@@YOSHlDA many Asian immigrants to western places have a deep seated hatred towards themselves because they see western cultures as superior. They could intentionally or unintentionally not speak it as much at home, or the kid could see their parents language as embarrassing and speak English at home while their parents speak something else! There's lots of reasons someone might not be able to speak their mother tongue. A lot of kids also just lose the ability after too much exposure to only English at school.
@@YOSHlDA omg the same thing happened with me but arab version. I'm not fluent but I can keep up at least a quarter of a conversation in arabic, but my parent's first language was arabic and I was born in america, so I learned English somehow instead. It's possible and I think why is because English is the most dominant language in america, but Im not sure
I experienced the same thing as a Chinese-Canadian. I didn't know how to read or write at all and I could barely talk just like what Emily went through as a kid.
experienced that as a russian-german. Born in russia and grow up in germany (grandparents germans and parents russians) even today in germany everyone think i am from russia but i feel not related to russia, and when we visited family in russia back then, everyone saw me as a german somehow no matter where i was, somehow i had the feeling for a long time that i did not belong to any acountry, but now i am older and i feel like i am german because my entire life i spend in this country and i was too young when i was in the other country. Of course i can speak Russian and german but even my english is better then my russian and this tells alot i think. But the best thing if you understand multiple languages is that you can enjoy alot of content in any way, racism is one thing but i think this affect children way more then adults.
similar here too. i can speak at the level of many a second grader but not enough to get across everything i want to say. unfortunuately it feels really hard to find any media with cantonese to practice or watch though...everything is mando
I said something similar as a kid. I asked my white mom if I could have a white dad because my brown dad didn’t match me. I was 3 and I didn’t know any better. Being half Hispanic is weird sometimes. I was pale until I started tanning at the age of 4, I actually get pretty dark.
I’m a Mexican-American (entire ancestry is Mexican. I’m not sure if I have Spanish blood or pure Mexican blood, but I am born in America) and I have experienced a bit of what Emily experienced. Ever since I was born, I was surrounded by Mexican culture. I am a mix of what Emily wished she could be, and what she actually is. I am super involved in my Mexican background, and even took up clarinet because I saw it in multiple Mexican videos my dad had. I even started learning some Mexican recipes for the future. However, when it came to speaking Spanish, that’s where I start relating to Emily. My parents taught me the occasional Spanish phrase to respond with. The basics like “Hola” “¿Como estás?” “¿Bien, y tú?” and some others, including Spanish words. Despite this, however, I never learned a lot of Spanish. Whenever my parents talked to me in Spanish, they would have to repeat themselves in English, or if I did understand them, I’d respond in English. Because I grew up in America, I was surrounded by American things, except for neighbors. While America _is_ a mixing pot, it isn’t a real diverse one, at least from my experiences so far. I grew up at schools where I was surrounded by white people, and I mean that in the politest way possible. Because of that, I had primarily white friends. The standard white skin, brown or blonde hair with brown or blue eyes, give or take one or two with dyed hair. I never had a reason to speak Spanish to other friends. The friends I knew who were Mexican spoke English, but still spoke Spanish fluently to their parents and relatives, and that makes me feel bad because, like Emily’s situation, they grew up similar to me. Luckily, I’m still young. I’m taking Spanish classes, and turning my life around language wise. I’m getting more comfortable speaking Spanish in my home, even if it’s just basic Spanish. I’m lucky that I get these opportunities, because I know not everyone is as fortunate when it comes to learning a new language
Don’t give up! I’m also Mexican-French Canadian and I was also embarrassed of my culture all my childhood but I git motivated when i learned we were going back to Mexico after 4years so that motivated me to practice my Spanish as much as possible ! Even though I was embarrassed and not too confident of my Spanish I spoke Spanish with my dad , movies in Spanish dub , music in Spanish and that helped a lot ! I improved a lot and I’m still improving! The Mexican culture is the best . I encourage you to keep learning it too!
@@c3vy_ Yo! Good job dude! I’m actually starting school at an international high school that’ll help greatly increase my Spanish knowledge, instead of the slightly limited Spanish my non-international middle school
I deeply relate to this as a Puerto-Rican American because I'm a white passing American born and raised who doesn't know any Spanish, so I feel totally disconnected from my own culture. I've basically fully assimilated into American culture only acknowledging my culture just from the fact that I know that Puerto-Rico is my heritage. The fact that people constantly deny the existence of my ethnicity by saying, "you're not Puerto-Rican, you're an American," because Puerto-Rico is under colonial control by the US just makes it even more frustrating.
same, i'm fullblooded puerto rican, but very white looking, and I barely know Spanish cuz my parents left the island at the age of 1-3. I know a little spanish.
same, my mother is Mexican and my father is Puerto-Rican so I’m Hispanic-American but I just don’t really speak Spanish. I can fully understand Spanish but I just don’t speak it in fear of getting words wrong. So when my mom talks to me I just respond in English and sometimes simple Spanish phrases.
My grandfather : speak Chinese My grandmother : speak Chinese My dad : speak Chinese My mom : speak Chinese My friends : speak Chinese Me : speak English
It's rare to actually be related to samurai! Maybe take Kendo class to honor your ancestors if you are interested?? ww 心配しないで元気出して~your family is proud of you
I’m Mexican who’s a first generation in America and never in my life did ever think someone related to my issues, this video and the comments by other Hispanics made me feel comforted in a way, thank you for sharing Emily, I feel as of this is an underrated topic.
My parents are born in Puerto Rico and I was born in Pennsylvania. I can say I’m a Puerto Rican American. As I was growing up I get nervous sometimes and I was diagnosed with Autism when I was 3, but it didn’t stop me from trying new things. Love the animation by the way. 🙂
I have symptoms of autism, but am not formally diagnosed. I can definitely relate to the notion of "disappointing" my ancestors. The way I've come to see it, my ancestors passed down a heritage to me in some sense of the word, but that does not obligate me to pass it on exactly as is. My being quite different from my ancestors does not obligate me to judge myself as a "failure" for not being who they think I should be. Come to think of it, when I hear stories about other Americans with parents from foreign countries trying to "pass on their heritage", it comes across to me not only as coercive, but downright gross. About ten years ago, my Thai partner discovered the film *Selena*, directed by Gregory Nava, which tells the story of the life of the singer Selena Perez, born in the USA to parents from Mexico. The way the film portrayed her father instilling a Mexican identity in her struck me as downright possessive. But also, I know that western countries like the USA also have a past tradition of willfully destroying the cultures of people it assimilates that is very coercive at an individual level. People should be free to be who they want to be. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk ;-)
I’m not Asian but I relate to the whole language aspect. My mom’s Croatian so she tried to get my brother and I to speak it when we were kids. But as time went on and we went to daycare we started speaking English more and more because that’s what we heard most of the day. According to my mom we used to demand she speak to us in English. Now I can understand very little. ☹️
Zanimljivo da to kažeš. Moji rođaci su rođeni u Švicarskoj, ali su čisti Hrvati i pričaju odličan hrvatski s malim švicarskim naglaskom. Uzmi u obzir da su bili okruženi s njemačkim cijelo vrijeme, ali doma je bilo čvrsto pravilo pričanja hrvatskog i to bez iznimke. Nisam siguran koliko je teško pričati materinji u drugoj državi ako su ti roditelji iz miješanog braka, no mislim da se jezik može jako lagano pričati uz par trikova i pokojom čvrstom rukom čak i u miješanom braku.
I can relate to this as a Filipino American. I grew up in America so I never learned the language so all I can say is thank you but I’ve been trying to learn the language and I love the food and culture but there’s a lot of times where I would feel closer to my American side but then my Filipino side and I would feel out of place when with my relatives. It’s nice to know a fellow asian has gone through similar experiences.
Which one, Tagalog or Bisayan? I'm not Filipino but my lady is a Filipina and I love Bisayan and I wish to speak her beautiful language. There is very few language tools to help out either because they usually focus on the national languages only.
@@mellieignacio7468 that's very surprising she tells me they are all over there! My lady tells me that everyone in visayans can easily learn english attracting alot of the call centers there in recent decades. The Philippines is such a diverse place with many cultures it's truly a beautiful country
Is that also the reason why you people only date and marry White dudes and hate Asian men?Because of your own insecurities y'all wanna merge with White people and don't even wanna give chance to Asian dudes.
omg a filipino!! i feel the exact same way. my parents immigrated to the us and then had me, so i've always wondered if i was actually filipino if i wasnt born there.
People sometimes think I'm Asian lol. Lemme tell you why. I tell people that I am mostly of the Blackfoot tribe. These idiots forgot what a native American is (even tho our school's mascot is a native). So they googled what a Blackfoot was. The first picture they saw was one of my ancestors of course. He just happened to have what Americans call "Asian eyes". Not only did they call him a girl for having two long braids, but they also assumed that he was asain. They looked at the shape of my eyes and THESE IDIOTS SAID I WAS CHINESE 💀!
@@fourtrifiveo4350 yEs i Am vErY mUcH cHiNeSe. iT's NoT LikE I hAvE aN aFrO. iT's jUsT A wEaVe. I'm native American, African American, and European American btw. A very mixed child lol.
