisions later on. They’re not teaching them how to think for themselves at all rly and how to look out for themselves, only in the eyes of others which oftentimes comes at the expense of your own true happiness

  • @wanr5701

    @wanr5701

    5 күн бұрын

    One wearing Seiko isn't less worthy than one wearing Rolex.

  • @user-yc2vl2qq5r
    @user-yc2vl2qq5r20 күн бұрын

    Thank you for addressing this issue. As a Korean, I think this is a key issue that speaks to the suicide rate and birth rate of many Korean youth.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    You're right, especially suicides at such a young age. Stay strong my Korean friend.

  • @carkawalakhatulistiwa

    @carkawalakhatulistiwa

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@PaulYuNow South Korea brith rate in 2023 is 0, 72 and still growing down . To 0,68 in 2024 and 0,65 in 2025.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    15 күн бұрын

    @@carkawalakhatulistiwa holy shit it keeps plummeting

  • @WeedShaggy

    @WeedShaggy

    3 күн бұрын

    ​@@PaulYuNowand with more young folks offing themselves, it'll be even lower

  • @theia1653

    @theia1653

    9 сағат бұрын

    Chinese and Vietnamese APs do this too, not just Korean.

  • @rajratan6310
    @rajratan631023 күн бұрын

    That's why they left family after grow up and some commit suicide.According to the World Health Organization, the suicide rate in South Korea is the fourth highest in the world.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    23 күн бұрын

    Yeah it's such a toxic environment to grow up in. No wonder they feel trapped thinking there's no way out.

  • @helixxia9320

    @helixxia9320

    11 күн бұрын

    That’s so sad

  • @mannylikestoanimate

    @mannylikestoanimate

    6 күн бұрын

    That’s disturbing

  • @im_so_silly861

    @im_so_silly861

    5 күн бұрын

    whats the first highest? im curious?

  • @marcey4207

    @marcey4207

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@im_so_silly861 i thought it was Japan, was is also concerningly in Asia

  • @tutisusilowati8556
    @tutisusilowati855621 күн бұрын

    Disgusting, they dont even value their children as human

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    21 күн бұрын

    you're right, the mothers are tyrants raising slaves

  • @KateeAngel

    @KateeAngel

    13 күн бұрын

    But they see that society is very competitive and the only way their child will survive in it is studying and working a lot. So maybe that is why they make their kids study so much. It is not the individual parents which are the problem. How the whole society works is a problem

  • @totke6588

    @totke6588

    6 күн бұрын

    @@KateeAngel Agreed but it's really heartwrenching watching these parents talk about it like that. like why are u laughing

  • @wanr5701

    @wanr5701

    6 күн бұрын

    @@KateeAngel and the parents choose to let the society dictates their life, instead of fighting fiercely to change the society they live in for the sake of their children and the future? What kind of parents are they?

  • @raycigar6356

    @raycigar6356

    6 күн бұрын

    ​@@wanr5701unfortunately in many Asian countries standing out and having different opinions is being seen as weird and can result in getting avoided or even bullied by society, many young folks there admire the the culture of individualism in the west but have to abide by the deeply ingrained culture of saving face, family honor and societal cast system thinking in their home...

  • @raven8108
    @raven810821 күн бұрын

    i grew up as a child of chinese immigrants. when i was in elementary school my mom was similar to the moms in this video. i was usually about 3 grade levels ahead of the rest of my class. during middle school, when i was in my rebellious phase (haha), i argued with my mom a lot and we came to an agreement that although i'll do my best in school, the hours upon hours of studying was excessive. in high school, the tables turned a bit and she's the one to remind me to take it easy, enjoy being a teenager and to make memories. i'm definitely lucky to have parents who are a lot more open minded and willing to listen to their child.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    18 күн бұрын

    it's great that your mom turned around later in your life! I hope more parents have a change of heart like that.

  • @duaneowens7777

    @duaneowens7777

    18 күн бұрын

    Hi are you in the US. Which state are you from

  • @raven8108

    @raven8108

    17 күн бұрын

    @@duaneowens7777 new york

  • @inkersbrew6370

    @inkersbrew6370

    10 күн бұрын

    I really hope these parents down the line will be like your Mom instead of keeping onto their pride.

  • @Mortablunt

    @Mortablunt

    8 күн бұрын

    White American here, there were lots of different Asians, where I grew up in Virginia. I really didn’t believe anyone could make their kids stay six hours a day. It was pretty similar with a lot of Indian parents too. But I’m talking to my friends they’re their parents still took good care of them, and their parents did worry about their happiness, even if they were very pushy about academics. This here in the video isn’t parenting it’s institutional abuse. For young children, in particular play is a proven, developmental essential they need it, not just for the purpose of fun, but for the purpose of just learning things, becoming acquainted with the world and developing the underlying psychological parameters that will define who they are for their entire life. Not letting a kid play is horrifically damaging and I know you can’t make it up by letting them watch something on the iPad. Now you can’t let them make up for it later when they’re an adult and earn money to go spoil themselves it has to be real physical play in childhood every day.

  • @gilliangreen842
    @gilliangreen84214 күн бұрын

    This is so narcissistic and depressing to see this abuse being so normalized and even ‘funny’. These people don’t love their children at all, they love looking good and having perfect controlled robot children that raise their status in society even if that means destroying their own children’s soul and childhood

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    Whenever someone says "Not having children is selfish" I just ask where there is altruism in birthing an Instagram photo prop.

  • @baesumine
    @baesumine6 күн бұрын

    my parents used to starve me if I didnt study or got below an 90, then they remover my door hinges in like 6th grade, and it pains me to know that children are still going through this

  • @passthemic1271

    @passthemic1271

    6 күн бұрын

    I'm so sorry

  • @GlitchBoy-ws5in

    @GlitchBoy-ws5in

    3 күн бұрын

    That's just fucked

  • @shanako-kun

    @shanako-kun

    7 сағат бұрын

    are you safe? please take care!! I care about you!! ❤️

  • @BeautifulDreamerK
    @BeautifulDreamerK21 күн бұрын

    I’m Asian American and I understand how extreme Asian culture is- competitive, shallow, judgmental, always talking ish. I know Korean culture is also this way but the clip is so fascinating to watch. I can’t believe what some of the mothers were saying, poor kids. What Asian parents don’t understand is the importance of socialization and how Asian racism is still real in the western world. I wasn’t the typical straight A Asian kid but I ended up going to grad school on my own terms. In the real world (especially in the US), everyone stereotypes you as the “smart, passive Asian” and you still won’t get the respect you earned no matter how much you work hard. Also, no one cares what college you went to. Another case- I also know of an Asian coworker who is the most socially unaware and immature person I’ve met. And she’s in her 30’s. She brought in her Asian mindset and insecurities to a Western minded workplace. She gets offended over things you shouldn’t, she buys everyone things for approval, does more than what she needs to as “hard work” and because of all this, she has severe mental health issues. She was very toxic to be around.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    fascinating to hear your story and your Asian coworker. thanks for sharing. yeah children being raised like this probably won't turn out to be wholesome individuals, you're right.

