Showing posts with label Family Mart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family Mart. Show all posts

Where have all the oppas gone?







hanbit media park

by Filmmkr.






Last night I headed out to Family Mart at 2:30 a.m. for cookies and ice cream, it was just one of those days where I didn’t want to be social. thankyouverymuch.

As I was poking through the ice cream, two young-ish men came in and spent forever getting cigarettes. Waiting in line I wondered briefly if one of them was a student of mine, while marveling they had the appropriate ID for cigarettes and alcohol. (He wasn’t a student, and I don’t think anyone checks IDs.)They left without their cigarettes, thus having to come back in and awkwardly pick them up from the counter before I could pay for my heart-attack inducing snacks.

On the walk back, I hear “Ohh….waygookin….” I ignore them, paying the sweet overnight clerk, who probably thinks I’m the most batshit person for walking in there almost every single night for ice cream, beer and cookies. (I’m a creature of bad habits.) They walk out the door presumably to disappear in the dark wet night. 

I step outside and hear, “Hello? Hello? Hi? Hello?” before I could open my umbrella. The smaller one kept saying the words over and over again. Like I couldn’t hear him even though I was responding to each greeting with a “hi” and a smile. Once he finally quiets down long enough to realize he had my attention, he asks where I’m going. 

I say I’m going home. 

He asks me to come drink soju with them. I have no idea where seeing as Family Mart is the only open establishment at this time of the morning in my dong. I shake my head. 

“No, I don’t want to.” I say. 

“Wae-oo? Wae?” They both start whining. 

“You look young.” I smile trying not to sound like a complete bitch. 

“How old? How old? How old?” The smaller one asks. I smile unsure of what he’s trying to ask me and not about to tell him I think they look 19.

“How old are you?” I ask instead.

“I’m very old.” He says puffing out his chest with pride. “I’m 21.”

“Too young for me,” I say. “I don’t want to be a noona.”

“Noona?” The bigger one screeches jumping into the conversation with a load of Korean. I eventually work out he’s asking how old I am.

“I’m 25,” I respond.

“Only four, only four, only four.”

“Too much,” I sigh and turn around to leave.

I turn back and wave goodbye. As they shout after me “goodbye, goodbye, goodbye.”