I'm different I'm a not Bruneians to the Bruneians and not a Malaysian to the Malaysians eventhough both of the countries are Malays it's the accent ༎ຶ‿༎ຶ
this vid is relatable on so many levels. i was born in the philippines, but i moved to another country at the age of 5 and got exposed to english media. as u can predict, that influenced me a LOT, not only did my ability to speak tagalog get completely erased.. i even lost my understanding on the language and culture. i wanted to re-learn the whole language because i didnt want to embarrass my parents and i didnt want to feel disconnected from it, but i never fully committed. i always felt ashamed when i take the awful flight back to the mother land because of my relative's comments. knowing someone, and many other people, have the same experiences as me feels reassuring. Now that im older, ive been trying to learn the basics and the culture of my homeland^^
I’ve seen this video many times but have never commented. I’m a white American. I’ve never had these feelings. I don’t understand what this is like. But I appreciate and am humbled that you’ve shared your experience. I always want to be as educated as possible given my innate privilege. So thank you for sharing your story. And to every commenter that is sharing their own stories. I’m so glad to hear your voices and stories. I have a deep respect for you all. I’ll always have so much I want to learn, so thank you for helping me.
American Elementary schoolers then : "This sounds weird! What is this?!" American elementary schoolers now : BOKU WO, TSURETE TE SUSUMEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
I’m sorry man I thought when you said Chad you meant like the meme but then remembered Chad is a real country in Africa well either way God bless you and God bless Chad
I also have very similar feelings. I'm a Mexican-American who is white passing. I grew up in rural East-Texas and distanced myself from my culture. I hated going to Mexico when I was younger because I felt so out of place. People would always ask me if I was a "Gringo" and were surprised I spoke Spanish. Even at home, it always comes as a surprise when people find out that I'm Mexican. My Spanish has an accent and so I don't speak it unless necessary. It gets made fun of when I speak it with others. I think that hardest thing for me is communicating with my parents. I find it hard and often struggle finding the words that I just get frustrated and give up. I reply to them in English most of the time if I can. I feel like I can't go back and speak with my family in Mexico because they resent me for never coming back to see them. It has been 10 years since I've been and I haven't spoken a word to my cousins.
I truly appreciate Emily’s mom trying to introduce Korean music to others because I’m more mature and I like to listen to all kinds of music that life has to offer, but school-era me can totally relate to not being that one person that brings in something that makes you “different” and labeled as weird. Especially since I grew up in a time where coming out was not accepted nor was being into anime (other than DBZ)
“A shame?! How many languages do you know lady?!” Every bilingual in a nutshell. Cause gosh darn it you better know at least three languages before coming at me I’m both extremely happy and terrified that so many can, in fact “come at me”.
Wow, I cried watching this. Thank you for posting. The analog of the potted plants as cultures that we nurture is really apt. I am a Filipino American who never learned the language and grew up also hearing what a 'shame' it was I couldn't speak OR understand Tagalog. To some degree, it's true I wish I had learned, but so I could keep the connection to that part of my identity. But when I or my parents are BLAMED for it, it does make me mad and resentful and I think it's just really disrespectful to the reality that multi cultural people grow up with. I have a lot of strong feelings about it now that I am older because 1) I am going to visit the Philippines soon for the first time since I was, like, a baby. And I feel so weird about it, and realizing I am kind of scared about it. I am excited but I am definitely an impostor or at least feel that way. 2) I have a baby now who is white (Russian)/Filipino and I have just all sorts of thoughts about how to keep him connected to his culture/identity, and feeling bad I can't even pass on Tagalog. I am trying hard to make sure he learns Russian since my husband speaks it at least. I cried when you said you once told your parents you wished they were white. Maybe because I identify with it, maybe also because I'm afraid of hearing it from my own son someday.
im hispanic and i connect with this video so much it has me in the feels ... parents moved from peru to the US when i was not even 2 yet, and i actually refused to learn english as a toddler until elementary school, then i refused to speak spanish and became embarassed by my culture. between 2013-2019 i never had a real hispanic friend. i was in this very hispanic church scouts troop in middle school for a while, but i never connected with the girls and felt like a loner but it's more cus i'm shy and isolate myself more than anything. i was never bullied for being hispanic, when some white kids in a day care chased me around with questions and wanting me to speak spanish, i hated that, but i cant call them racist cus they were just curious little kids. i am hella lucky that in 2020, i made an online friend who is peruvian like me, except he grew up there and moved to the US as a teenager, as opposed to me moving as a toddler. he's fluent in english and just has an accent while i understand most spanish i just feel insecure about it because of my refusal to speak it as a kid. he's really helped me let go of my shame and that what i've gone through is understandable, and it's never too late to relearn. so sometimes we have late night voice chats where it's just us speaking spanish and sometimes he's impressed with how natural i sound and that i've improved a lot. so i feel super lucky for that. as a kid i didnt like going to peru every summer but we haven't gone since covid and now i miss it more than ever :(
The vicious cycle of not trying because you feel like you sound stupid and never getting better which only makes you sound even more stupid is extremely relatable. I used to speak more Macedonian as a kid but because I lived in America (even though I did interact with Macedonian American family friends) I eventually lost my ability to speak well and only got worse with time due to the anxiety attempting to speak brought. I got even more embarrassed when I learned I had a thick American accent when speaking, which singled me out even if I spoke, and I completely thought I had a Macedonian accent when speaking.
My mum: "Learn to speak Spanish" Me: *goes and learns French* Me to my mum: "Je ne veux pas apprendre Espagnol" My mum: *fluent in French as well* Me: *le gasp*
Me: Filipino-American My Parents: Don’t teach me their language or culture Also My Parents: Disappointed that I’m not magically bilingual Me: ( ; - ; )ノ
To add to the irony, I'm a white American, but I lived in the Philippines for 2 years as a missionary and speak Hiligaynon, Tagalog, and Karaya fluently and picked up on a lot of aspects of Filipino culture. Ang puso kong pinoy
I'm a Mexican teen born in the US. My parents are both Mexican, though my father was born in America too. I had the same issue with language as my mother's side of my family mostly speak just Spanish, while my dad's side mostly know both English and Spanish. I always have a good time with my dad's side of the family. But whenever I go to my Mom's side, it's kinda awkward. My cousins know English like me, but some of my uncles and aunts don't, so I don't really talk to them that much. Whenever I do speak Spanish, I sometimes make mistakes, and whenever i speak it, one of my uncles or aunts say, "You sound like a white boy." And yeah, they're not wrong, but it still hurts a little. I've gotten better with my accent, but they still think the same thing. I hope I get better. Also, nice video! It was amazing, and I hope you have a lovely year!
this might make sense because of the Japanese invasion on more long ago, which some of koreans, still hate the Japanese for, so basically making them more anti-anime or anti-japanese
@@koto485 I think it's more of the fact that a lot of Asian elders still think anime = cartoon = for kids. But even if they didn't think it that way, even as anime is reaching mainstream status, they still think that having a career related to it is not a viable path in life, that it should just stay a hobby. I'm Indonesian, we got fucked over by 3.5 years of Japanese colonialization, the dismissive attitude towards anime is not related to it.
haha, had an opposite experience. as a bug-eyed asian person, a friend of a friend once asked me, "are your eyes really that big or is that your glasses?"
I'm Indian American (Tamil, to be specific), and a child of immigrants. I have also faced numerous identity crises because of it. Another thing added to that was that many Americans do not consider Indians to be Asian, even though we are in Asia. I am still dealing with it, but am also learning to balance my Western and Eastern identity. This video helped me a lot, thank you!
Well what the fuck? Here in Malaysia, India is definitely considered Asian. We’re Asian ourselves PS: the drawings of Emiri are so adorable someone give 2005 Emiri a hug🥰
I mean I think Americans know that India is Asian, but in American English Asian with no specification refers to east Asian while Indians would be considered south Asian. But if you said South Asian Americans should know that you're referring to like India/Bangladesh/Pakistan area. Southeast Asian also is a distin region to Americans. I think Asian being defaulted to east Asian is just a matter of population and the fact that many Chinese people immigranted in the 1800s for the US.
yeah Asian is a stupid label, Asia has like more than half the worlds population, and there are so many different ethnicities in Asia. The Middle East is in Asia, but people don't consider them to be Asian either.
i come back to this video every once and a while because i relate soso much to this :( i’m a poc , but i don’t feel connected to my culture at all. i was bullied a lot by my peers because i don’t really fit the general “look” for my ethnicity (i’m not even 100% sure of it anymore) , and never really felt like i could fit in. i wasn’t white for my white peers, but not really like the peers of my ethnicity. i see so many people celebrating their culture, or at least knowing about their traditions, but i really don’t and it’s makes me feel very alone and sad when i think about it a lot :( cultures are something that have always interested me , but when it comes to my own i feel so disconnected. this video really helps me feel less alone , i love your content soso much emily !!! 💞💞💞
This video really resonated with me, I’m full Korean and live in the US, but everyone in my family says I should “like Korean food” or whatever, it’s exhausting. I don’t speak any Korean at all and want to start learning, but never found when to start. My school is depressing, and everyone just expects me to be better than I am. It’s hard. I never had any friends I could rely on at school. I’ve always wanted to visit Korea and maybe learn more about the culture, but at this rate with everything on a tight schedule, I’m afraid that it’ll never happen. Thanks for this video, even if it was posted a while ago, it really helps.
Yea, im filipino/American and my mom speaks filipino and i cant understand it, my dad is American and he has no clue what she says. As a kid i kept asking my mom to teach me about speaking her language she said she will teach me, but she never did so I tried to copy her but she shouted at me saying that's inappropriate even tho i had no idea what it means.
I cried while watching this video because I am in the same situation as you ! (yeah I am writting this comment two years later haha) It's the first time I see a video that speaks about the language barrier in a crisis of identity! And it fits so well with what I live as a French-Morrocan! The fact is that as a Morrocan, I do not have to learn one more complicated language, but three (Darija, Arabic and Amazigh) ! It is so haaaaaarrrrrrrdddd to live with, especially when I don't speak any of them fluently!!