  • @theia1653

    @theia1653

    4 күн бұрын

    It will have severe implications for your careers and relationships for the rest of your life, if you never developed social skills in your childhood and your emotional needs aren't met, and then have to try to learn it all as an adult decades behind everyone else, unlearn everything from how you were raised, and how to live in the real world after college. Then APs wonder why you're such a failure, why you can't talk to anyone, where are their grandkids, and why you're not a millionaire or billionaire.

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    I often wonder how psychologists are going to find a way to repair the damage of tiger parents or cram school agony.

  • @Tafseel
    @Tafseel20 күн бұрын

    I work in in one of the 학원s and kids are usually exhausted. All the colorful books and class activities bore them. It's very difficult to make them interested to something useful.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    damn. that makes me sad to hear that. thanks for sharing

  • @MrAntinexus
    @MrAntinexus18 күн бұрын

    3:00 even mothers demand certain heights from boys wtf

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    18 күн бұрын

    lol the height discrimination is real.

  • @Henrique-up4su

    @Henrique-up4su

    10 күн бұрын

    "I don't go out with dudes with less than X meters. I don't think we should see each other anymore." "Wtf mom?"

  • @katie9735

    @katie9735

    8 күн бұрын

    I saw recently they’re giving them injections to make them tall.

  • @pylotheric9777

    @pylotheric9777

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@@katie9735sounds like a yikes

  • @Rella-rellai

    @Rella-rellai

    7 күн бұрын

    ​@@katie9735 Doesn't sound healthy. Mentally and physically.

  • @TheSteam02
    @TheSteam028 күн бұрын

    I'm Chinese-American, but it's stuff like this that makes me SO glad that my parents never raised me like this. They wanted me to do well at school, but they didn't remove every ounce of my life just so that I could focus on grades. This is literally just child abuse.

  • @dachosens1

    @dachosens1

    6 күн бұрын

    yeah i think for chinese-americans maybe it was bad before but lately i think it has just become a relic of the past and just a meme our asian community embraces, my experienceis similar to yours

  • @KattLikesGames

    @KattLikesGames

    5 күн бұрын

    As a Malaysian American I ageee with you so much lol

  • @SapphireSage
    @SapphireSage18 күн бұрын

    This is sad as mother. Let them be children. Let them have their privacy treat them like people.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    18 күн бұрын

    Agreed.

  • @theia1653

    @theia1653

    5 күн бұрын

    Privacy is an individualist and a western concept. That there are boundaries that not even government can cross. These moms think nothing of removing a door or going through their child's stuff and it's their business even when we are in the bathroom.

  • @NekoArts
    @NekoArts17 күн бұрын

    As someone who's currently pregnant with my first child, this absolutely breaks my heart to look at. Of course I'd want my child to have a good education and the best resources to get a good future, but I feel like these "parents" are completely stripping their children of their childhoods. Sure, maybe their kids will grow up to be really successful (career-wise) but will they actually be happy? Will they actually have normal and healthy relationships to the people around them? I'm Swedish but I live in Japan where there's also a big pressure on kids to grow up successful (I'm not sure how it compares to Korea though). I was shocked when I found out that school-aged children here don't always get the same national holidays are everyone else in Japan (so while everyone else is off on holiday, the kid still has to go to school) and nobody really seems to think it's weird. As a future mother, I can't even imagine forcing a 4-year old to study for 5+ hours a day to the point of burnout - and I definitely can't imagine laughing about it. I truly feel sorry for these kids. I wanted to slap every single one of the mothers in that video that you shared.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    17 күн бұрын

    Very interesting hearing from you. Best of wishes with your baby to come

  • @Mortablunt

    @Mortablunt

    8 күн бұрын

    What even is there that a four-year-old can study for five hours a day!? They only read really need to know their script, and then shapes colors clocks and numbers.

  • @ML-cc7gj

    @ML-cc7gj

    8 күн бұрын

    School-aged kids get the national holidays as everyone else in my experience in Japan. It’s the weird in-between days, for example during Golden Week, that are not national holidays, when they go school. Depending on the company, their parents might have those off, but these are not national holidays as such.

  • @abcxyz3028
    @abcxyz302822 күн бұрын

    I'm soo glad my parents aren't like them. My classmate stressed herself so much that she had plenty of grey hair at 16. From what I've read, it's more stressful for female Koreans where they'll be judged for their looks. Allegedly, some Koreans do judge you for not being admitted to a top local uni if you have an overseas degree which isn't from the top elite universities. I believe some Asian countries incl Korea require a photo for job applications. Thank goodness this isn't a requirement in the west 😅

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    22 күн бұрын

    Yeah they judge you on your resume by your looks... No wonder plastic surgery is a graduation present to so many Korean girls. Even guys are getting plastic surgery, I know a guy who got his eyelids and nose done.

  • @91762chareyes

    @91762chareyes

    20 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow that’s sad. So, does this mean that those who can’t afford plastic surgery won’t have a chance to improve their economic status?😢

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    @@91762chareyes well if you are ugly in Korea it's a disadvantage for sure, perhaps more than other countries

  • @OliviaWoods-ej8ju
    @OliviaWoods-ej8ju6 күн бұрын

    I'm a Korean middle schooler and I just have one word to sum up Korea's education; competition. Many kids say it's tiring to have to see their own friends as competition and always be compared to others. And the education system and parents aren't really helping.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    6 күн бұрын

    Sad to hear that...

  • @ArheIy
    @ArheIy8 күн бұрын

    That's just f#%ked up. I've thought that my studying in Russia was brutal, because here the final exam is an all-or-nothing situation: you get a good grade - the state pays for you education; but if the grade is too low to go to university - you're being enlisted, so the sheer weight of the deal's cost is just absolutely crushing. But *THIS* isn't even a fair deal. It's straight up disgusting. It's not that the children are going to have a really bad time without an education - these parents are brutal for practically no reason but their own insecurities. Crazy sh*t.

