@@Honeydoyou ikr this was one of the saddest things when reading about russia and ukraine for me 😢😢 many russians and ukrainian are family, i even had an online friend living in russia who is half ukrainian that was constantly upset about the war because her mother's family was in ukraine
In South Korea, my students still draw the whole peninsula when they are asked to draw “Korea.” They told me they’re still one country. It boggled my mind as a foreigner who grew up with them being considered two separate countries.
My paternal grandma was separated from her younger brother at the start of the Korean War. She and my grandpa, with their young kids (just before my dad was born) initially settled near what became the border and a couple of years later she swore she saw her brother again passing by as a North Korean soldier, but couldn’t approach him because that would mean risking danger, and she had her kids to think of. They were never reunited, and she passed away almost 7 years ago.
I hope they reunited in the spirit world (I choose the word because I don't know if other people believe in heaven or what they called it in their version of heaven)
My grandfather had similar experience but different. He was living in Pyongyang and ran to south few days before the Korean War started. He talked about how cold the river was heading to south while his little sister sleeping on his back.
저희 친할아버지도 이북 살다가 6.25 때 잠시 이남으로 피난왔다가 분단되는 바람에 북으로 영영 못가시고 서울에서 자리잡고 가정을 꾸려 제가 태어났어요. 할아버지가 좋아하시던 가자미식혜를 여기서 보게될줄이야... 이 음식은 할아버지와 결혼하신 울 할머니가 할아버지를 위해 잘 해주셨고 저도 어렸을때 많이 먹었었는데 정말 추억입니다. 현재 할아버지는 돌아가셨고 할머니는 치매에 걸리셨어요. 저는 더이상 한국에 살지 않습니다. 가자미식혜가 어떤맛인지 어떤식감인지 생생히 기억나지만, 제 일생에 다시 한번 먹어볼 수 있을까요?
My grandmothers village was on the 38th.her three brothers were taken by the North to fightbwhile her, her sister, and mom fled south. She was the only survivor, fleeing to Alaska then moving to Texas. We most likely have blood up North. She doesnt like her culture too much. Likes to not think about home too much. But she always cooks great Korean food, being sure I was fat unlike all the trials her family faced. I love her very much, thank you for sharing your story and this recipe!
Ikr. I moved to a different country to study for a bit. I’m Chinese, but raised in Canada (but still connected to a lot of my Chinese heritage as I live with my grandma and my family goes back to China every other year) and I’m not a very sentimental person usually, I’m not even on amazing relations with my family lol, but I find myself missing home often 😭 I guess it’s the unfamiliarity of my environment and being on my own for the first time but ugh I want to go back to my room in Canada and curl up in my bed! I want to find an Asian supermarket and get my Chinese snacks and drinks 😭 I can’t imagine never being able to go back to where I grew up
My grandma was 5 years old when the Japanese killed her dad and grandfather and her youngest sibling was a baby and she died from starvation and they don’t know where they buried her. My grandma went through a lot she’s my hero 🦸♀️
my grandparents were from the northern side of korea, but quickly escaped to busan in search of safety for the war, as they were hoping it was safe. luckily, the north korean troops never set foot in busan, so we're all good :D
My grandfather is also from the north. Although ive never seen him because he passed before i was born, he apparently had his wife and children there too. But were separated when he came down and the war broke. My grandmother is technically his 2nd wife, and 3rd women who he had a baby with, lol 😅
My grandma is also from the north, and Gazami Sikhe is literally the one dish my mom misses the most from her mother’s cooking. I live in a place where Korean food culture hasn’t really developed much, so finding this type of local delicacy is very difficult. I love seeing someone who is continuing the family recipe from the north.❤
My parents' family friend was also from the north before it split off. She moved to USA when she was young and she married an American. She was very kind and knew a lot of recipes from the north. But she's gotten very old so she doesnt cook much anymore. She does still make kimchi in her retirement home
My grandpa is from the north but escaped to the south before the war, but he had a business importing trees from Japan or something so he was looked at poorly for doing business with the enemy or something. We don't talk about it but that's what I've gathered from family.
@@melia1426 Oh absolutely, I do not deny that. But why should people carry baggage of others? The fact that many Japanese who stayed in Korea trying to replenish what has been torn from the country, to end up going to war with the North should not be taken away from them.