I’m Filipino and grew up in the Philippines but I don’t look or act like it and my Filipino is horrible. My mom is half Canadian and Filipino and my dad Chinese. Every time I interact with someone who isn’t Filipino they are always like wow you’re really in touch with you Filipino roots but when it’s with a Filipino they always think that I’m like Australian or British especially considering my accent. It’s been hard dealing with that and I’ve been going through similar experiences as you had when you were younger. Thank you for making this video as it really helped me feel a lot better about myself! Thank you so much!
@@randomperson4050 How scotland and america are close because they speak the same language? Oh I dont mean Filipino and Mexico speak the same language, it's just an example
Torlak Kårstad Woah calm down there mister badass, You are so cool... I’m jealous. No but seriously it isn’t a big deal for most people but if a person doesn’t do it they might be more timid or just feel a certain amount of respect should be given but personally I wouldn’t stand for it either and I feel as if most people (especially men) would stare right back to reciprocate their feelings about what was occurring.
Dude… if someone stares at me i always say to my head "Does he/she hate me we never met, okay okay relax... deep breath just dont make eye contact and everything will be fine" i get nervous really i always think that did i do something wrong or have something wrong with me :/
This is one my favourite videos of yours. I can’t express how much I relate to this, especially in the language department. I’m a Sri Lankan Canadian btw. The weird thing is that when you forget about your own culture, you naturally get more interested in other cultures. I’ve been speaking French since forever and love Japanese music. Idk how I’ll change but I just wanted you to know that you weren’t the only kid like that 😊
I went through similar experiences as a half-Vietnamese Puertorican kid growing up. Great to see this video being made the way it was. It was very relatable!
The whole "understanding a language but not being able to speak it" and "language barrier with family" and "being compared to other people " and the SHAME....I can very much relate too (We love you for who you are Emily and who you will be ❤)
I relate too my gosh every time I go to my hometown(?) Me and my sister (my brother learnt the language and left me and my sister in the dust) would always have a hard time. But all our cousins from my mum's side also spoke English so we would talk to them,...... Then get scolded for "preventing them from learning the language" Also the whole "I want to be white" thing is very common, but I feel like there's also some people that say "I wish I was Asian" (East Asian) and I am partly ashamed of myself for thinking this way but it's true. I think a lot of people don't really talk about it so I see Emily as being brave for coming out and talking about it. Good on you Emily♥️♥️
I enjoyed your video immenselly. I'm Uruguayan and for very odd circumstances, I am of two nations, Uruguay and the US. I first came to the US with my parents at age 5 years and 10 months, then went back at age 10, then came back at age 17. To say that I was totally lost and felt uprooted repeatedly is an understatement. I lost friedships so many times I lost count. But fortunately I turned out 100% fluent in both languages, yet with a lot of heartache and emotional upheaval too. Yet despite all this, I found myself identifying with you so much. I guffawed out loud at several points because I could see your situations and empathize with you. I laughed not at you but with you, feeling I somehow knew that even though you felt strange, you also knew who you were and were fine with it. And it was exhilarating to hear what you went through and how you overcame it. Well, just to say I loved your life story. I will subscribe to your channel and I look forward to many good moments during your videos.
This was so incredibly resonant with me. I've been considering doing a video essay on my own channel about my Asian-American identity crisis, and I have to say, this video was such an inspiration. It mirrors my own journey so closely (with the exception of my being biracially Japanese and Filipino, so no language aside from English was ever spoken at home) that I can't help but see how universal this issue is among first-generation American kids. Thank you so much for sharing all of this. It's truly so powerful.
Family: “oh you don’t know Vietnamese fluently? What are you w h i t e” Me: *tries to speak viet and mess up a word* Family: *makes fun of me so I feel stupid and stops learning* “why aren’t you learning viet?”
Ahh, same! Whenever I try to speak it, it always sounds weird and just plain broken and I just end up not speaking it at all because of how it sounds. I try to mimic my parents Vietnamese accent whenever they say things but it’s always hard;;;
I have a similar story: -I was born in china -I moved to canada when i was 1 -I have chinese side of family -I know nothing about chinese culture -My chinese side of the family knows how to speak chinese -i dont know how to speak to most of them -I NEED HELP
I am filipino and I was born in Britain & I also don’t know how to speak my language & so I always get super embarrassed when I meet new family members as they don’t speak English. I also don’t know a lot about filipino culture unfortunately, so I feel your pain
i love the symbolization of the different nationalitys as flowers so much omg i kinda relate to this as a hispanic american feeling like i should learn spanish because more than half of my family only speaks that. this video is like so good
i am south korean too! my mom is also sometimes worried that i mostly speak english with her but she always says if i talk english 'He! speak korean!' and then sometimes i found it harder or just still speak english but now times i trie to leurn more and speak more korean its a nice launguage, (i am not to good in writing enlinh sorry lol) i whas born in korea but we where a travel family and traveld over the world. I also lived in korea but after years my parents wanted to travel again. My mother is korean but my dad is netherlads so we now live some years in the netherlands. So i get your problems too! Only because i lived now in netherlands and traveled my korean also went down. I whas better at it when i whas younger because we where living in korea. but now i live in the Netherlands it went down only i still have the korean culture in my mind. So i have to deal with this with three laungauges. But i love korea! they have good food and everything. So i get your feelings :) its oke to not be that good at korean just like me:) i watch korean tv shows with engilsh descripton their are tv shows to leurn more korean
I watch your videos here and there when they pop up on my feed this video today was one of them, I’m hispanic and I grew up until a certain age on a island I felt a real connection with this video because it is the same in all aspects I’m trying to get better for my grandpas sake as the English to Spanish is not working well as it used to since my detachment but thank you for making the video I thought I was really alone on something like this…..
Oh man, what a touching story, glad you summon courage to openly speak about it like this. Can relate as Tatar/Russian person, who very rarely and poorly speak on tatar language, but can understand most of it. Identity crisis is such a weird thing. Even if you don't care, you feel bad about you parents or close ones about other people asking them uncomfortable questions.
I love that you used arirang as the end song. I remember one time my sister screaming to me "Why do I have an Asian family?!" It absolutely broke my heart, while starting some questions about my own cultural identity. Having pressure from both sides can be difficult. I still deal with it sometimes. But i've learned now to live in both worlds, and not being ashamed.
This video is able to connect and reach out to anyone of a different ethnicity in America and feel the same bond and struggles. On the other hand, things like this can bring the same people together to grow together. I'm complete mexican ethnicity, but I'm born & raised American, and I can only say broken, basic around the house spanish, but I want to get better so I can be with the relatives and friends instead of being a "no sabo" kid. Everyone should bond with where they came from so that the can celebrate the past, present, and all to come.
Welp..... I kept watching and watching until i eventually learned how to speak and spell the words in the language of a cartoon i watched back in 2010 or 2009, (only thing was remaining was asking my parents about what those words did mean)
Lol. With me I have the complete opposite. All of my friends and I are total weebs. We all are anime obsessed. So usually our classmates ask us that question 😂
My parents: *talks in Vietnamese so that I could eventually learn* Me: *replies in English* My grandparents: *actually learn English so that they could communicate with me and my cousins* Thanks grandparents
I’m Bangladeshi-Pakistani-Arab-American and it’s extremely confusing for me bc my grandparents and parents speak different languages and my grandparents are always bugging me to learn all these different languages and I’m not that interested in my culture (or the clothes there itchy 😭), so I can completely relate
I’ve also had a similar identity crisis. I’m half Mexican and half Japanese (My mom is Mexican and my Dad is Japanese) and I was born in the U.S. Meaning I felt the pressure from my Japanese half to be super smart and gifted and know the language and be super in touch with all the Japanese traditions. And for my Mexican half the expectations were also to learn the language and the cultural traditions, but also to make my family proud and have a super successful job in order to support my family. And I’m also the artist child out of my other siblings who want to be scientists or doctors and it just made me feel super disconnected to both my Mexican and my Japanese roots.
Classmate: Yo man. Can you read this? *Shows Chinese* Me: Nah man. I don't know how to read in Chinese. Classmate: I thought you were Asian. Me: Dude. I'm from Pakistan. Classmate: So does that mean you're not Asian? Me: *:/*
@@zeno.7519 I actually remember referring to my Indian friend as Asian and he got so mad at me and everyone (including my other Indian friends) kinda made fun of him for not knowing that I was correct 😂 EDIT: We were in high school at the time, so he should have known that by then.
@@zeno.7519 same with philipino. People seem to closer relate us with being latino when we are still asian. Also, the lack of chopsticks is another thing. One of my asian friends tried arguing with me that I'm not asian because pinoy people don't use chopsticks, it was honestly a rediculous conversation between 5th graders, but it made me question my identity. Also, even though it was between 5th graders, i've no doubt that some adults believe it too because where would my friend have got it from if it wasn't from his parents.
15 year old me: A Filipino living in the Philippine whose first language is English and speaks without a Filipino accent. Grandmother: Learn tagalog, be proud of being Filipino Me: Proceeds to learn German and Japanese.
Me: *is American* My grandparents: *are American* My ancestry: *Every relative American since the early 1900s* My grandparents: Haven’t you learned more G E R M A N than that?!