  • @CatU-U

    @CatU-U

    5 күн бұрын

    As someone who can kind of get what you mena, i just wish you so so much luck at EGE. I hope you get high score :)

  • @ArheIy

    @ArheIy

    5 күн бұрын

    @@CatU-U да я уже получил, так-то. И давно)

  • @eee_eee

    @eee_eee

    5 күн бұрын

    not even comparable

  • @esterbun9356

    @esterbun9356

    4 күн бұрын

    Is that a fair deal though? I'm Australian. I could be speaking from my bottom. But we were always taught informed concent about enlisting, shown the harsh nature at a young age and presented the facts. If you fail your education, you just fail. Thats it. You can choose to enlist, sure, but there's no pressure. I couldn't imagine thinking about your future on the day of the final exam -- who you want to be -- then flunking and being forced into what is essentially a life-or-death contract.

  • @TheYuccaPlant
    @TheYuccaPlant27 күн бұрын

    This is giving the same vibes as the scene in Oppenheimer where they discuss their targets for the a-bombs

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    27 күн бұрын

    LOL are you talking about the moms

  • @TheYuccaPlant

    @TheYuccaPlant

    27 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow definitely lol

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    27 күн бұрын

    @@TheYuccaPlant yeah they're like scheming how their child is going to be, everything they should do. Scary...

  • @Mortablunt

    @Mortablunt

    8 күн бұрын

    Korean parents: “You drop F bombs in school, why not bring home A bombs!!!??”

  • @karld1791
    @karld179120 күн бұрын

    Not going outside is robbing the kid’s eyesight. Taiwan had a program to get school kids outside 2 hours a day before the pandemic and it lowered myopia rates. Unfortunately the program ended during the pandemic. Korean school kids have a 65% myopia rate and they need to get outside for their eyes to develop. The Korean healthcare system will struggle to treat the 6.9% with higher myopia which can be expensive to treat. Staying indoors so much physically damages children and unfortunately the west is catching up to the far East so it’s not only one country’s problem.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    Is that why my eyes got so bad? I didn't know indoors crushes eyesight. Very interesting to hear, thanks for sharing

  • @karld1791

    @karld1791

    19 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow there has been a lot of research on why myopia has been increasing in children worldwide especially in developed countries (lead by northeast Asia, though effecting every nation) that pointed to the need to get outside to take in sunshine and see vistas to develop eyesight. Taiwan was able to intervene lowering myopia rates with a program to get kids outside. Unfortunately the pandemic ended the program.

  • @Payday5

    @Payday5

    7 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow it is also good to stare at the sky for a while, i heard that it improves your eyesight, but don't do it for too long, you might burn your eyes instead lol

  • @olorin3815

    @olorin3815

    5 күн бұрын

    Think you are supposed to look at objects further away or something doesnt need to be sky or anything specific l, as long as you are outside its probably fine

  • @somethingelse9228

    @somethingelse9228

    2 күн бұрын

    @@olorin3815 No, our eyes need sunlight to fully develop especially in our childhood and early teenage days.

  • @Rain_RC
    @Rain_RC21 күн бұрын

    Life ain’t all about studying 😬 Experience is the best teacher tho. They’re just teaching them to be judgmental, discriminating, cold people with no sympathy 😬 Yikes

  • @lukesherry8416
    @lukesherry84167 күн бұрын

    “why are you sending me to a nursing home?”

  • @akcub3

    @akcub3

    6 күн бұрын

    this is the best comment ive seen

  • @natnat_o3

    @natnat_o3

    6 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    Why was I ghosted the moment my kid turned 18? Why is my other kid in the morgue?

  • @Hana-kc1lq
    @Hana-kc1lq25 күн бұрын

    Just after listening one story, l feel it's so disturbing how they laughed it off. Like they don't really care their children well being, thinking it's just their tantrum😢😢 Thankfully it's not like that here, parents generally not that strict here. I remember my childhood memories full of me playing until my mom shouting telling me it was a nap time then she would hugged and cuddled me to sleep. Best memories ❤

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    25 күн бұрын

    Disturbing indeed. Glad to hear that you had a play filled childhood Hana, sounds like you grew up in a loving household

  • @Hana-kc1lq

    @Hana-kc1lq

    25 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow Thank you 😁 Love your content, so surprised you only have 1k subscriber, gonna add one.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Hana-kc1lq I appreciate you Hana! There's more to come! 😎 Although idea generation is not easy for me

  • @kellyaslan3657

    @kellyaslan3657

    22 күн бұрын

    It's called psychopathy...

  • @kellyaslan3657

    @kellyaslan3657

    22 күн бұрын

    Mother, and teacher with 30-year experience in multiple continents and countries....Yes, this is seriously disturbing. In the majority of the developed world, all these parents would be considered abusive and they would lose custody of their children. The teachers, first and foremost, would have reported them to social services. The irony.

  • @dbbd_sg
    @dbbd_sg10 күн бұрын

    Surprised about how the removal of doors are used for control by these mothers. Tbh i too removed my doors but solely for airflow purposes in a hot tropical country but now i regret it because myself and child spend the days growling at each other thru the curtains "WHY U NO GIVE ME PRIVACY???" (I might reinstall my doors before she gets older...)

  • @2003LN6

    @2003LN6

    7 күн бұрын

    def singapore / malaysia "WHY U NO GIVE ME PRIVACY???" gives it away haha🤣🤣🤣

  • @tealmandala632

    @tealmandala632

    5 күн бұрын

    You can get doors with vents in them

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    I wonder how many just rub one out without caring if the door is gone.

  • @mamamooscake281
    @mamamooscake28110 күн бұрын

    As someone who had burnout (as a kid) , this makes me want to scream on top of my lungs. Their laughs and giggles make me want to throw up. This is almost triggering to me. Poor kids , i feel so bad for them. They are going to have a messed up perception of boundries. If a kid says that at 4/5 , when they are just in kindergarten , somewhere you are lacking ( you know where ). Sorry not sorry but all this is simply bad parenting. These are the kind of parents that will end up at old age home. I know damn well their kids loathe them ( atlest some of them ). No doubt the korean society has turned the way it has. All this is making me so angry i cant express in words lol.

