Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles (mellow guitar music) - Hey, everyone, it's your girl Jenn and I am so excited to film this video for you guys because the month of May is Asian Pacific Heritage Month and in the spirit of that, I thought that it would be very timely to do the Asian American tag. I wanted to share with you guys my experience growing up Asian American and my friend Amy gave this whole concept structure and made it very simple by creating questions and so I just wanna dive right into it so let's get started. I am Korean-American. I was born and raised in Southern California. So my parents immigrated from Korea and they first moved to Chile and that's where my mom had my brother but after my parents got their green card, they were able to come to America and they had me. And so I would categorize me and my brother as first-generation because like, my parents didn't speak any English so we were truly the first generation to really grow up American here. The first experience when I realized that I was different from the rest of the kids, was when I was in first or second grade, my mom packed my favorite food which was kare rice which is basically just curry with rice and it has vegetables and meat and it's so delicious and I remember being so excited to eat it for lunchtime and when I opened the Tupperware, I remember a kid looking at it and just being so disgusted and he just called me out, he was like, "Jennifer packed poop for lunch!" and I remember being so mortified and so embarrassed and I just completely lost my appetite and I don't, I didn't even eat that lunch and when I got home, I told my Mom that I never wanted her to pack things like this again. I told her that I only wanted her to pack like Lunchables and sandwiches just like normal American food so that I would fit in. When I was younger, there was a period where I was super proud to be Korean. It happened when I was around like nine years old. My mom took me and my brother to Korea for the entire summer, and we stayed at my aunt's and it was such an amazing experience because for once like I realized like that everyone looked like me and I felt really, just like, I just felt like I connected with everybody and I remember always hanging out at this park where all the kids used to hang out and I made a lot of friends because everyone was so fascinated at the fact that I was American. And so I would bring like chapter books that I'd packed and I'd be like (speaks in foreign language), and everyone was like so impressed and it was just, it was just a really great time for me and that's when I was really just like proud of my culture and when I brought that back to America, like that, that pride stayed there for a little bit until I went to middle school and middle school was when everything just kind of changed for me. I feel like it was a lot of factors just hitting all when I was like 11. It was puberty, it was the fact that I was like chubby and then the fact that like there weren't that many Asians in my school. I remember there was a group of these boys that walked the same route as me home and I remember hating when we would like cross paths because they would always say something to me and they would say something so like racist. They would say things like "Hey chink do you wanna do my homework?" or "Hey, you dropped your calculator" and now, I wish that I had the strength to just clap back at them because at the time, I just didn't say anything, I was so scared I was, I was genuinely afraid of my, for, I was afraid for my life and I wish that I had the courage to just like stand up to them and be like "Hey yes, I did drop my calculator, thank you. "I'm really, really gonna need this when I'm just "calculating all my finances in the future" but unfortunately, I wasn't like that. I think this also crossed at the same path when my parents made me go to Korean school on Saturday and I was so pissed that they were making me and my brother go to school an extra day. Like we already had Monday through Friday and now they're adding like a whole new curriculum for Saturday and like we also, they also made us go to church every Sunday so I felt like I had no days off, like ugh! So we had to go to Korean school and there was this one instance with a teacher that just really stuck with me. She was telling us that when people ask us what our ethnicity is, we need to say that we are Korean-American. The Korean always has to be first and I remember being very unsettled by it because I felt like in my heart that I was American so I rose my hand and I told her my piece and she said, "No, you are always going to be Korean. "You're Korean-American." And I just said like, "Why can't I just be American? "I was born here, I speak the language, I don't understand." I just felt like this big distance between my culture and what I was brought into. I associated being Korean as a negative thing because number one, the bullying sucked and number two, I would see the way people would treat my parents. Like my parents didn't speak English very well. I would just see the way people would treat my parents because of their accent. People lose their temper, people get frustrated, people treat you like you're an idiot when you have an accent and it just really frustrated me and my Mom is already kind of a shy, timid person and I think when she was thrown into this world in America as like a foreign person, I think that just made her reclusive even more. One stereotype that I absolutely struggled with growing up was the model minority stereotype. The fact that all Asians are amazing at crunching numbers and they're just really great academically blah, blah, blah and I think from an outsider's perspective people might think wow like, that's actually a really good stereotype, like people just think you're really smart but it puts a lot of pressure on you especially when you are not academically smart. Like I, growing up I tried my best to be a good student. Like I would literally spend hours and hours doing my homework and all this stuff and it just wouldn't register to me. Like I was always like a B minus, C student, like one time I got a D and like, in an Asian household like that is unacceptable, like my B minuses were such disappointments to my parents and they would always compare me to like other kids and because I wasn't the best student, I felt this distance between my Asian American peers that were very studious so I just found like a new group of friends. Like friends that I can connect with artistically and creatively and obviously like there was Asian Americans there too but it was like a whole mix and it was really cool like we would, you know burn CDs for each other, we would go to shows, we'd go thrifting and I felt really blessed that I was able to have my own community in high school. Yes I can speak Korean. I would probably say I speak the equivalent of like a seven year old, maybe a six year old now. Like I know how to get by. I know, you know, how to ask for directions, order food, have like light conversation but anything with depth, I'm just like ugh like, I don't know. When I watch the Korean news, I'm just kinda like, I don't know what they're saying. They have to talk a lot slower. It was a lot better when I was living with my parents obviously, like I speak Konglish with my parents so I'll speak Korean and then I'll just fill in English words where I don't know the Korean words. I just don't understand like where did all those years of Korean school go, like, did I just bury them in a box? Like it's, I don't know but I want to change this desperately and so I'm just gonna do like an open call now. I'm looking for a Korean tutor if you are based in the Los Angeles area, I would love for you to DM me on my Instagram, it's IMJENNIM. I guess you just tell me your name, your age, what school you go to or if you did and just like