Mood lol, I wish I was as good at german as my brother. It makes me self conscious when he has to walk me through what he's saying to me, even though me and him are the only ones trying to learn the language properly
@@Honey_Valentine dont feel bad about it. i live in germany and i barely understand how to correctly speak it myself, because there is not a single thing that makes sense about german
Everytime I see those type of comments, I, as a German, really feel the urge to help people learn my native language if they want to learn it idk why it’s just- ;-;
@@gabrieljustus8869 i can relate becouse when i was learning german in school i had no idea how i got all good grades in it, it made no sense to me and when the reversed genders in grammar came i wanted to say fuck it im out
Dude, once my Mandarin teacher asked me where I was from and I replied "Texas." I looked her dead in the eye and we stared at each other for a good 20 seconds.
Ever get the "no, where are you really from?" lol its badly worded, so I just let the loop continue for as long as possible. Gotta enjoy the little things
SolracJ88 No, I just get more questions going back in my history. Where are you from? Where did you grow up? Where were you born? Where are your parents from? I honestly didn’t notice what they were getting at so I’ve had this exchange with multiple people and one even chuckled like I was giving the wrong answers. I wasn’t being difficult, I was just answering the questions being asked. Now that I know what it’s about, I wish I was third or fourth generation so I could just keep going.
Asian American: Can’t speak their language really well.
Duolingo: Come, this is no place to die
top tier comment
carot meme well let’s wait and see. If this can get to top tier
Lol
XD dude that’s funny
Sadly, Duolingo doesn't have good Korean learning.
*So I'm learning it off a Discord server*
My Mom’s side: “You’re too White to be Hispanic”
My Dad’s Side: Your’re dark to be white”
Me: “WHAT AM I THEN?!?!”
Grey lol
Bruh im Mexican but i can barely speak any Spanish
Beautiful. That's what.
Human
valid
whether you like it or not,
you will always be valid 👏😔
Omg right
Man. As a Korean American myself I found this so relatable. Especially the part where people teased me for not knowing Korean. This was so cathartic
How can you not know it when your parents are Korean and know the language it’s so bizzare to me
@@YOSHlDA many Asian immigrants to western places have a deep seated hatred towards themselves because they see western cultures as superior. They could intentionally or unintentionally not speak it as much at home, or the kid could see their parents language as embarrassing and speak English at home while their parents speak something else! There's lots of reasons someone might not be able to speak their mother tongue. A lot of kids also just lose the ability after too much exposure to only English at school.
@@YOSHlDA some people have english as their first language.
@@ilikewinter20 but their parents are Korean so 1st language they should learn is Korean not English how did it happen
@@YOSHlDA omg the same thing happened with me but arab version. I'm not fluent but I can keep up at least a quarter of a conversation in arabic, but my parent's first language was arabic and I was born in america, so I learned English somehow instead. It's possible and I think why is because English is the most dominant language in america, but Im not sure
I experienced the same thing as a Chinese-Canadian. I didn't know how to read or write at all and I could barely talk just like what Emily went through as a kid.
Im also a Chinese-Canadian :0 :)
may be a chinese american instead of a canadian but i still can barely talk cantonese as well lol
@@DuchessEnder same heree:))
experienced that as a russian-german. Born in russia and grow up in germany (grandparents germans and parents russians) even today in germany everyone think i am from russia but i feel not related to russia, and when we visited family in russia back then, everyone saw me as a german somehow no matter where i was, somehow i had the feeling for a long time that i did not belong to any acountry, but now i am older and i feel like i am german because my entire life i spend in this country and i was too young when i was in the other country.
Of course i can speak Russian and german but even my english is better then my russian and this tells alot i think.
But the best thing if you understand multiple languages is that you can enjoy alot of content in any way, racism is one thing but i think this affect children way more then adults.
similar here too. i can speak at the level of many a second grader but not enough to get across everything i want to say. unfortunuately it feels really hard to find any media with cantonese to practice or watch though...everything is mando
Emily’s Dad : why don’t you have more Korean friends
My Dad : why don’t you have any friends
Bruh same
lol good comment you deserve a like
You will now never know why I got a 100 likes
oof thats relatable
i can be your friend -w-
"I wish I had white parents"
BRUH I SPAT MY DRINK OUT. I'M NOT EVER YOUR FATHER BUT THAT HURT
Bruh u got hearted by the queen.
@Aimal Tabassam I know
J4studios x4 I know
@Towerbattles kid I know
I said something similar as a kid. I asked my white mom if I could have a white dad because my brown dad didn’t match me. I was 3 and I didn’t know any better. Being half Hispanic is weird sometimes. I was pale until I started tanning at the age of 4, I actually get pretty dark.
I’m a Mexican-American (entire ancestry is Mexican. I’m not sure if I have Spanish blood or pure Mexican blood, but I am born in America) and I have experienced a bit of what Emily experienced. Ever since I was born, I was surrounded by Mexican culture. I am a mix of what Emily wished she could be, and what she actually is. I am super involved in my Mexican background, and even took up clarinet because I saw it in multiple Mexican videos my dad had. I even started learning some Mexican recipes for the future. However, when it came to speaking Spanish, that’s where I start relating to Emily. My parents taught me the occasional Spanish phrase to respond with. The basics like “Hola” “¿Como estás?” “¿Bien, y tú?” and some others, including Spanish words. Despite this, however, I never learned a lot of Spanish. Whenever my parents talked to me in Spanish, they would have to repeat themselves in English, or if I did understand them, I’d respond in English. Because I grew up in America, I was surrounded by American things, except for neighbors. While America _is_ a mixing pot, it isn’t a real diverse one, at least from my experiences so far. I grew up at schools where I was surrounded by white people, and I mean that in the politest way possible. Because of that, I had primarily white friends. The standard white skin, brown or blonde hair with brown or blue eyes, give or take one or two with dyed hair. I never had a reason to speak Spanish to other friends. The friends I knew who were Mexican spoke English, but still spoke Spanish fluently to their parents and relatives, and that makes me feel bad because, like Emily’s situation, they grew up similar to me. Luckily, I’m still young. I’m taking Spanish classes, and turning my life around language wise. I’m getting more comfortable speaking Spanish in my home, even if it’s just basic Spanish. I’m lucky that I get these opportunities, because I know not everyone is as fortunate when it comes to learning a new language
Don’t give up! I’m also Mexican-French Canadian and I was also embarrassed of my culture all my childhood but I git motivated when i learned we were going back to Mexico after 4years so that motivated me to practice my Spanish as much as possible ! Even though I was embarrassed and not too confident of my Spanish I spoke Spanish with my dad , movies in Spanish dub , music in Spanish and that helped a lot ! I improved a lot and I’m still improving! The Mexican culture is the best . I encourage you to keep learning it too!
@@c3vy_ Yo! Good job dude! I’m actually starting school at an international high school that’ll help greatly increase my Spanish knowledge, instead of the slightly limited Spanish my non-international middle school
@@c3vy_Tu parles Français ? Sinon il n'est jamais trop tard pour apprendre !
@@ErkinBeg oui je parles français , j’habite au Québec . Trop tard pour apprendre quoi?
@@c3vy_ Rien dutout, je t'encourageais à apprendre le Français si ce n'était pas le cas. C'est déjà bien que tu parles une langue de tes parents !
I deeply relate to this as a Puerto-Rican American because I'm a white passing American born and raised who doesn't know any Spanish, so I feel totally disconnected from my own culture. I've basically fully assimilated into American culture only acknowledging my culture just from the fact that I know that Puerto-Rico is my heritage. The fact that people constantly deny the existence of my ethnicity by saying, "you're not Puerto-Rican, you're an American," because Puerto-Rico is under colonial control by the US just makes it even more frustrating.
same, i'm fullblooded puerto rican, but very white looking, and I barely know Spanish cuz my parents left the island at the age of 1-3. I know a little spanish.
same, my mother is Mexican and my father is Puerto-Rican so I’m Hispanic-American but I just don’t really speak Spanish. I can fully understand Spanish but I just don’t speak it in fear of getting words wrong. So when my mom talks to me I just respond in English and sometimes simple Spanish phrases.
@@kkslider730 At least you actually understand the language.
@@gabetalks9275 Spanish isn’t hard,
@@EperogiLimousine Learning any language is always hard. My grandmother barely spoke any English, yet I was never able to understand her.
My grandfather : speak Chinese
My grandmother : speak Chinese
My dad : speak Chinese
My mom : speak Chinese
My friends : speak Chinese
Me : speak English
Oof
@Zach Crom same here...
Duo: speak Chinese or die
#relatable
So relatable.
Me: Japanese
Also me: Can’t use Samurai sword
Ancestors: *Shame*
SHAME
Ishigami Yu no! I like japan!
I sub to u
Me: Korean
also me: *can use anything as a weapon and uses it well*
ancestors: *proud?*
It's rare to actually be related to samurai! Maybe take Kendo class to honor your ancestors if you are interested?? ww 心配しないで元気出して~your family is proud of you
I’m Mexican who’s a first generation in America and never in my life did ever think someone related to my issues, this video and the comments by other Hispanics made me feel comforted in a way, thank you for sharing Emily, I feel as of this is an underrated topic.
My parents are born in Puerto Rico and I was born in Pennsylvania. I can say I’m a Puerto Rican American. As I was growing up I get nervous sometimes and I was diagnosed with Autism when I was 3, but it didn’t stop me from trying new things. Love the animation by the way. 🙂
I have symptoms of autism, but am not formally diagnosed. I can definitely relate to the notion of "disappointing" my ancestors.
The way I've come to see it, my ancestors passed down a heritage to me in some sense of the word, but that does not obligate me to pass it on exactly as is. My being quite different from my ancestors does not obligate me to judge myself as a "failure" for not being who they think I should be.