  • @theia1653

    @theia1653

    5 күн бұрын

    All of us do, you only have to read r/Asianparentstories, everyone except those that try to defend and excuse it, and get deeper into it. The males, especially, and I'm an AM.

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    I often said if I was forced to grow up in east Asia, I wouln't have lived past the age of 11. I would be another statistic or railway "accident."

  • @vffncl0
    @vffncl026 күн бұрын

    another reason why the birthrate is so low

  • @stoup7280

    @stoup7280

    25 күн бұрын

    How?

  • @vffncl0

    @vffncl0

    25 күн бұрын

    @@stoup7280 the financial burden of school fees + the demanding school/work culture that leaves people with little free time (no time for dating/family life -- what's even the point of having kids if you'll spend crazy hours at work and they'll be at school 18h/day?)

  • @junjae.

    @junjae.

    23 күн бұрын

    Isn't the self-deIetion rate also the highest in the world?

  • @vffncl0

    @vffncl0

    23 күн бұрын

    @@junjae. Yes, one of the highest. No wonder.

  • @lotuspocus2165

    @lotuspocus2165

    22 күн бұрын

    Low birth rate is due to basic education. A lot of countries have too high of a birth rate

  • @parulrathore8153
    @parulrathore815321 күн бұрын

    Oh god I can't even watch this whole video past 3 mins it's so sick to seem them laughing and finding their tortuous behaviour as "funny".

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    21 күн бұрын

    Yeah I felt sick too...

  • @wanr5701

    @wanr5701

    6 күн бұрын

    They are gangsters until the kids gone because of their behaviour.

  • @theskinnypot
    @theskinnypot21 күн бұрын

    And they think it's funny.

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    I think about Joker and Murray arguing about what's funny and what isn't.

  • @sue008A
    @sue008A26 күн бұрын

    Oh my goodness. Your video is right on spot. In my opinion woman should have some knowledge of childhood development/ basic childhood and adolescent psychology. Ive witnessed a Korean mother here in the US heaping extra classes on her daughter who was between the age of 4 and a half and 5 years of age . Adter spending the whole day at school she not only had homework, she also had piano lessons, Korean school, English enrichment class and a couple of other programs she was in. I remember helping her with her homework one day and she just kept telling me she was very tired. After helping her with her homework she had to practice her piano... Then her mother took her to the next program. Her mother told me she was preparing her daughter to do something in the medical field. I asked her what if your daughter doesn't want to do anything related to the medical field? She was very set on her daughter being in the medical field regardless of what her daughter might want.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    26 күн бұрын

    That sounds so toxic... Typical Korean childhood for so many. Poor daughter has no say in the matter. Must be soul sucking.

  • @sue008A

    @sue008A

    25 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow Yes. I do wonder how she is doing. That was about 15 years ago.

  • @KateeAngel

    @KateeAngel

    13 күн бұрын

    And men? Aren't they supposed to parent their children too?

  • @inkersbrew6370

    @inkersbrew6370

    10 күн бұрын

    It'd be so easy for her Mom to make it so piano lessons are just Mommy Daughter time so they can hang out but still be educational. Plus cheaper. Even if she's not good at it, they can learn together

  • @pylotheric9777

    @pylotheric9777

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@@KateeAngelyes.

  • @abcxyz3028
    @abcxyz302822 күн бұрын

    I remember hearing the news of a Singaporean primary school student commit sui side due to stress many years ago. Even now, there are still Singaporean students who commit sui side due to stress and pressure.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    22 күн бұрын

    That's crazy. No child should feel so trapped that they feel like the only way out is death.

  • @mdilham5237

    @mdilham5237

    22 күн бұрын

    nah, i disagree... as a Singaporean, yes, education is stressful and sometimes demanding but most and a lot of my peers who i grew up till now have never had that feeling of wanting to commit that kind of thing and i tell u what, not everyone is stress and unhappy in Singapore and east asia...

  • @jiyojiy6202

    @jiyojiy6202

    8 күн бұрын

    @@mdilham5237Singapore isn’t paying you to do PR, please..

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    Every time I read about the developed parts of East Asia, I think about Cyberpunk Corpo cities.

  • @darkwizard5970
    @darkwizard59709 күн бұрын

    Kindergarten literally means something like children garden. The job of a kid is to play, have fun and explore life. This sick, twisted parody of parenting and education is to childhood what an oil spill is to an ocean

  • @Clemix_
    @Clemix_7 күн бұрын

    I’m originally from Korea, however I was adopted and raised in America. Seeing this video and many other videos makes me realize how badly I would’ve been treated over in Korea. I’m glad to be here in America

  • @BigBrotherMateyka
    @BigBrotherMateyka8 күн бұрын

    Basically, both Koreas wound up being dystopias.

  • @user-cvbnm

    @user-cvbnm

    5 күн бұрын

    Not exactly, South Korea would be a dystopia for the young and maybe even to women. adult men are spared. North Korea is a dystopia for all.

  • @franzsigel7166

    @franzsigel7166

    3 сағат бұрын

    @@user-cvbnm South Korea is a dystopia for adult men too. they literally have the worlds highest suicide rate.

  • @user-gd3wp97
    @user-gd3wp976 күн бұрын

    I never really personally thought of it as “child abuse” because it’s so normal here, but now that i’m mostly on english channels I’ve really come to realise how horrible my country is and how i guess “mistreated” we are.

  • @SpikoDreams

    @SpikoDreams

    3 күн бұрын

    I wish you the best, dear

  • @flyingkangaroo814
    @flyingkangaroo81422 күн бұрын

    2:17 Oh my god. Hearing her say this actually pissed me off. These "mothers" are raising their children to be obedient robots. I subscribed to your channel also BTW. Keep up the content.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    22 күн бұрын

    That's exactly what they want! They want obedient robots as children. And thanks for joining, I'll keep new content coming :)

