2. Q had a pretty important English test this morning and so he joined 300 some other Koreans at one of the local middle schools to sweat away two hours over a grueling listening and writing test. After the test Q showed up all exhausted and discouraged from the test and so I took my baby out for lunch.
3. Today it was drizzling outside, which was perfect. Nothing ever quite feels as relaxing as a rainy weekend, especially a rainy Sunday. I love a rainy day.
4. Q and I are quite the movie buffs and we're been waiting for the longest time for the movie "Awake" to come out. We thought it came out today. Apparently we were wrong.
5. I had my weekly lesson to plan and so I worked on my lesson while Q read his book... correction... while he slept on his book... hehehe.
6. Apparently the theme of the day was kimchi. We had kimchi jjigga for lunch and then another kind of kimchi jjigga for dinner and you know, you're always bombarded with kimchi side dishes and so it was like a kimchi eating marathon today.
7. In what started off as a casual conversation between Q and I about how we first met, turned into definitely a heavy, heavy conversation... surprisingly enough, Q was the one who kept it going for as long as it did. I had asked him if he wished I was Korean, not cause we'd speak the same language but because we'd share the same culture and thus understand each other more. He answered no.
8. I curled up to him, the tears started up, and the discussion continued... a discussion that I had once vouched to stay relaxed on but knew would eventually surface again. Just didn't expect it to resurface this soon.
9. Our discussion revealed many things. It revealed to me that Q has been thinking about a future "us". I know there's a big
10. But on that note, couldn't we find some kind of middle ground between being a Canadian wife and being a Korean wife? I mean, I think that I've adapted. I've taken from the Korean culture that that I think is good and so my mannerisms and what not as a girlfriend shows both Canadian (Western)traits and Korean traits... I'm one of many "fusion girlfriends", but how do the "fusion wives" do it?
QUESTION OF THE DAY...
What is it like being a "fusion wife"?
QUOTE OF THE DAY...
Promise yourself to live your life as a revolution and not just a process of evolution.
-- Anthony J. D'Angelo
2 comments:
Hmmm...as a "fusion wife" myself, I feel compelled to answer your question of the day. I think the experience of being a fusion wife depends on how much of a fusion husband you're married to. If you have a truly fusion husband, life is easier. If you have a very Korean husband, life can be difficult. From my experience, a successful intercultural marriage requires an understanding and empathy from both partners towards one another's cultural beliefs and lifestyles. In my case, this could only be achieved by both partners spending time in one another's "worlds".
But that is just this fusion wife's $.02. :)
Good Q Amy!...think Beloved say verry wricht things!
Post a Comment