Come to think of it, when I hear stories about other Americans with parents from foreign countries trying to "pass on their heritage", it comes across to me not only as coercive, but downright gross. About ten years ago, my Thai partner discovered the film *Selena*, directed by Gregory Nava, which tells the story of the life of the singer Selena Perez, born in the USA to parents from Mexico. The way the film portrayed her father instilling a Mexican identity in her struck me as downright possessive.
But also, I know that western countries like the USA also have a past tradition of willfully destroying the cultures of people it assimilates that is very coercive at an individual level.
People should be free to be who they want to be. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk ;-)
My parents: "Learn Chinese goddamnit"
Me: *Angry italian noise*
PESTO DE QESTO DI MAMA
Kasaisho did u know that Chinese is the first hardest language to learn
Me chupa un huevo la pasta learn spanish *Angry south American noises*
My mum: "learn to speak Spanish"
Me: Angry French and English noises
JJGeorgeG GJ did u know that I’m chinese
"My dad would call out in Korean and I would call back in-"
My sleep deprived brain: "American ..... wait...."
Well if they mean the Ethnicity, then it is the correct use. If language, then wrong.
I’m not Asian but I relate to the whole language aspect. My mom’s Croatian so she tried to get my brother and I to speak it when we were kids. But as time went on and we went to daycare we started speaking English more and more because that’s what we heard most of the day. According to my mom we used to demand she speak to us in English. Now I can understand very little. ☹️
Not to be a dick but what is a Croatian?
A person from Croatia, a country which is located in Europe
@@malikthemadmana South slavic country
Zanimljivo da to kažeš. Moji rođaci su rođeni u Švicarskoj, ali su čisti Hrvati i pričaju odličan hrvatski s malim švicarskim naglaskom. Uzmi u obzir da su bili okruženi s njemačkim cijelo vrijeme, ali doma je bilo čvrsto pravilo pričanja hrvatskog i to bez iznimke. Nisam siguran koliko je teško pričati materinji u drugoj državi ako su ti roditelji iz miješanog braka, no mislim da se jezik može jako lagano pričati uz par trikova i pokojom čvrstom rukom čak i u miješanom braku.
@@malikthemadmantell me you’re American without telling me you’re American:
I can relate to this as a Filipino American. I grew up in America so I never learned the language so all I can say is thank you but I’ve been trying to learn the language and I love the food and culture but there’s a lot of times where I would feel closer to my American side but then my Filipino side and I would feel out of place when with my relatives. It’s nice to know a fellow asian has gone through similar experiences.
Which one, Tagalog or Bisayan? I'm not Filipino but my lady is a Filipina and I love Bisayan and I wish to speak her beautiful language. There is very few language tools to help out either because they usually focus on the national languages only.
@@d3thkn1ghtmcgee74 I’ve been studying tagalog haha. I’ve never heard of bisayan so I’ll have to look into that!
@@mellieignacio7468 that's very surprising she tells me they are all over there! My lady tells me that everyone in visayans can easily learn english attracting alot of the call centers there in recent decades.
The Philippines is such a diverse place with many cultures it's truly a beautiful country
Is that also the reason why you people only date and marry White dudes and hate Asian men?Because of your own insecurities y'all wanna merge with White people and don't even wanna give chance to Asian dudes.
omg a filipino!! i feel the exact same way. my parents immigrated to the us and then had me, so i've always wondered if i was actually filipino if i wasnt born there.
So basically Im an asian american, and this other guy is like, “you’re not asian you don’t have squinty eyes!”
and I got so mad ;-;
People sometimes think I'm Asian lol. Lemme tell you why.
I tell people that I am mostly of the Blackfoot tribe. These idiots forgot what a native American is (even tho our school's mascot is a native). So they googled what a Blackfoot was. The first picture they saw was one of my ancestors of course. He just happened to have what Americans call "Asian eyes". Not only did they call him a girl for having two long braids, but they also assumed that he was asain. They looked at the shape of my eyes and THESE IDIOTS SAID I WAS CHINESE 💀!
@@mrpotatomansoul2577 🅱️ruh moment
You're like an anime character! 🙃
@@fourtrifiveo4350 yEs i Am vErY mUcH cHiNeSe. iT's NoT LikE I hAvE aN aFrO. iT's jUsT A wEaVe.
I'm native American, African American, and European American btw. A very mixed child lol.
@@daylenhigman8680 anime characters have them 👁️👄👁️ eyes
The biggest problem is when you are not “American” for the Americans but not “Korean” for the Koreans
Yup
The Chinese have this term called Jook-sing or zuk-sing (竹升). It means, "bamboo" which in Chinese, its a negative connotation with Westernized Asians.
Felt that one, but German
It funny because "American" doesnt truly mean anything unless you white or black.
I'm different I'm a not Bruneians to the Bruneians and not a Malaysian to the Malaysians eventhough both of the countries are Malays it's the accent ༎ຶ‿༎ຶ
this vid is relatable on so many levels. i was born in the philippines, but i moved to another country at the age of 5 and got exposed to english media. as u can predict, that influenced me a LOT, not only did my ability to speak tagalog get completely erased.. i even lost my understanding on the language and culture. i wanted to re-learn the whole language because i didnt want to embarrass my parents and i didnt want to feel disconnected from it, but i never fully committed. i always felt ashamed when i take the awful flight back to the mother land because of my relative's comments. knowing someone, and many other people, have the same experiences as me feels reassuring. Now that im older, ive been trying to learn the basics and the culture of my homeland^^
I’ve seen this video many times but have never commented. I’m a white American. I’ve never had these feelings. I don’t understand what this is like.
But I appreciate and am humbled that you’ve shared your experience. I always want to be as educated as possible given my innate privilege. So thank you for sharing your story. And to every commenter that is sharing their own stories. I’m so glad to hear your voices and stories. I have a deep respect for you all. I’ll always have so much I want to learn, so thank you for helping me.
American Elementary schoolers then : "This sounds weird! What is this?!"
American elementary schoolers now : BOKU WO, TSURETE TE SUSUMEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Demon Slayer op!
Overrated
@@gavin1721 stop being a hater, just dont watch it if you don't like it
Overrated
anime weebs in school is nothing new
Emily's older bro is literally the most badass person ever.
"Fight me" on the recommended list
i do that too. one thing worst than looking someone in the eye is them looking at me
You know what they say about bald people
*They trade their hair for power*
@@squidpedia8682 Yeah, big power is given to few chosen ones who sacrifice there hair.
Yessee
I FELT THIS SO MUCH! Like basically all the points she covered, except for my parents being Vietnamese I can relate!
As a Chadian-Canadian, this is so relatable. I have always had communication problems with my family. I couldn't even hold myself in a conversation.
I’m sorry man I thought when you said Chad you meant like the meme but then remembered Chad is a real country in Africa well either way God bless you and God bless Chad
@@RainOperator938 GIGA CHAD CANADIAN
My grand parents used to: speak Chinese
Me: replies back in English
Years later
I speak Chinese
Grandparents: learn english
how the turn tables
This is a sad story =((
They should pick one.
Yeah this is the exact reason i dont know any chinese at all. My grandma wants to practice her english rather than teach me cantonese
@@lilliantrinh8221 Ah I see you're a person of culture as well. Memento
Emily: crying over an 88%
Me when I get an 65% in middle school: hell yeah
As long as I don't utterly fail then I'm fine
asia 101 welcome to hk
Me getting a 26% on a sundanese test:
Im not suprised, this was bound to happen
Me get 25% out of 100%: FUCK YEAHHH!!!!!!
The highest percentage I have in school is 91% percentage for Life Orientation
I also have very similar feelings. I'm a Mexican-American who is white passing. I grew up in rural East-Texas and distanced myself from my culture. I hated going to Mexico when I was younger because I felt so out of place. People would always ask me if I was a "Gringo" and were surprised I spoke Spanish. Even at home, it always comes as a surprise when people find out that I'm Mexican. My Spanish has an accent and so I don't speak it unless necessary. It gets made fun of when I speak it with others.
I think that hardest thing for me is communicating with my parents. I find it hard and often struggle finding the words that I just get frustrated and give up. I reply to them in English most of the time if I can. I feel like I can't go back and speak with my family in Mexico because they resent me for never coming back to see them. It has been 10 years since I've been and I haven't spoken a word to my cousins.
I truly appreciate Emily’s mom trying to introduce Korean music to others because I’m more mature and I like to listen to all kinds of music that life has to offer, but school-era me can totally relate to not being that one person that brings in something that makes you “different” and labeled as weird. Especially since I grew up in a time where coming out was not accepted nor was being into anime (other than DBZ)
“A shame?! How many languages do you know lady?!” Every bilingual in a nutshell. Cause gosh darn it you better know at least three languages before coming at me
I’m both extremely happy and terrified that so many can, in fact “come at me”.
i know four but would be ashamed saying this, learning languages can be harder for someone and this is absolutely fine! :(
I feel that i speak 4 languages
Boi if my kid doesn't know my nativ languag and feels ashamed of it, I whould be like " kid I barely know the language and I studied it"
Oof i know english,spanish,a lil japanesse,french and a small little bit of portuguese
Sorry i aint bragging
Being a polygot is nc (me with 5 language)
My mom: Chinese
My dad: chinese
My parents: why don’t you speak French/Spanish
Me: *confused*
Lol
Same my mom told me te learn a new language
Felt that
Lol same
Atleast i watched the sub for animes
Wow, I cried watching this. Thank you for posting. The analog of the potted plants as cultures that we nurture is really apt. I am a Filipino American who never learned the language and grew up also hearing what a 'shame' it was I couldn't speak OR understand Tagalog. To some degree, it's true I wish I had learned, but so I could keep the connection to that part of my identity. But when I or my parents are BLAMED for it, it does make me mad and resentful and I think it's just really disrespectful to the reality that multi cultural people grow up with.