  • @hopium7
    @hopium719 күн бұрын

    I actually feel like something similar is starting to happen in the US, although maybe for different reasons. My little brother is in his first year of middle school and has experienced TONS of bullying and judgment from other classmates purely about money. They will judge his clothes, tech, the car his parents drive, etc. This is ridiculous as is, but the even stranger thing is that my family is middle class. My parents have a Mercedes. We don't live in some millionaire town, and he's going to public school, not some preppy private school. But his classmates OBSESS over these small things. Mercedes isn't good enough, it has to be ______. Even if he has a brand that is liked, they will insist it must be a fake since they don't like him. Back only a few years ago, I was going to the same schools and it wasn't like this AT ALL. No one was unironically using "poor" as an insult like we were in some Disney Channel movie. Of course judgement still existed, but it wasn't THIS bad. I think one of the reasons is that all of these kids have had access to internet and social media from an EXTREMELY young age. They were RAISED on the iPad, growing up with content from brands, celebs, and rich influences flexing their wealth. So they internalized this, and now, it is in turn, what they value and strive to emulate. Another similarity is the bar for college and jobs raising to an unsustainable degree. Everyone I know that has graduated from a 4 year, with good grades and multiple internships under their belt, still had an insanely difficult time getting hired. And when they finally got hired, it was to an entry level job in a completely unrelated field. Like why are customer service or data entry jobs only hiring 4 year bio grads? If you don't have any college degree you can just forget about it (that's the situation I'm in). College is no longer good enough. You need to be the best of the best to even start in some of these fields. The interesting thing about this (and the part that differs from SK) is that so far this rising competitiveness in the job market does not seem to be reflecting in student education. From a numbers/grades perspective, the US education system doesn't rank well. Our literacy rates are also dropping. Students here don't seem to be very competitive about grades as they are about other status symbols like wealth, despite the job market becoming so competitive. It's a bit worrying to think what the result of that could be. With that said, the solution is certainly not to force students into more competition. The bar raising and raising like this is unsustainable. The problem lies in the job market, universities, and the education system broadly. Although I don't know the solution, there certainly needs to be an overhaul. I hope things will start changing for the better soon.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    19 күн бұрын

    I hope what your brother is experiencing is not a trend happening throughout the world. That's scary to hear

  • @Ajarylee-qh9ln

    @Ajarylee-qh9ln

    8 күн бұрын

    I think banning employers from requiring unrelated qualifications would be a good first step. Furthermore, I believe the education system must be overhauled by separating education and qualification. I feel that too many education institutions are parasitic in nature: they do not provide a genuinely valuable service and simply feed off the fact that education is often demanded. To solve this problem, schools, colleges, universities, etc. must be banned from providing diplomas entirely. Instead, they must provide *exclusively* education. Final assessments and qualification must be handled by separate organizations that are not allowed to associate with any specific education provider or restrict who is allowed to attend in any way. This will put a competitive pressure on education providers to actually be useful, since people will be able to just skip them entirely and study for a qualification test on their own.

  • @Handleitt1
    @Handleitt117 күн бұрын

    Met two Korean guys and one was tall, has a new house, new car, attractive, smart, and great personality (kind of switched to sadist out of no where when I offered to help him) I felt he kind of looked down on me. The other Korean guy had roommates in college, a cool car, very sweet and I felt comfortable with him. When I talked to the college guy he says the other guy must have rich parents. Come to find out college guy knew something more than I could ever know. Maybe it’s a certain social class that raise their children this way?

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    17 күн бұрын

    Yeah these moms are in the central place for all the cram schools where competition is fierce. Definitely not all moms are like this

  • @zerodegreescelsius
    @zerodegreescelsius21 күн бұрын

    I remember when I was in grade 3, the boy seated beside me told his friends that his father had an American Express, and asked me if I knew what it was. I said, "Yeah, like Midnight Express, right?" They laughed really loudly, and I felt really ashamed back then.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    21 күн бұрын

    Jesus. That's toxic dude.

  • @im_so_silly861

    @im_so_silly861

    5 күн бұрын

    maybe they thought it was a joke?

  • @zerodegreescelsius

    @zerodegreescelsius

    4 күн бұрын

    @@im_so_silly861 unfortunately no...because they had asked again after that. I really had no idea what it was back then. I only learned about Amex years later in my late teens.

  • @im_so_silly861

    @im_so_silly861

    4 күн бұрын

    @@zerodegreescelsius damn, sorry about asking that

  • @zerodegreescelsius

    @zerodegreescelsius

    4 күн бұрын

    @@im_so_silly861 nah, we're good. All in the past now

  • @shacooked
    @shacooked16 күн бұрын

    These are so sad… so I understand why some of my friends resent their parent.. they would let them study till the kids burnt out. Sometimes you see a very high suicide rate in children is all time high due to pressures from their parents

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    16 күн бұрын

    Sad indeed... I hope the parents realize why they are being resented

  • @user-spartium

    @user-spartium

    9 күн бұрын

    That's a common misconception from people with limited knowledge about korea. The high suicide rate is mostly attributed to elderly poverty, not children. The suicide rate for the young in korea is one of the lowest in OECD.

  • @shacooked

    @shacooked

    6 күн бұрын

    @@user-spartium it’s pretty high of lonely death in elderly people in Singapore too… cause they just don’t want to seek help or feels that they put burden on people they are shut ins and would die in their own apartments. That’s why Singapore government is trying to combat with it and trying to add housings meant for elders when they get older have staffs on standby to check on them in every few floors. Each country has its own unique situation and would try to help their own citizens.

  • @user-spartium

    @user-spartium

    6 күн бұрын

    @shacooked Good to hear that the Singapore government is working to solve the problem. I believe it's necessary since the aging population is growing rapidly all around the world.

  • @theia1653

    @theia1653

    5 күн бұрын

    @PaulYuNow They won't because there is no self awareness, no self reflection or change even if their kids haven't spoken to them in 10, 20 years. They are a prisoner of their own disordered personality.

  • @robertstark5748
    @robertstark57487 күн бұрын

    The two Koreas (North and South) I feel adopted some of the worst political and economic qualities from their handlers (The US & USSR).

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    Cyberpunk dystopia vs 1984 Orwell dystopia.

  • @catandcaboodle6492
    @catandcaboodle649221 күн бұрын

    I've known about the cram schools, and I've heard about children not getting home until 10 or 11 at night, then still having homework to squeeze in, maybe get 5 hours of sleep! But I had never heard of No Doors !🚫 🚪 this is crazy and so detrimental to adolescents who need privacy. I am just shocked. My family was stationed in Korea when I was little and I was too young for school, but we probably would have gone to an American school on the Army base. I really don't think I could handle the stress these poor kids have. It's an extremely rigid and depressing lifestyle to put on these poor kids. I do love so many things about Korea....but I feel this all-day school and studying needs to change. Excellent video btw. 😊

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    20 күн бұрын

    Cool that you lived in Korea! Thanks for sharing your story and thoughts. Glad you didn't go through all that shit like the other students. School all day should not exist.