It's not a "should" question; it's just a fact. Grandchildren of holocaust survivors and victims both carry that baggage. Descendants of slaves carry that baggage. There's also biological evidence for generational trauma that you can look up. @@DisingenuousComment
I am a Sakhalin Korean and this flounder kimchi (we call it schikke... or however you transcribe it) is very commonly sold in the markets. Very tasty 😋
@@siratshi455 southern half used to be until mid 20th century. The only few Japanese I know of are only the workers in the Japanese embassy we have in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk.
@@zerobaseone_HelloZB1_3rdAlbum If you wanna learn more about it, look up "Sakhalin Koreans" on Wikipedia. Most of the Koreans that live there descend from labor workers sent by Japan when Korea used to be a single entity and more poor. So most cultural aspects (especially food dishes) are a mix of what people find in North and South Korea, with some adaptations to locally available animal produce/vegetables (ex. winter kimchi, giant burdock dishes, the fish kimchi the lady in the video showed, North Korean potato side dish salad, etc.)
Brings tears to my eyes when i.think about the possibility of brothers, or childhood best friends having to fight against each other, back then. And the very real reality that families were separated, in some cases for ever. I saw a video were brothers who were separated for DECADES finally got to see each other for a few hours one day, and they were both so old, so you know that was probably their "I can finally die now" moment.
Hmmm you most definitely learn about this in school. We just don't spend that much time on it since we emphasize U.S. history a lot more. It depends on your school and how much freedom you have to pick your history curriculum. My public school had everything, U.S. history, contemporary history, world history etc. The Vietnam War also is emphasized way more in a lot of curriculums here because of the much bigger cultural impact that it had here. I would say that when briefly exploring Asian history, it will probably be more relevant to WWII, and the Korean and Vietnam War are studied from the perspective of the U.S's crusade against communism. Admittedly, Japan is not treated as more than an axis power and a lot of their dark and cold, imperialistic history that affected Korea, Hong Kong, and parts of China are ignored.
Americans are not taught about their involvement at all. Only 2 months after WW2, Koreans freed themselves from Japan and held a democratic election and voted in a communist party. US didn’t like that so they, with Japan, slaughtered hundred of thousands innocent Koreans (burning crops, bombing villages, etc). The south was ruled by Syngman Rhee, US educated, CIA trained, and puppet dictator. The north was ruled by the communist party. Soviets didn’t want to help at first (it’s expensive) but they trained elected officials how to manage public works, water, agriculture. Now, Americans are unlettered on this war. They teach it as the “forgotten war” for a reason…to forget about the genocide the US supported. US and their lapdogs in Europe heavily sanction/starve DPRK (N.Korea) because they don’t want people knowing about this brutal history. If no one trades with communist DPRK, then it looks like their fault 🤷
@panyrosas I agree the exact details of our occupation there during that time are never going to be taught in detail. It's never beyond the guise of "fighting against communist dictatorships in Asia." But the simple fact that Korea was once one nation that then split into North and South is taught here in many schools... that's is all I wish to point out. As to whether we should have been there in the first place is up for debate. Believe me, I am Puerto Rican, and we have firsthand experience with history being re-written to favor certain views...
Luck was really on your and your whole family's side bcz I feel like if any Korean knew what their fate would be later on, they would have never chosen North Korea.
I'm loving this side of Jiny. You're one complex, interesting young woman!! Truly wholesome. You've got a lot going on inside that cute little skull of yours. Do share.. Dont be shy about opening up more. You are interesting. AND delightful . God Bless You 🙏😍🙋
Similar to experience of india n indians ! India got independence from brits in 1947 before that India and pakistan were one country just India They divided muslim population to pakistan!Many flew overnight from pakistan side to india side as they wanted to be in india And some flew to pakistan as they were muslims and wanted to be with their community! Dozens were killed , starved we were already pushed to poverty by brits and this was more of just traumatic experience for our ancestors continous struggles to survive! My great grandfather side used to be on the Pakistan side n my grandpa was a teenage when he came to india with his dad !
