Ajummas!!
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Ajummas at the park with their trademark visors on. |
Yes, this blog post is dedicated to South Korea’s
favorite assertive little ladies, Ajummas! (say it with me now, Ah-jew-ma’s)
Ajummas are the old ladies of Korea, notorious for their puffy- permed black
hair, giant head visors, and decked out in glowing neon track suits or
mismatching plaid and floral pants suits with fake sparkly rhinestones glued
on. They like all that glitters. They also like nude colored rubber shoes and
huge hand bags large enough to fit a small child that is usually stuffed with
leftover kimchi, back-up head visors, and who knows what else.
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Now this is another Ajumma favorite, the face shield visor. |
They love to zig-zag their way through crowed people
on the sidewalks, push you over as they make their way onto the buses or
subways and talk, no yell, to their Ajumma friends. Do not be deceived, though
they appear small and hunched over at the best of times, they can run faster
than a cheetah on crack when they see an open seat on the subway. If they don’t
think they will get there in time, they will take their 30 pound handbag and
fling it across the subway car to make sure they get it. I admire their
athletic skill; they always seem to get their bag to land right in the seat
they were intending. If there are no seats left, I have seen one Ajumma go as
far as yanking the wrist of a teenage boy to get him to give up his seat. Smart
guy, I would have done the same thing, give my seat to otherwise avoid a
confrontation with an Ajumma who won’t stop at pulling the hair of the person
they are arguing with to prove they are right. Pay a visit to Korea, and you will end up in a
confrontation with one, guaranteed; there is no avoiding their assertive
presence. No one is safe from their hand bags or bodily functions.
Yes, this Ajumma is standing next a giant phallic symbol in a seaside village in Korea. You should have seen what she was doing to it earlier. No, I won't tell you. |
My fondest memory of one was a memory recalled from
my brother and my dad when they came to visit a few years ago. They were busy
browsing through clothes one day at an underground shopping mart and my Dad was
minding his own business looking through a pile of shorts when suddenly someone
ripped a flutterblaster/big one/fart so big the whole store stopped what they
were doing to locate the culprit of this possibly dangerous biohazard. My Dad,
with his mouth and eyes open in astonishment, looked right at my brother as
though it might have been him, my brother points to the Ajumma standing near
him. The Ajumma looks at them as if to say, yeah,
whacha gunna do about? And then
walked away, leaving them to rot in her fumes. I think Dad and brother just
stood there in shock, thinking, OMG Did
that just happen?? Yes Dad and brother, you guys just got Ajummaed. Not to
worry, I have been Ajummaed many times too, though not as fragrant.
Though I give Korea’s old ladies a lot of, ahem,
breathing room when walking the streets of Korea, they will be the first thing
I miss when I leave. I know that I will one day in the far-off future, I will
act like, but hopefully not look like, one of them.
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