  • @catandcaboodle6492

    @catandcaboodle6492

    20 күн бұрын

    @@PaulYuNow Thank you 😊 We have always been lucky to have Korean friends, even living in the States, but none of them have ever placed this kind of all-day school regimen on their kids. They do expect hard work and good grades, but that's only right - because parents should want the best for their kids. But our friends here, their kids were only in one after-school activity, so still plenty of free time to explore who they are.

  • @maywalker997
    @maywalker9977 күн бұрын

    I went to a top world university and I witnessed a number of Korean and Chinese students there have mental breakdowns in the final year as graduation drew in closer because they were not coping with the pressure at all well. I observed that often the better they were as students, the more they tended to beat themselves up over just about everything, intensely loathing themselves and being very fatalistic in their attitudes towards any percieved mistakes or shortcomings. Raising kids to constantly obsess over grades and judge their self-worth as human beings by their acedemic performance are very poor grounds to build confidence and coping skills upon. It was also very sad because even at their lowest points, many of these students utterly refused to let the teachers inform their parents about their struggles and mental health problems at university, so often during their lowest moments these students were very isolated & fearful whilst their parents carried on completely oblivious to their childs suffering. It was almost as if they thought that if their parents knew they were not delivering fantastic results all the time, they feared that their parents would withdraw all love & affection from them (and hate them instead). A child should never feel like they have no value as a human being nor entitlement towards love & compassion if they don't deliver great academic results 24/7. A parents love should be unconditional, not bought with school grades. Society is also increasingly not rewarding those who do graduate with great results because the university systems are producing more over-qualified people than what society actually has a need for, which is resulting in situations such as Masters graduates being forced to work in factories because there is no other work for them, or for people to have to be ridiculously over-qualified for even the most basic jobs. It is really important to see that there is more to life than grades, studying & being a top student all the time.

  • @kyonsi
    @kyonsi6 күн бұрын

    I’m korean and I notice this with other Asians too, my teacher who is Vietnamese said his parents treated him in a similar way to a point where he had no free time, no interests, no friends, etc. it wasn’t until he became an adult (now 30 years old) where he was free to finally get into stuff he’s always wanted to as a teen, like martial arts like jujutsu and taekwondo , anime, video games etc. people would tell him that he’s “too old” to do any of these things but in reality he’s living the life his parents never allowed him to for the sake of a good education. I even hear that the cases in Japan with suicide are very similar to Korea as well, and many children in China sleep on the bus when going back home which is usually very late

  • @puhlsar1
    @puhlsar17 күн бұрын

    I’m a Korean student and I’m quite lucky to say that I live relatively free with only a couple cram schools, but most other people at my school have upwards of four cram schools after school on average and their daily lives seem similar to what was described in this video.

  • @puhlsar1

    @puhlsar1

    7 күн бұрын

    Also the common expectations of parents for students’ grades (at my school) is A (96+)

  • @sim4296

    @sim4296

    6 күн бұрын

    That still seems crazy to me, im lucky enough where i dont really have homework and can get away with 1 hour of studying a night at most (im in my second last year of school and still pretty much at the top of my classes). I think if i did any more i would be so burnt out too, if i had a mother like the women in this video im not sure i could function.

  • @sweethistortea
    @sweethistortea5 күн бұрын

    My parents are Italian and Czech immigrants who put a heavy focus on academics such as writing, art, history, etc. However, while they wanted me to do well in school, I was still able to be a kid and play with dolls and with my friends. I feel bad for those poor babies who don’t get to be a kid and forced to be robots.

  • @corolla94
    @corolla947 күн бұрын

    God, the part about the door... I remember not being able to sleep right when the lock on mine broke. This is pure evil.

  • @molanohouse

    @molanohouse

    6 күн бұрын

    Evil is when my parents discipline me.

  • @NASALunarLight
    @NASALunarLight8 күн бұрын

    As a Korean, I’m glad I wasn’t raised like this in America. Yet I was still one of the top in my class without being forced, now I’m happily attending GeorgiaTech.

  • @yeungxuxi5981
    @yeungxuxi598126 күн бұрын

    I'm a 16 years old from Pakistan, being an Asian and a Muslim you have really strict parents. I don't know about others but I'm so happy that my parents try to understand the things from our pov that how do we feel and view the. aspects of life. I think in any relationship communication is the key... without it I don't think, things workout well for everyone in the family. Family is about growing and facing every situation together. Being a Pakistani, we give a lot of attention and respect to our traditional, cultural and religious values but that doesn't mean people would stop evolving. Way of thinking keeps on changing... My parents are careful when it comes to religion cuz that's our way of life, they let us understand things rather than finding ways to force things on us. When it comes to studies and career. Of course parents do expect a lot from their child as they should cuz they invest their entire life, time , money and attention to raise us well...my parents don't expect us to be a topper or all A grade student rather they want us to be an average student and focus on all the aspects of life...and through my parents teachings I think freedom lets you grow stronger but one should know about it's roots and stay connected with them... just wanted to share my point of view...THANKS AND HAVE A NICE DAY

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    26 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing dude, interesting to hear about your story

  • @duaneowens7777

    @duaneowens7777

    18 күн бұрын

    Wow I agree with you.

  • @WastedBananas

    @WastedBananas

    11 күн бұрын

    Pakistanis aren’t Asian

  • @officialjocelyn9108
    @officialjocelyn910817 күн бұрын

    I just started watching "Green Mother's Club" on Netflix and am so disappointed at how the adults are insincere toward each other, but tolerate each other in hopes of climbing in the social hierarchy on the talents of their children. So exhausting to watch, I can't imagine what it would be like to LIVE that way!

  • @letsgowalk
    @letsgowalk22 күн бұрын

    I just got back from a stint in Korea, and even though I enjoyed my visit, I did notice how cold and inconsiderate many people are. I never felt slighted or disrespected whatsoever, but most people just seem detached and aloof, practically like mindless zombies in many ways.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    21 күн бұрын

    That's how I feel when I visit Korea as well. Definitely not a friendly vibe.

  • @letsgowalk

    @letsgowalk

    21 күн бұрын

    I will say this though. The people I feel are genuinely good people, but just don't know how to express emotion, and generally just stick to themselves. The few individuals whom I did actually communicate with were quite friendly. Also, I must say that the average young person has impeccable English skills! Much better than Japan, Taiwan, and even HK! If you ask anyone under 30, chances are, they will be able to help you if you have limited Korean skills.