I truly hope that North and South Korea can one day become a single country again, or at LEAST be on good terms with each other 🙏 They need to realize that they would be stronger together instead of staying separated from the other! North Koreans do NOT deserve what they have to go through because of Kim Jong Un and their sh*tty government. They should be free to do what they want like the citizens of South Korea! All I can do is hope that one of Kim Jong Un’s descendants eventually decides that tyranny is an absolutely horrible way to run a country, and finally allows the citizens to have the freedom they should be entitled to 💔
Who could ask for more?...already love you for always...now we get history lessons...incredibly special recipe...love when they're passed down generations as well...with love and respect always❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Kind of like germany wich also was split in 2 (technically 4 but the UDSSR were the ones to built a wall across the country and the capital) after the war. Luckily we managed to unite again and i am so sorry for north-/ Korean people that they didn’t got to reunite
The pain & beauty of one mans sacrifice for the generations to come from him 🥹❤️🙏🏽 what an incredible man! Thats A HAAAARTY SOUTH KOREAN alright ❤🇰🇷 love from Aotearoa NZ
Incredible that one choice to study in south korea changed his entire family’s existence.
And saved his future generations
@@mizuki6150IKR
So true
if you know stephanie soo, something similar happened with her too which is insane to think about
@@asshunnngamilink?
Honestly, it’s heartbreaking every time I hear about it. I can’t imagine how many families were torn apart by the war and still are to this day.
Like the families in Palestine 😢
@@Honeydoyoubalestine
@@Honeydoyou agreed. The humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip right now is unfathomable. We need sane leaders working for peace on all sides.
and again america involved in the same bs across the globe …
@@Honeydoyou ikr this was one of the saddest things when reading about russia and ukraine for me 😢😢 many russians and ukrainian are family, i even had an online friend living in russia who is half ukrainian that was constantly upset about the war because her mother's family was in ukraine
So lucky that his siblings were studying in the south too so he didn't lose his whole family in one go.
In South Korea, my students still draw the whole peninsula when they are asked to draw “Korea.” They told me they’re still one country. It boggled my mind as a foreigner who grew up with them being considered two separate countries.
yes but north Korea is not racist like the south
@@BlackTourmaline25 😂 You must be trolling
@@Sophie-dd5xr idk about the north but it's true skorea is pretty racist especially towards SEAsians.
@@Sophie-dd5xr North Korea only hate the USA . while south koreans despise everyone who looks any shade of dark
@@Sophie-dd5xr Northern korea only hate USA. while south koreans hate anyone who's skin is not white enough for them. go figure
My paternal grandma was separated from her younger brother at the start of the Korean War. She and my grandpa, with their young kids (just before my dad was born) initially settled near what became the border and a couple of years later she swore she saw her brother again passing by as a North Korean soldier, but couldn’t approach him because that would mean risking danger, and she had her kids to think of. They were never reunited, and she passed away almost 7 years ago.
☹️
That's so sad
I hope they reunited in the spirit world (I choose the word because I don't know if other people believe in heaven or what they called it in their version of heaven)
My grandfather had similar experience but different. He was living in Pyongyang and ran to south few days before the Korean War started. He talked about how cold the river was heading to south while his little sister sleeping on his back.
I learned more in this under one minute video than how much I learn in history at school
Omg! How am i so early 😭
Right? Me too :-/
🤨 How underfunded was your school? My God. You didn’t learn anything in world history??? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
This is so special , thank you for sharing your family’s culture
I love your videos! You and Bridey are so incredibly underrated. Yall deserve to blow up!!!
America actually had a hand in the division of Korea.
So did the Soviet Union, and Japan, and China, and the UN
저희 친할아버지도 이북 살다가 6.25 때 잠시 이남으로 피난왔다가 분단되는 바람에 북으로 영영 못가시고 서울에서 자리잡고 가정을 꾸려 제가 태어났어요. 할아버지가 좋아하시던 가자미식혜를 여기서 보게될줄이야... 이 음식은 할아버지와 결혼하신 울 할머니가 할아버지를 위해 잘 해주셨고 저도 어렸을때 많이 먹었었는데 정말 추억입니다. 현재 할아버지는 돌아가셨고 할머니는 치매에 걸리셨어요. 저는 더이상 한국에 살지 않습니다. 가자미식혜가 어떤맛인지 어떤식감인지 생생히 기억나지만, 제 일생에 다시 한번 먹어볼 수 있을까요?
My grandmothers village was on the 38th.her three brothers were taken by the North to fightbwhile her, her sister, and mom fled south. She was the only survivor, fleeing to Alaska then moving to Texas. We most likely have blood up North.
She doesnt like her culture too much. Likes to not think about home too much. But she always cooks great Korean food, being sure I was fat unlike all the trials her family faced. I love her very much, thank you for sharing your story and this recipe!