I have a lot of strong feelings about it now that I am older because 1) I am going to visit the Philippines soon for the first time since I was, like, a baby. And I feel so weird about it, and realizing I am kind of scared about it. I am excited but I am definitely an impostor or at least feel that way. 2) I have a baby now who is white (Russian)/Filipino and I have just all sorts of thoughts about how to keep him connected to his culture/identity, and feeling bad I can't even pass on Tagalog. I am trying hard to make sure he learns Russian since my husband speaks it at least. I cried when you said you once told your parents you wished they were white. Maybe because I identify with it, maybe also because I'm afraid of hearing it from my own son someday.
I love the way the grandparents were so kind on the phone
My whole family: African
Me: African-American, raised in the USA
My relatives: SToP DoInG AmEriCaN sTuFf
Broo My Haitian ass felt this 😞
This is so relatable
This hits harder than my African dads belt
Yes! My whole AMERICAN BORN CHINESE (ABC) LIFE!
100% relate
"Why didn't you teach your kid Korean"
*Responds in Spanish*
Lmaoo
Y e s
Porque no necesita korean
PUEDE ALGUIEN PERFORARME EN LA CARA? gracias
Si
im hispanic and i connect with this video so much it has me in the feels ... parents moved from peru to the US when i was not even 2 yet, and i actually refused to learn english as a toddler until elementary school, then i refused to speak spanish and became embarassed by my culture. between 2013-2019 i never had a real hispanic friend. i was in this very hispanic church scouts troop in middle school for a while, but i never connected with the girls and felt like a loner but it's more cus i'm shy and isolate myself more than anything. i was never bullied for being hispanic, when some white kids in a day care chased me around with questions and wanting me to speak spanish, i hated that, but i cant call them racist cus they were just curious little kids.
i am hella lucky that in 2020, i made an online friend who is peruvian like me, except he grew up there and moved to the US as a teenager, as opposed to me moving as a toddler. he's fluent in english and just has an accent while i understand most spanish i just feel insecure about it because of my refusal to speak it as a kid. he's really helped me let go of my shame and that what i've gone through is understandable, and it's never too late to relearn. so sometimes we have late night voice chats where it's just us speaking spanish and sometimes he's impressed with how natural i sound and that i've improved a lot. so i feel super lucky for that.
as a kid i didnt like going to peru every summer but we haven't gone since covid and now i miss it more than ever :(
The vicious cycle of not trying because you feel like you sound stupid and never getting better which only makes you sound even more stupid is extremely relatable. I used to speak more Macedonian as a kid but because I lived in America (even though I did interact with Macedonian American family friends) I eventually lost my ability to speak well and only got worse with time due to the anxiety attempting to speak brought. I got even more embarrassed when I learned I had a thick American accent when speaking, which singled me out even if I spoke, and I completely thought I had a Macedonian accent when speaking.
My mum: "Learn to speak Spanish"
Me: *goes and learns French*
Me to my mum: "Je ne veux pas apprendre Espagnol"
My mum: *fluent in French as well*
Me: *le gasp*
😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂
The fact that you speak French makes "le gasp" funnier--
I can 100% relate to that, growing up in Quebec with Salvadoran parents, I ended up learning and speaking more french and English than spanish
I was dying of laughing cuz french is my main language xD
Me: Filipino-American
My Parents: Don’t teach me their language or culture
Also My Parents: Disappointed that I’m not magically bilingual
Me: ( ; - ; )ノ
Bruh same but British 😅
To add to the irony, I'm a white American, but I lived in the Philippines for 2 years as a missionary and speak Hiligaynon, Tagalog, and Karaya fluently and picked up on a lot of aspects of Filipino culture. Ang puso kong pinoy
bro same
relatable T-T
FELT THAT
Also, the use of a flower as a symbol of your mastery of the language and culture is an excellent visual metaphor. Well done.
I'm a Mexican teen born in the US. My parents are both Mexican, though my father was born in America too. I had the same issue with language as my mother's side of my family mostly speak just Spanish, while my dad's side mostly know both English and Spanish. I always have a good time with my dad's side of the family. But whenever I go to my Mom's side, it's kinda awkward. My cousins know English like me, but some of my uncles and aunts don't, so I don't really talk to them that much. Whenever I do speak Spanish, I sometimes make mistakes, and whenever i speak it, one of my uncles or aunts say, "You sound like a white boy." And yeah, they're not wrong, but it still hurts a little. I've gotten better with my accent, but they still think the same thing. I hope I get better.
Also, nice video! It was amazing, and I hope you have a lovely year!
"what's your kid been up to?"
"she likes to draw"
"Oh? Like Fashion design? Animation?"
"No, Anime"
"*Oh, Ew.*"
My Career choice in a nutshell TTwTT
this might make sense because of the Japanese invasion on more long ago, which some of koreans, still hate the Japanese for, so basically making them more anti-anime or anti-japanese
@@koto485 I think it's more of the fact that a lot of Asian elders still think anime = cartoon = for kids. But even if they didn't think it that way, even as anime is reaching mainstream status, they still think that having a career related to it is not a viable path in life, that it should just stay a hobby. I'm Indonesian, we got fucked over by 3.5 years of Japanese colonialization, the dismissive attitude towards anime is not related to it.
My dream is to make my own anime, god I just love making my own franchise where people can enjoy both my stories and characters.
HA! I was like number 420!
@@AvianZone Start from Webtoon, it should help.
My bully at school: "Why are your eyes so small? Can you even see me?"
Me: _Your free trial of life, has expired._
My friends think I’m Japanese while I’m Filipino and American
It’s cause my eyes
haha, had an opposite experience. as a bug-eyed asian person, a friend of a friend once asked me, "are your eyes really that big or is that your glasses?"
@@kerentan9446 Fr?
same im a fil kor
3 years later and this is still such a relevant experience for so many people.
I can’t believe how you succinctly you’ve summarised everything I’ve been feeling into this one video. Thanks so much :)
Heritage: Chinese
Classmates: Brings Chinese text over.
Me: Can't read Chinese.
Classmates: (゜ロ゜)
Kid in my school: I'm Chinese
My classmates: m.ruclips.net/video/5qhd5YJoJzE/видео.html
literally
thabksu_ haha lol
This but I’m Vietnamese but they still bring Chinese text over.
Yep I can speak it but not read it
Me: *half Dutch half Vietnamese*
Dutch people: *U Chinese?*
Vietnamese people: *Where u from, white people land?*
Gekoloniseerd
Nói được Tiếng Việt không bạn?
ok, first of all, as a hetalian, imma just... *squeals* tHAT IS SO COOL OMG- THATS AMAZING!
@@hoanghunglong9222 Nói chuyện Tiếng Việt cho em thì khó mà em vẫn hiểu được tất cả mọn người.
@@ottohettemakrieger2428 Altijd
I'm Indian American (Tamil, to be specific), and a child of immigrants. I have also faced numerous identity crises because of it. Another thing added to that was that many Americans do not consider Indians to be Asian, even though we are in Asia. I am still dealing with it, but am also learning to balance my Western and Eastern identity. This video helped me a lot, thank you!
Well what the fuck? Here in Malaysia, India is definitely considered Asian. We’re Asian ourselves
PS: the drawings of Emiri are so adorable someone give 2005 Emiri a hug🥰
I mean I think Americans know that India is Asian, but in American English Asian with no specification refers to east Asian while Indians would be considered south Asian. But if you said South Asian Americans should know that you're referring to like India/Bangladesh/Pakistan area. Southeast Asian also is a distin region to Americans. I think Asian being defaulted to east Asian is just a matter of population and the fact that many Chinese people immigranted in the 1800s for the US.
yeah Asian is a stupid label, Asia has like more than half the worlds population, and there are so many different ethnicities in Asia. The Middle East is in Asia, but people don't consider them to be Asian either.
i come back to this video every once and a while because i relate soso much to this :( i’m a poc , but i don’t feel connected to my culture at all. i was bullied a lot by my peers because i don’t really fit the general “look” for my ethnicity (i’m not even 100% sure of it anymore) , and never really felt like i could fit in. i wasn’t white for my white peers, but not really like the peers of my ethnicity. i see so many people celebrating their culture, or at least knowing about their traditions, but i really don’t and it’s makes me feel very alone and sad when i think about it a lot
:( cultures are something that have always interested me , but when it comes to my own i feel so disconnected. this video really helps me feel less alone , i love your content soso much emily !!! 💞💞💞
my dad: korean
my mom: thai
me: *so i started trying to learn japanese-*
this is gold
raikantopini?
XD LOL XD
this is literally me!
Underrated.......
I feel like it was a missed opportunity that Skill Share didn’t sponsor this video
thats rough buddy
Sokka: man I love the moon
I love how the first two comments are about Avatar.
Veteran Fan! Not exactly an OG fan because I joined the fandom in 2011 but still!