  • @letsgowalk

    @letsgowalk

    21 күн бұрын

    I also should add that in other smaller cities, such as Gwangju and Yeosu, the people are much more friendly. This is probably true for most other countries as well. However, their level of communication with foreigners is certainly lacking compared to Seoul.

  • @passthemic1271

    @passthemic1271

    6 күн бұрын

    Mindless zombies? I mean we do be like that but we shouldn't attribute that to academic competitiveness

  • @chai298
    @chai29826 күн бұрын

    As a mom of two kids living in India , this video is giving me anxiety even to just view it. Yes we have competition here but atleast for primary kids it doesn’t get this bad !!

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    26 күн бұрын

    Good that it's not as severe as this where you are in India! Yes it was upsetting for me to watch this. Kids should not be living under tyrants.

  • @rumjhumgupta7137

    @rumjhumgupta7137

    22 күн бұрын

    I agree, very grateful its not as bad in India. I feel only after 8th grade does the real pressure of uni prep start

  • @NagajyothiKalaguri-qe2in
    @NagajyothiKalaguri-qe2in6 күн бұрын

    I didn't even study seriously until I was in 6th grade and it is due to my own interest. My mother would be dissatisfied when I was a kid because I got marks which were just passing. I would be saved by my papa every time "atleast she didnt fail!!" "Just a kid" The fact that these kids are literally going through "study focused kindergarten" is insane for me. Couldn't imagine giving up my childhood. Those are supposed to be the most carefree days of our life and these moms are turning it into hell

  • @simonem.8176
    @simonem.817626 күн бұрын

    there are very few people in this world that deserve children

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    26 күн бұрын

    it's sad that so many kids grow up under tyrants

  • @jessn.3851
    @jessn.38518 күн бұрын

    As far as I'm aware, getting into one of the top 3 universities in Korea is important for getting a good job and marrying well. Their entire future depends on how well they do on college entrance exams. That's an insane amount of pressure. And their reward? Working long hours so that they don't have time to date or start a family. It's a miserable process from start to finish.

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    Lose your youth to cram school so you can afford to steal someone else's youth with cram school. No wonder people break the cycle.

  • @Babygirl6102
    @Babygirl610217 күн бұрын

    It's so sad. Yesterday this new KZreadr I started watching, said he got into a disagreement with his mom, because he wanted to watch TV, but she wanted him to study more. Even though he already spends his time studying and wanted to watch TV because he had a little free time that day. 😢

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    15 күн бұрын

    sounds like a toxic mom who wants her son to be a study machine

  • @reylandvilla6646
    @reylandvilla664620 күн бұрын

    It is a comparing society, that is why my Korean friend said he does not like going to Korean get togethers

  • @toukendanshiwarrior2846
    @toukendanshiwarrior28465 күн бұрын

    Not to mention, most of the things they learn in school aren't needed in their lives. When will parents like them realize this? They're just wasting their kids' lives away to be obedient slaves with no joy or agency. They need to have CPS called on them and put those kids in better places. You're not raising children, you're raising robots. You want them to make money for your family? Make your own money or get a higher-ranking job.

  • @hugofriberg3445
    @hugofriberg344512 күн бұрын

    I read a news article a few months ago about a korean restaurant owner. And they shared the view of people being more rude nowadays. They said that the restaurant often had staffing issues since students offten even wouldn't tell the owner that they quit, they just stop showing up.

  • @fish441
    @fish4412 күн бұрын

    My mother is Asian, she told me that my main focus should be studying, but I remember she made me exercise, take breaks, make sure I ate well and check up on my social well-being quite often. She belived studying was a good goal, but being locked up in a room for hours was not a healthy way to look at this goal. It breaks my heart to see this happening to other Asian kids, and it makes me grateful my mother doesn't treat me like this.

  • @Priyaaa_royyyy
    @Priyaaa_royyyy5 күн бұрын

    They described my whole life. 😞 Now i am depressed for almost a decade with no degree or job and poor physical and mental health. I am not even allowed to go for walks.

  • @anetepaulakrinicka7830
    @anetepaulakrinicka78306 күн бұрын

    It remind me of a russian TV series, where a doctor gives parents a reality check that they are not raising kids but adusing them mentally and physical.

  • @randommice-rm1c3

    @randommice-rm1c3

    6 күн бұрын

    Maybe the Ukrainian one?

  • @moonchild1749
    @moonchild174927 күн бұрын

    So true, I'm from India, here there is definitely a super competitive scenario when it comes to education and employment Coaching centres and pvt. universities profiting loads from the middle class and what not Being a college student rn it definitely sucks

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    26 күн бұрын

    Feel for you man. It's really a dog eat dog world in some societies.

  • @SerenityLoman

    @SerenityLoman

    26 күн бұрын

    There is no reason to compete everyone is different and competing creates chaos in the world.

  • @rumjhumgupta7137

    @rumjhumgupta7137

    22 күн бұрын

    I would say its not as bad in India, and maybe even its improving? with knowledge that there are other possible streams that a child can go in... but i can't be sure because it depends on household.

  • @shoetoss2655
    @shoetoss26556 күн бұрын

    Thank you for spreading awareness on this subject. It’s sick and disgusting the way those witch moms laugh at the way they treat their children. If Korean society (or other East Asian cultures) want to survive, it must start changing drastically.

  • @ducckk
    @ducckk7 күн бұрын

    as a south korean person myself, i wasn't really trated this badly, (beacuse i was raised in america), but when i was in puberty, i really did still get burned out because it was normal, and my parents were hard on me, but this is a whole different level of disturbing.