It is sad to think of all the traditions family wise and culturally that we're not just lost but annihilated
He's lucky he chose to study in the South but it must be sad never getting to visit where you grew up ever again
Ikr. I moved to a different country to study for a bit. I’m Chinese, but raised in Canada (but still connected to a lot of my Chinese heritage as I live with my grandma and my family goes back to China every other year) and I’m not a very sentimental person usually, I’m not even on amazing relations with my family lol, but I find myself missing home often 😭
I guess it’s the unfamiliarity of my environment and being on my own for the first time but ugh I want to go back to my room in Canada and curl up in my bed! I want to find an Asian supermarket and get my Chinese snacks and drinks 😭 I can’t imagine never being able to go back to where I grew up
I always explain this to people when they ask if my family is north or south. Literally 3 generations ago, it was one country, no north or south.
Thank you for sharing his recipe with us but especially his story, that is a real gift
She's so nice for not gatekeeping all these amazing recipes.
My grandma was 5 years old when the Japanese killed her dad and grandfather and her youngest sibling was a baby and she died from starvation and they don’t know where they buried her. My grandma went through a lot she’s my hero 🦸♀️
Ive also heard that all North Koreans have south korean citizenship and are considered to just be koreans
my grandparents were from the northern side of korea, but quickly escaped to busan in search of safety for the war, as they were hoping it was safe. luckily, the north korean troops never set foot in busan, so we're all good :D
My grandfather is also from the north. Although ive never seen him because he passed before i was born, he apparently had his wife and children there too. But were separated when he came down and the war broke. My grandmother is technically his 2nd wife, and 3rd women who he had a baby with, lol 😅
So you got cousins in North Korea??
Oh wow looks delicious AND the video was educational
That’s incredible that you can hold onto such traditions still that could eventually be lost.
My grandma is also from the north, and Gazami Sikhe is literally the one dish my mom misses the most from her mother’s cooking.
I live in a place where Korean food culture hasn’t really developed much, so finding this type of local delicacy is very difficult.
I love seeing someone who is continuing the family recipe from the north.❤
존경스러워요 한국의 역사적인부분과 가자미식혜 음식의 스토리텔링까지 정확히 알고 영어로 설명하시다니 음식도잘하시고 맨날 눈으로만 보다가 댓글남깁니다ㅎㅎ👍🏻❤️ 한국가면 하루별 식당도 한번 가보고싶네용
This is very special. Thank you for sharing this with us 🌻
My Grandpa fought in the Korean War too. He ended up marrying my Japanese Grandma. ❤
My parents' family friend was also from the north before it split off. She moved to USA when she was young and she married an American. She was very kind and knew a lot of recipes from the north. But she's gotten very old so she doesnt cook much anymore. She does still make kimchi in her retirement home
I pray one day North Korea and South Korea can be as close as they once were
My grandpa is from the north but escaped to the south before the war, but he had a business importing trees from Japan or something so he was looked at poorly for doing business with the enemy or something. We don't talk about it but that's what I've gathered from family.
Japan fought the North along with South korea and America. Don't forget that.
If it was before the war, there was nothing to escape. Migration between the two was permitted.
@@DisingenuousCommentThey still occupied Korea for 35 years. There’s a lot of baggage that goes with that that a lot of families still carry.
@@melia1426 Oh absolutely, I do not deny that. But why should people carry baggage of others? The fact that many Japanese who stayed in Korea trying to replenish what has been torn from the country, to end up going to war with the North should not be taken away from them.
It's not a "should" question; it's just a fact. Grandchildren of holocaust survivors and victims both carry that baggage. Descendants of slaves carry that baggage. There's also biological evidence for generational trauma that you can look up. @@DisingenuousComment
I am a Sakhalin Korean and this flounder kimchi (we call it schikke... or however you transcribe it) is very commonly sold in the markets. Very tasty 😋
But Sakhalin is Japanese
Isnt Sakhalin Island Russian?
@@siratshi455 southern half used to be until mid 20th century. The only few Japanese I know of are only the workers in the Japanese embassy we have in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk.
@@zerobaseone_HelloZB1_3rdAlbum If you wanna learn more about it, look up "Sakhalin Koreans" on Wikipedia. Most of the Koreans that live there descend from labor workers sent by Japan when Korea used to be a single entity and more poor. So most cultural aspects (especially food dishes) are a mix of what people find in North and South Korea, with some adaptations to locally available animal produce/vegetables (ex. winter kimchi, giant burdock dishes, the fish kimchi the lady in the video showed, North Korean potato side dish salad, etc.)