@@hranghlei same here ✌🏽
Fax
I’m glad you were able to get through your struggles with your roots and became the person you are today. God speed Emily
This video really resonated with me, I’m full Korean and live in the US, but everyone in my family says I should “like Korean food” or whatever, it’s exhausting. I don’t speak any Korean at all and want to start learning, but never found when to start. My school is depressing, and everyone just expects me to be better than I am. It’s hard. I never had any friends I could rely on at school. I’ve always wanted to visit Korea and maybe learn more about the culture, but at this rate with everything on a tight schedule, I’m afraid that it’ll never happen. Thanks for this video, even if it was posted a while ago, it really helps.
me: *italian*
Me: *doesnt like pizza or cheese*
Family: *SHAME*
ASL Lydia oof that sucks, I’m Italian and I love all Italian food lol
Omar Dana nah, lactose sensitive but nothing serious
@@asllydia2407 same but i just cant drink milk
I'm part italian too and my i can tell my granddad judges me for not knowing a single goddamn word of italian lmao
Shame
I know the feeling of people saying ”it a shame” whenever you can’t speak your own language
Yea, im filipino/American and my mom speaks filipino and i cant understand it, my dad is American and he has no clue what she says. As a kid i kept asking my mom to teach me about speaking her language she said she will teach me, but she never did so I tried to copy her but she shouted at me saying that's inappropriate even tho i had no idea what it means.
MY DAD SHAMES ME FOR NOT KNOWING KANNADA. now i have to do kannnada class torture
Yes, it sucks so bad. To top it off, Korean was actually my very first language and I just forgot about it
@@lunahetfield same with me!
Ye i live in indonesia but grew up speaking english and it's always pointed out that i couldn't speak indonesian
I cried while watching this video because I am in the same situation as you ! (yeah I am writting this comment two years later haha)
It's the first time I see a video that speaks about the language barrier in a crisis of identity! And it fits so well with what I live as a French-Morrocan!
The fact is that as a Morrocan, I do not have to learn one more complicated language, but three (Darija, Arabic and Amazigh) ! It is so haaaaaarrrrrrrdddd to live with, especially when I don't speak any of them fluently!!
I’m Filipino and grew up in the Philippines but I don’t look or act like it and my Filipino is horrible. My mom is half Canadian and Filipino and my dad Chinese. Every time I interact with someone who isn’t Filipino they are always like wow you’re really in touch with you Filipino roots but when it’s with a Filipino they always think that I’m like Australian or British especially considering my accent. It’s been hard dealing with that and I’ve been going through similar experiences as you had when you were younger. Thank you for making this video as it really helped me feel a lot better about myself! Thank you so much!
Classmate: hey can you read this?
*chinese text*
Me: no i don’t know chinese, i’m thai
Classmates: didn’t you say you were Asian?
Me:🤯
I can relate, btw hello fellow thai
*Google is your friend.*
hello fellow thais
glad to be here
I’m half Chinese and idk how to read Chinese but I can read a little Thai
lol im 25 percent thai and i cant even read it so whenever my kun yaai is visiting i feel awkward because she really wants me to learn it lol
me: mexican but born in America
someone: are you filipina?
me: well we were both conquered by Spain so...close enough
According to my teacher mexican and filipino are somewhat similar
LMAOO. As a Filipino, this made me chuckle
@@randomperson4050 How scotland and america are close because they speak the same language? Oh I dont mean Filipino and Mexico speak the same language, it's just an example
i have a filipino friend and his math teatcher called him mexican once and he had to correct her
Eyy I'm Pinay!
It’s been a few years I watched your channel. Holy cow, the quality of your drawings and video became insane.
Thanks for this video. Just found your channel. Every young person goes through something like this growing up in a different country.
“He just stared right back at him until he got uncomfortable”
Yo legit, your brother is a straight up badass
I thought that was kind of a normal passive-aggressive response? I do that too and never thought much of it...
Torlak Kårstad Woah calm down there mister badass, You are so cool... I’m jealous. No but seriously it isn’t a big deal for most people but if a person doesn’t do it they might be more timid or just feel a certain amount of respect should be given but personally I wouldn’t stand for it either and I feel as if most people (especially men) would stare right back to reciprocate their feelings about what was occurring.
Dude… if someone stares at me i always say to my head "Does he/she hate me we never met, okay okay relax... deep breath just dont make eye contact and everything will be fine" i get nervous really i always think that did i do something wrong or have something wrong with me :/
Bruh I just read that when she said it
I did tried once, but it didn't last long bc staring back is also uncomfortable.
“Don’t do something that makes you feel like a failure if you don’t progress as quickly as you could” -Emirichu
Got it.
Time to drop out of college.
"My poo stuck between my buttcheeks" - Abraham Lincoln
Thank you now I have courage to ignore study positively
so everything-
Yeah that sounds....
This is one my favourite videos of yours. I can’t express how much I relate to this, especially in the language department. I’m a Sri Lankan Canadian btw. The weird thing is that when you forget about your own culture, you naturally get more interested in other cultures. I’ve been speaking French since forever and love Japanese music. Idk how I’ll change but I just wanted you to know that you weren’t the only kid like that 😊
I went through similar experiences as a half-Vietnamese Puertorican kid growing up. Great to see this video being made the way it was. It was very relatable!
The whole "understanding a language but not being able to speak it" and "language barrier with family" and "being compared to other people " and the SHAME....I can very much relate too
(We love you for who you are Emily and who you will be ❤)
same, it always feels so bad to not be able to speak the language of my other half of the family, romanian ;-; it feels so weird
I relate too my gosh every time I go to my hometown(?) Me and my sister (my brother learnt the language and left me and my sister in the dust) would always have a hard time. But all our cousins from my mum's side also spoke English so we would talk to them,......
Then get scolded for "preventing them from learning the language"
Also the whole "I want to be white" thing is very common, but I feel like there's also some people that say "I wish I was Asian" (East Asian) and I am partly ashamed of myself for thinking this way but it's true. I think a lot of people don't really talk about it so I see Emily as being brave for coming out and talking about it.
Good on you Emily♥️♥️
Hi fellow ash lol
OMG YES!
Ash Lost my mom tells me not to speak english in the philippines because i’ll be kidnapped lol
me: *Mexican but born in America*
someone: are you Italian?
me: *googles my name, meaning its blond in Italian*
Banana Stalker so your name is Bionda ?
Are you blond tho?
@@r.b.4338 no, black as coal, no one in my family, or distant relative are blond.
Relatable name translation, my name in Hebrew(not username) means something interesting(not literally, but metaphorically)
I have the opposite problem to where ive been asked to translate spanish even tho im italian
I enjoyed your video immenselly. I'm Uruguayan and for very odd circumstances, I am of two nations, Uruguay and the US. I first came to the US with my parents at age 5 years and 10 months, then went back at age 10, then came back at age 17. To say that I was totally lost and felt uprooted repeatedly is an understatement. I lost friedships so many times I lost count. But fortunately I turned out 100% fluent in both languages, yet with a lot of heartache and emotional upheaval too.
Yet despite all this, I found myself identifying with you so much. I guffawed out loud at several points because I could see your situations and empathize with you. I laughed not at you but with you, feeling I somehow knew that even though you felt strange, you also knew who you were and were fine with it. And it was exhilarating to hear what you went through and how you overcame it.
Well, just to say I loved your life story. I will subscribe to your channel and I look forward to many good moments during your videos.
This was so incredibly resonant with me. I've been considering doing a video essay on my own channel about my Asian-American identity crisis, and I have to say, this video was such an inspiration. It mirrors my own journey so closely (with the exception of my being biracially Japanese and Filipino, so no language aside from English was ever spoken at home) that I can't help but see how universal this issue is among first-generation American kids.
Thank you so much for sharing all of this. It's truly so powerful.
"I feel like older Koreans really like to stare for some reason"
No Emily. That's just all Older Asian people...
Well it's Practically the same in all Asian Region i guess, same with Indonesia, China, and Japan, its all about Respect i guess.
oh no, Im already doing it
... THAT'S JUST EVERYONE
That is all old people
That’s just every old person everywhere....
i mean some of them are literally staring out their window for up to 9h
Family: “oh you don’t know Vietnamese fluently? What are you w h i t e”
Me: *tries to speak viet and mess up a word*
Family: *makes fun of me so I feel stupid and stops learning* “why aren’t you learning viet?”
Stop describing my life!
Ahh, same! Whenever I try to speak it, it always sounds weird and just plain broken and I just end up not speaking it at all because of how it sounds. I try to mimic my parents Vietnamese accent whenever they say things but it’s always hard;;;
So true. I’m hating Vietnamese and trying to avoid the culture itself
Me learning Lao
And when you’re able to say a word or phrase correctly and they just act like you became the president or something-
Bro this is TOO relatable. Especially calling the grandparents over the phone wtfffff. 😂
Video: Grandparents yapping about korean
Me: Realizing we have the same korean name
I have a similar story:
-I was born in china
-I moved to canada when i was 1
-I have chinese side of family
-I know nothing about chinese culture
-My chinese side of the family knows how to speak chinese
-i dont know how to speak to most of them
-I NEED HELP
UwU
So your ethnicity is China and nationality china not very confusing
I am filipino and I was born in Britain & I also don’t know how to speak my language & so I always get super embarrassed when I meet new family members as they don’t speak English. I also don’t know a lot about filipino culture unfortunately, so I feel your pain
@RUOQI XU i can speak it too but i cant write the chinese character XD
so relatable, except for i wasn't born in china. uwu
emily: “i wish i had white parents”
me: *GASPS LOUDLY LIKE A CARTOON* MIJA QUE PASO
Chale porfin un hispanohablante ;-;
Josua Caleb hollllaaa niño 🥴🥴
No habla español
Ah sí, más hispanohablantes😌
Reyes_DoesFlipsYT I can relate to this so hard
i love the symbolization of the different nationalitys as flowers so much omg
i kinda relate to this as a hispanic american feeling like i should learn spanish because more than half of my family only speaks that. this video is like so good
i am south korean too! my mom is also sometimes worried that i mostly speak english with her but she always says if i talk english 'He! speak korean!' and then sometimes i found it harder or just still speak english but now times i trie to leurn more and speak more korean its a nice launguage, (i am not to good in writing enlinh sorry lol) i whas born in korea but we where a travel family and traveld over the world. I also lived in korea but after years my parents wanted to travel again. My mother is korean but my dad is netherlads so we now live some years in the netherlands. So i get your problems too! Only because i lived now in netherlands and traveled my korean also went down. I whas better at it when i whas younger because we where living in korea. but now i live in the Netherlands it went down only i still have the korean culture in my mind. So i have to deal with this with three laungauges. But i love korea! they have good food and everything. So i get your feelings :) its oke to not be that good at korean just like me:) i watch korean tv shows with engilsh descripton their are tv shows to leurn more korean
lives in uk:
"why is your accent weird"
goes to lithuania (home country):
"why is your accent weird"
-.-
big bruh
Lithuania gay.