  • @kbangtan45
    @kbangtan4521 күн бұрын

    i also relate to this and im not a Korean but i'm asian... i feel like our education system is stealing our childhood and our future as we need to study atleast 10 hours a day (non- school days) plus intake hours of tuition classes (cram schools) to get an A and to get into uni! Btw, don't forget the strict rules and punishments that we must face if we are late to school, didn't braid hair, skirt is short, if we wear makeup, if we brought our phone to class etc... but thank god that i go to a private school because we don't face physical punishments such as cane hits on the hands or legs like in public schools if we broke any of those rules, we would likely get detention, stand in the corridors or get suspended if we break the rules too many times. While at that, my parents also removed my room's door as they didn't want to hear out my frustration. Evenmore, just like you said, my parents would tell me to tell others that i live in our own house not rented and they would also tell me to tell i got all straight As to my relatives, when i actually didn't ... and bonus for me "yay" we would go out of home ALOT (for business work and trips) and i would also get sick ALOT because of my younger siblings (their classes get ill frequently because there's no proper hygiene among these kids) and they tell me to rest and stop studying and yet still somehow get As... i try my best... especially this year... i'm waiting for my results now. So basically i get a little support from everyone and the rest like 80% is upto me... and my parents would mock me if i don't get As...it hurts but hey, atleast they provide me with all the necessities right? Also the school gives us ALOT of homework and i barely have time to study or do other stuff, so anyone who is doing sports or does youtube is likely to get low grades... but it doesn't mean its impossible... you just gotta sacrifice mini things in order to gain the best of things. So those who are under stress like us, you've got this, especially since you are surviving in a such environment, it makes you disciplined and strong! and since i've been experiencing for over a decade and still is, the stress and this environment wasn't that noticeable until i watched videos like this! so i'm getting used to it but i don't want the future generations including my siblings to experience the same!

  • @nate-iq7dg
    @nate-iq7dg7 күн бұрын

    All I remember from my childhood is feeling anxious every day, worrying about losing a math competition, fearing my mom wouldn't love me if I didn't study even on my birthday, or stressing about getting rejected from that prestigious middle school. I still hate looking at my elementary school notebooks and diaries because my diary entries would say things like, "I want to go out and play, but Mom said I have to work on my English more." It makes me very sad. Growing up in South Korea didn't make me successful, it made me suicidal.

  • @PaulYuNow

    @PaulYuNow

    6 күн бұрын

    dude that is very sad to hear...

  • @milliedragon4418
    @milliedragon44187 күн бұрын

    And this one of reason why the birthrate is so low in sk, who would want children knowing you'll a never able to provide the best for your children, knowing the world they face.

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    I often joke "I was ripped out of perfect nonexistence for the benefit of cyberpunk corpos."

  • @thesenate1844
    @thesenate18447 күн бұрын

    Can anyone act at all suprised that such an atomised and stress filled culture has a massively falling birthrate? When women are expected to drop all the careers they've earned to raise kids that will just go through the same childhood stress they did.

  • @gustavus0013
    @gustavus00137 күн бұрын

    There are so many ways that they can do to make their kid well educated. They can do math while cooking, learn science by going outside, even educational games and toys!. Just set realistic school expectations (like behaving well, good attendance, passing grades etc).

  • @_Choco_
    @_Choco_7 күн бұрын

    Yeah, no wonder suicide rates are crazy in South Korea. Even though their population is not nearly as large as so many other countries 🤦‍♀️ im just glad I wasn't raised there.

  • @PineappleDealer37
    @PineappleDealer376 күн бұрын

    "WHY DOES OUR COUNTRY HAS THE HIGHEST SU I CI DE RATE OUT OF THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES!" The country:

  • @kimchimami

    @kimchimami

    Күн бұрын

    And lowest birth rate of the world too 😢 just so sad, I hope they start to realize

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    I often say if those numbers are to be fixed, there has to be a high "life is worth living" rate. I say the same thing to the absolutely no euthanasia crowd. I just ask them when they are going to make it not suck to be really sick, really old, or really poor. Are they going to make sure the people in pain can get really good pain pills?

  • @PineappleDealer37

    @PineappleDealer37

    9 сағат бұрын

    @@skylinefever fuck KZread

  • @Deathbytroll
    @Deathbytroll18 күн бұрын

    Tbf it’s a survival strategy. S. Korea is a nightmare urbanite society.

  • @skylinefever

    @skylinefever

    9 сағат бұрын

    This is what happens when K selection goes wrong.

  • @Nixo77
    @Nixo775 күн бұрын

    I thought my parents were strict but holy! These people are more asian than mine.

  • @skinnyrat4277
    @skinnyrat42777 күн бұрын

    The way they're laughing is so infuriating. They're sitting there and giggling about the ways they abuse their children. What the fuck dude. Some Korean media like this just pisses me off. Like that show Hello Counselor as well. Laughing about legitimately bad stuff >:(

  • @jin_cotl
    @jin_cotl5 күн бұрын

    When I was like 6-7 my grandma wouldn’t let me sleep even if it was 12am, because in her words, “I haven’t finished my homework yet”. Thank god I don’t live there anymore.

  • @am_2395
    @am_239519 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this. It's when I see things like this that I'm so grateful I was born in Brazil lol I hope things can change in Korea in the future. God bless those children 😢

  • @yurikovRUKR762
    @yurikovRUKR7625 күн бұрын

    Those moms would probably be asking the grand question once they're old: "Why isn't my children visiting me?"

  • @cupcake9483
    @cupcake94837 күн бұрын

    After watching this, it seems to me that these parents want to live THROUGH their children, more than anything. All of this abusive behavior feels very ego driven. Like, they want them to he SUPER smart not for THEIR sake, but rather to give the family (And parents, mostly) a certain "image". Plus, when you beat into your child's mind that studying is the only thing in life that matters, how on earth do you expect for them to thrive in ANYTHING else? (Social life, sports, ect) When you're that sheltered and brainwashed beginning at a very young age like that, it's hard for you to find your own identity and sense of purpose. You literally have no idea who you are other than your parents' (And society's too, for that matter) image of who they THINK you should be. Watching this made me so angry. Jeez, say you're a bad parent without saying you're a bad parent.

  • @theia1653

    @theia1653

    5 күн бұрын

    No one owns up to their failures cause narcissists will never admit to being wrong and it's a loss of face. NPD is built into the culture for thousands for years in a perpetual cycle and living for yourself requires individualism.

  • @roxana256
    @roxana256Күн бұрын

    These South Korean parents would be *shook* if they ever hear about the Finland education system.

  • @shanako-kun
    @shanako-kun7 сағат бұрын

    Why are they laughing as if it’s a joke? These are real people. The parents can’t relive their lives through their children. “Remove their doors”. “Moniter them” “they don’t die”. I want people to understand that you can’t make your child how you wish you were, it’s wrong. They are them. You are you. It’s okay to educate them and have standards, but there’s a line not to cross. Great video!!!

  • @JosephSvigos
    @JosephSvigos6 күн бұрын

    I used to live in South Korea as a little kid with Korean kids and Korean-American kids, and the all of the kids with Korean parents said that in their free time, they would just study. There were so many kids that didn’t know how to play with other kids and I.

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