@@zerobaseone_HelloZB1_3rdAlbumyes
Brings tears to my eyes when i.think about the possibility of brothers, or childhood best friends having to fight against each other, back then. And the very real reality that families were separated, in some cases for ever. I saw a video were brothers who were separated for DECADES finally got to see each other for a few hours one day, and they were both so old, so you know that was probably their "I can finally die now" moment.
This feels like such a precious and special recipe!! Thank you for sharing it with us 🖤🖤
Thank you for the history lesson! It was actually very cool.
I just love learning others family history. Your father was a brave man to fight in war. Thanks for sharing a little piece of your family with us ❤
Respect for your grandad. I hate the heartbreak that so many families were separated from their loved ones after the division. So heartbreaking
Learnt more history in this video then I did in my actual history class today😂
Me too!! My great grandmother escaped during the korean war! Its so cool to see one of my fav youtubers have the same story!!
I had absolutely no idea South Korea was such a newly liberated country! They are doing an amazing job. It's gonna be wild when your channel blows up.
Americans are usually very unaware of these facts about other countries. Glad she is sharing more info!
@@Mink_Tracksyeah unfortunately American education hides a lot from us so they can better control us. It’s sad
Hmmm you most definitely learn about this in school. We just don't spend that much time on it since we emphasize U.S. history a lot more. It depends on your school and how much freedom you have to pick your history curriculum. My public school had everything, U.S. history, contemporary history, world history etc. The Vietnam War also is emphasized way more in a lot of curriculums here because of the much bigger cultural impact that it had here. I would say that when briefly exploring Asian history, it will probably be more relevant to WWII, and the Korean and Vietnam War are studied from the perspective of the U.S's crusade against communism. Admittedly, Japan is not treated as more than an axis power and a lot of their dark and cold, imperialistic history that affected Korea, Hong Kong, and parts of China are ignored.
Americans are not taught about their involvement at all. Only 2 months after WW2, Koreans freed themselves from Japan and held a democratic election and voted in a communist party. US didn’t like that so they, with Japan, slaughtered hundred of thousands innocent Koreans (burning crops, bombing villages, etc). The south was ruled by Syngman Rhee, US educated, CIA trained, and puppet dictator. The north was ruled by the communist party. Soviets didn’t want to help at first (it’s expensive) but they trained elected officials how to manage public works, water, agriculture.
Now, Americans are unlettered on this war. They teach it as the “forgotten war” for a reason…to forget about the genocide the US supported. US and their lapdogs in Europe heavily sanction/starve DPRK (N.Korea) because they don’t want people knowing about this brutal history. If no one trades with communist DPRK, then it looks like their fault 🤷
@panyrosas I agree the exact details of our occupation there during that time are never going to be taught in detail. It's never beyond the guise of "fighting against communist dictatorships in Asia." But the simple fact that Korea was once one nation that then split into North and South is taught here in many schools... that's is all I wish to point out. As to whether we should have been there in the first place is up for debate. Believe me, I am Puerto Rican, and we have firsthand experience with history being re-written to favor certain views...
So 👋🏻 I’m new to your channel and am loving this content. Feels very wholesome and family oriented 😍
Aww..that's so cute I love history and even more when it's a personal story
Got my history and cooking instructions mixed up. Fought a war against the fish, then partitioned it off from the vegetables.
It is fascinating that one decision leads to an entire family being able to live in freedom.
I'm a Korean history major. It is nice to hear personal stories.
Love you grandpa for studying in South Korea, we can literally see jinni now here otherwise I would have dipression without her shorts ❤
Luck was really on your and your whole family's side bcz I feel like if any Korean knew what their fate would be later on, they would have never chosen North Korea.
North Korea was fairly rich up until 80s.
@@siratshi455You mean the government officials were wealthy? Do you really think that the working class and farmers were “rich” in NK in the 80s?