Perfectly balanced
Alwayzbooster no u
@@alwayzbooster7721 *show UNO reverse card
My Korean mom: exists
My White Father: Exists
Everyone: Cool so are you chinese?
Oh no
SERIOUSLY XD
i relate to that ALOT
Same except my dad is korean
Singapore: *Exists*
Everyone outside Asia: "You not Chinese? Singapore in China right??"
I have a feeling these people failed geography.
I watch your videos here and there when they pop up on my feed this video today was one of them, I’m hispanic and I grew up until a certain age on a island I felt a real connection with this video because it is the same in all aspects I’m trying to get better for my grandpas sake as the English to Spanish is not working well as it used to since my detachment but thank you for making the video I thought I was really alone on something like this…..
Oh man, what a touching story, glad you summon courage to openly speak about it like this.
Can relate as Tatar/Russian person, who very rarely and poorly speak on tatar language, but can understand most of it. Identity crisis is such a weird thing. Even if you don't care, you feel bad about you parents or close ones about other people asking them uncomfortable questions.
Kids in 2005 listening to Korean music: wtf is this
Kids now: vibing*
The good old days when people didn’t thirst and ship musicians
More like japanese
STOP MORGZ kpop?? BTS??
Ngl when a person listens to korean music im ok i don't care but if they bother me about it oh boy I do care but in a another way
Ally Miku pple been thirsting over artists since forever wdym???
Me: 100% German and lives in Germany
Also me: Is bad at German
😹
Die gelbe Seegurke same except I'm from another country lol
Ist es wegen der grammatik hahahahah?
Deutsche sprache schwere sprache
-every German on this planet
I love that you used arirang as the end song.
I remember one time my sister screaming to me "Why do I have an Asian family?!" It absolutely broke my heart, while starting some questions about my own cultural identity. Having pressure from both sides can be difficult. I still deal with it sometimes. But i've learned now to live in both worlds, and not being ashamed.
This video is able to connect and reach out to anyone of a different ethnicity in America and feel the same bond and struggles. On the other hand, things like this can bring the same people together to grow together. I'm complete mexican ethnicity, but I'm born & raised American, and I can only say broken, basic around the house spanish, but I want to get better so I can be with the relatives and friends instead of being a "no sabo" kid. Everyone should bond with where they came from so that the can celebrate the past, present, and all to come.
My friend: You're Korean, right?
Me: No actually-
My friend: Oh so you're Japanese.
Me: No, I'm Chinese.
My friend: ... oh well same thing
omg RELATEABLE
same but im korean
Anime? More like Chinese Cartoons.
Its the same exact thing for me but I'm Mongolian
My friend’s Parents are from Hong Kong and everyone calls her Korean and Japanese to the point where she is like. “Yea sure”
The only perk ive experienced being an Asian kid in an america school is special treatment in math class
thats... bad
@Len same its all bs lol
This is the most relatable content for me on RUclips ❤
* me watching anime*
Friends: do you even understand what they are saying?
Me: No but i can feel it.
Welp.....
I kept watching and watching until i eventually learned how to speak and spell the words in the language of a cartoon i watched back in 2010 or 2009, (only thing was remaining was asking my parents about what those words did mean)
Lol. With me I have the complete opposite. All of my friends and I are total weebs. We all are anime obsessed. So usually our classmates ask us that question 😂
69 likes
Frnd : do u even understand what they r saying ?
me : bruh, have u ever heard what subtitles is ?
@@mashihuzzaman1962 lmao ikr
My parents: *talks in Vietnamese so that I could eventually learn*
Me: *replies in English*
My grandparents: *actually learn English so that they could communicate with me and my cousins*
Thanks grandparents
lmao great parents
My grandparents did the opposite they pretended not to know english so I was forced to learn chinese
I cannot blame you as English is A LOT easier than Vietnamese :))
Vietnamese hurts me to speak I sound like a chicken 😭
Totally opposite my grandma speaks viet in all types of hards words
While me: greet in viet, say yeah bà or không (which means "no" in viet)
I’m Bangladeshi-Pakistani-Arab-American and it’s extremely confusing for me bc my grandparents and parents speak different languages and my grandparents are always bugging me to learn all these different languages and I’m not that interested in my culture (or the clothes there itchy 😭), so I can completely relate
I’ve also had a similar identity crisis. I’m half Mexican and half Japanese (My mom is Mexican and my Dad is Japanese) and I was born in the U.S. Meaning I felt the pressure from my Japanese half to be super smart and gifted and know the language and be super in touch with all the Japanese traditions. And for my Mexican half the expectations were also to learn the language and the cultural traditions, but also to make my family proud and have a super successful job in order to support my family. And I’m also the artist child out of my other siblings who want to be scientists or doctors and it just made me feel super disconnected to both my Mexican and my Japanese roots.
Classmate: Yo man. Can you read this?
*Shows Chinese*
Me: Nah man. I don't know how to read in Chinese.
Classmate: I thought you were Asian.
Me: Dude. I'm from Pakistan.
Classmate: So does that mean you're not Asian?
Me: *:/*
This girl once said to me that she thought Pakistan was in Africa.......she’s literally Asian herself???????
@@zeno.7519 I actually remember referring to my Indian friend as Asian and he got so mad at me and everyone (including my other Indian friends) kinda made fun of him for not knowing that I was correct 😂
EDIT: We were in high school at the time, so he should have known that by then.
I'm Half-Filipino and I got so tired of people in middle and high school finding this out and saying I wasn't Asian, I was a Pacific Islander.
@@zeno.7519 same with philipino. People seem to closer relate us with being latino when we are still asian. Also, the lack of chopsticks is another thing. One of my asian friends tried arguing with me that I'm not asian because pinoy people don't use chopsticks, it was honestly a rediculous conversation between 5th graders, but it made me question my identity. Also, even though it was between 5th graders, i've no doubt that some adults believe it too because where would my friend have got it from if it wasn't from his parents.
"lol can u speak indian"...I just find this phrase funny.
15 year old me: A Filipino living in the Philippine whose first language is English and speaks without a Filipino accent.
Grandmother: Learn tagalog, be proud of being Filipino
Me: Proceeds to learn German and Japanese.
Grandmother: suprised pikachu face
Legit I want to learn other languages and have no care towards Tagalog. Bad times, bad times.
Same here, but French lol
Same except I didnt learn any new languages-
Same lmao
Thanks! This has made my day.
I love the art style. So, so damn cute
Me: *is American*
My grandparents: *are American*
My ancestry: *Every relative American since the early 1900s*
My grandparents: Haven’t you learned more G E R M A N than that?!
Mood lol, I wish I was as good at german as my brother. It makes me self conscious when he has to walk me through what he's saying to me, even though me and him are the only ones trying to learn the language properly
@@Honey_Valentine dont feel bad about it. i live in germany and i barely understand how to correctly speak it myself, because there is not a single thing that makes sense about german
Everytime I see those type of comments, I, as a German, really feel the urge to help people learn my native language if they want to learn it idk why it’s just- ;-;
Gabriel Justus yep, also the word friend and girlfriend are the same?? Like wtf
@@gabrieljustus8869 i can relate becouse when i was learning german in school i had no idea how i got all good grades in it, it made no sense to me and when the reversed genders in grammar came i wanted to say fuck it im out
"yo how tf do you speak such good english"
sir I was born here
I can relate so much.
Dude, once my Mandarin teacher asked me where I was from and I replied "Texas." I looked her dead in the eye and we stared at each other for a good 20 seconds.
@@henryyin2471 holy moly , make it more , add 1 hours
:p
Ever get the "no, where are you really from?" lol its badly worded, so I just let the loop continue for as long as possible. Gotta enjoy the little things
SolracJ88 No, I just get more questions going back in my history. Where are you from? Where did you grow up? Where were you born? Where are your parents from? I honestly didn’t notice what they were getting at so I’ve had this exchange with multiple people and one even chuckled like I was giving the wrong answers. I wasn’t being difficult, I was just answering the questions being asked. Now that I know what it’s about, I wish I was third or fourth generation so I could just keep going.
I love the use of the song Arirang at the end. My choir sang it last year!😊
This is really relatable as a korean in Canada, keep up the good work!
This comment section is the most worldwide thing I've seen in a while. BTW I'm Brazilian.
Thanks for the heart!
Aaaahhh. I'm Brazilian American
same
sameee
Same here bud! My parents and two older sisters were born in Brazil but i was born in America. Ive never even been there sooooo. Heh...