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Volume 3 The Fourth Aunt Chapter 891 The True Look

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    Too many young people have been poisoned by Korean dramas. The real Korea is completely different from what Shuya thought. This was only discovered after she got married.  After marriage, Shuya followed Park Jingxiu back to South Korea. She was so happy that she thought she would live the life in the TV series from then on, but reality gave her a blow.  First of all, Koreans¡¯ family concepts are completely different from those in China today.  Do you know how mothers-in-law treated their daughters-in-law in the old society?  Korean mother-in-laws are like that.  Nowadays, when a Chinese girl marries into her husband's family, it means that she dares not pick the moon if she wants the stars.  You don¡¯t need to do it yourself when cooking, washing, or cleaning the room. Either your husband or your parents-in-law will do it.  In South Korea, once you marry into the man's family, as long as you live under the same roof with your parents-in-law, your daughter-in-law will have to do all the dirty work in the house.  Not to mention, if you don't do it well, you will be scolded. If you encounter a particularly strict mother-in-law, you will even beat her.  "Shu Ya was unfortunate. After marrying into Pu Jingxiu's family, she lived in a big house with her parents-in-law.  Fortunately, her mother-in-law was quite reasonable and did not come up to embarrass Shu Ya. But even so, Shu Ya could clearly feel the unfriendly eyes of the other party.  And there are a lot of etiquette in South Korea, which are even more excessive than the red tape in the Qing Dynasty.  Every morning, I get up before my parents-in-law and then make breakfast. After my parents-in-law get up, I have to say hello to others. After they are ignored and ignored, I have to be responsible for packing my husband's clothes for the trip.  Etc., in short, everything that happened to Shu Ya was basically in the sky and the earth as she originally imagined.  What made Shuya feel even more uncomfortable was that she had just come to Korea and didn't have a stable job. Park Jingxiu's mother always complained that Shuya was indolent and put all the responsibility of supporting the family on her son's shoulders.  There was no way to go on like this, so I started looking for a job in different ways.  But South Korea, which is already overcrowded, has so many jobs for a foreigner like Shu Ya. As a result, after half a month of searching, she didn¡¯t find any job.  Seeing that the money she brought from home was about to be spent, Shuya was very anxious.  Not to mention, going to Korean barbecue to eat barbecue was Shuya¡¯s biggest hobby in the past (she is a foodie), but when she actually arrived in Korea, she discovered that all she could eat here was kimchi.  That¡¯s right, it¡¯s kimchi!  If you want to eat a meal of meat, it is extremely difficult, because the price of meat is extremely expensive.  Through chatting, Shu Ya discovered sadly that living in South Korea is expensive, food is expensive, and supplies are expensive, but labor is not expensive.  It's no wonder that the country has few resources. Most of the products are imported, further processed and then sold around the world. Therefore, it is normal for them to be expensive.  Even for mothers who have given birth to a baby, the most they can do at home is to use cow thigh bones to make a pot of soup, which is considered a very high-end tonic.  ??Eating fruit is eaten in cuts. Have you ever seen a pear cut into several pieces, and then everyone eats one piece?  "To eat the most common long bean sprouts here, you have to pick off the top tips and then make bean sprout rice. This is something Shuya can't accept no matter what.  As for food such as dumplings and steamed buns, unless Shuya makes them by herself, if she buys them, one meal can cost Park Jingxiu three days' salary.  What is happiness index?  I personally think that if you can afford to eat, wear warm clothes, sleep well, and have good public security, you are happy.  But look at Shuya, in addition to eating kimchi, she still eats kimchi; although her clothes are okay, they are just the few sets of clothes she bought when she got married, plus the ones she brought from China; as for sleeping soundly,  Being scolded by my mother-in-law every day, no matter who I am, I can't sleep well. Then there is the security. There are many poor people in South Korea, how can the security be better?  So I would like to advise those Korean girls to wake up and never regard Korean dramas as the real state of Korea. To put it bluntly, Korean dramas are advertisements, and reality is the therapeutic effect.  One day on the way to find a job, Shu Ya met Park Jingxiu and his friends drinking in a tavern.  The other party also saw me, so he invited me in to sit.  Through the introduction, Shuya learned that Park Jingxiu¡¯s friend was named Jin Zhezhi. He was currently running a company and could be considered young and promising.  It's just that the other person's eyes looked at her strangely, and Shu Ya couldn't tell what it felt like.  Jin Zhezhi seemed very gentlemanly. He pulled out the chair and invited Shuya to sit down, and asked Shuya what she wanted to eat.  Not to mention, during the conversation with each other, the other party kept praising Shuya for her temperament, which is many times better than those Korean women who rely on plastic surgery.  Maybe Kim Cheol-ji¡¯s words were very pleasing to the ear. Park Kyung-soo drank a lot of liquor that day (when eating in Korea, you usually drink some soju, but theirThe alcohol content is very low, almost the same as the beer here).  While drinking, Park Jingxiu rushed to the bathroom yelling. It looked like she was really drunk and vomited there.  Just after Park Jingxiu left his seat, Jin Zhezhi immediately changed his cynical expression and said to Shuya very seriously: "You shouldn't come to South Korea. You have to know that it is very difficult to be a daughter-in-law in South Korea." Some people have this problem.  With this ability, every word can hit the weakest part of your heart hard.  Looking at Shu Ya's helpless expression, Jin Zhezhi continued: "You shouldn't marry Park Jingxiu, let alone return to South Korea with him." At this point, he quickly took out a business card from his pocket and handed it over.  , "This is my business card. Keep it. If you need anything, you can call me at any time." Perhaps it was the other party's care and consideration that made Shuya, who was far away in a foreign land, feel the warmth that she had not seen for a long time, so Shuya did not  Refuse the other party's kindness, instead put away Jin Zhezhi's business card, and then wait for her husband to come back with the other party.  After almost half a year of marriage, Shu Ya still couldn't find a decent job. Park Jingxiu's mother began to give Shu Ya no good looks. She always warned Shu Ya in a subtle way every day to find a job as soon as possible so that she could support her family.  Everyone, Shu Ya's ears were about to get calluses when they heard it.  It is said that good fortune and misfortune never come alone. As Shu Ya spent all her savings, her mother-in-law became more and more difficult for her.  That morning, before dawn, Shuya got up to make breakfast, woke up her parents-in-law, said hello, and then started ironing Park Jingxiu's clothes for the day's work.  I don¡¯t know what happened to her mother-in-law that day. She stood next to Shu Ya and started to sneer and curse. She even said things like how Chinese people are so lazy and how come you people in the bride¡¯s family don¡¯t understand etiquette.  Say it all.     to be continued
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