@@Peachyytrees Please point out where in the world are working class and farmers rich? Lol
이거 우리 할머니가 만들어 주시던건데 대박!!! 딱 날씨가 추워질때 베란다에서 삭히는 맛이 일품이에요!!!!
i'm from South korea, and Iso glad to see you on UA-cam 🤗
I'm loving this side of Jiny. You're one complex, interesting young woman!! Truly wholesome. You've got a lot going on inside that cute little skull of yours. Do share.. Dont be shy about opening up more. You are interesting. AND delightful . God Bless You 🙏😍🙋
우리엄마도 고향이 북쪽인데…3살인가 온가족이 넘어왔어요. 암튼 이런 정보 영어로 알려주셔서 감사해요.❤
Kim John UN finna be pissed 😡
Similar to experience of india n indians ! India got independence from brits in 1947 before that India and pakistan were one country just India
They divided muslim population to pakistan!Many flew overnight from pakistan side to india side as they wanted to be in india
And some flew to pakistan as they were muslims and wanted to be with their community! Dozens were killed , starved we were already pushed to poverty by brits and this was more of just traumatic experience for our ancestors continous struggles to survive! My great grandfather side used to be on the Pakistan side n my grandpa was a teenage when he came to india with his dad !
Sounds so similar 😭 my great grandparents fled to Pakistan and we’re still there to this day.
Thank you for sharing this history Jiny💜💜
Such an inspiring story
Love watching you prepare food..but I love your history lesson… I honestly hope we will live to see a United Korea in the near future.
I truly hope that North and South Korea can one day become a single country again, or at LEAST be on good terms with each other 🙏 They need to realize that they would be stronger together instead of staying separated from the other!
North Koreans do NOT deserve what they have to go through because of Kim Jong Un and their sh*tty government. They should be free to do what they want like the citizens of South Korea!
All I can do is hope that one of Kim Jong Un’s descendants eventually decides that tyranny is an absolutely horrible way to run a country, and finally allows the citizens to have the freedom they should be entitled to 💔
Wow
It’s so comforting to hear the language you use, when describing the American occupation and democratic Korea
Wow I have a test about this tomorrow, thank you for explaining to me ❤
Who could ask for more?...already love you for always...now we get history lessons...incredibly special recipe...love when they're passed down generations as well...with love and respect always❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Great information ❤
Thanks for sharing ur family history Jiny. 3 of my grandparents were also born in 🇰🇵 but moved/fled to 🇰🇷 Korea has a tragic history..
와 가자미 식해🥹🥹 요리 지인짜 잘하시네요
😢 thats entire time period was messed up. Im sorry for your granddad. I hope he found peace with his new family and this is an awesome recipe ❤
What you are doing is special. This mixture of history and food sprinkled with beautiful nostalgia of sharing your personal family stories
I am your biggest supporter / fan I love you soooooooooooooo muchh
U should try a nose ring would look sooo pretty on youu❤❤❤
Liked the background music
I like her smile
The ADHD in this video makes me so happy
The geography is killing mee😭😭
Love hearing someone talk about the dprk without so much negative bias
she is sooo cute
As a person who watches kdramas i knew all that because i was a bit too obsessed with researching korean history 😅
Thank you for the warning ❤❤❤
💕💕💕
Awesome
The “jinyyyyyyyyyyyyyy”😂
My grandfather on my mom's side fought in the Korean war he was a code breaker.
Kind of like germany wich also was split in 2 (technically 4 but the UDSSR were the ones to built a wall across the country and the capital) after the war. Luckily we managed to unite again and i am so sorry for north-/ Korean people that they didn’t got to reunite
Thank you fir sharing that about your grandad
Not you being in a UA-cam ad SLAY
Everyone and and every family has a story and a history that deserves to be taught to each generation
I had to watch the video twice .
First for the history.
Second time for the food .
I saw an interview with a north Korean soldier that escaped with another woman, and at the end he sings this song that south Korean people also know
She looks like hana from f4 thailand
Omg thank you for the fish prep warning
Lets note, Democratic doesnt mean Democratic in this case.
I love thé shoes
Ur nails are matching with the fish
😊😊 you are so sweet 🥰
Can you share the recipe with measurements with us please?
Wow how incredibly lucky
OMG I WOULD LOVE TO HEAR YOUR GRANDPAS STORY 🥹
❤
The pain & beauty of one mans sacrifice for the generations to come from him 🥹❤️🙏🏽 what an incredible man! Thats A HAAAARTY SOUTH KOREAN alright ❤🇰🇷 love from Aotearoa NZ
오호~ 그렇구나
Bc of the division, we lost contact with my maternal grandpa's family up there
Your so pretty🌹
Girl you got LUCKY