South Koreans lock themselves up to escape prison of daily life

by jacobbudinon 11/27/18, 9:27 PMwith 180 comments
by calvinbhaion 11/28/18, 12:19 AM

Question for South Koreans here: Is this real or is this report just the usual exaggeration by western media?

Asking because Reuter’s has a biased reporting for anything related to India, and I’m wondering if they have a similar lens / filter for South Korea. (I’m from India in US)

by klodolphon 11/28/18, 12:42 AM

Those of you considering the appeal, consider that there are retreats you can go on which structure your time and give you rules to follow. You don't have to make it look like prison.

by dawhizkidon 11/27/18, 11:25 PM

If I ever developed a chronic illness in old age and would be on the verge of bankruptcy because of it, I would seriously consider committing a white collar crime and get free treatment in prison over suffering through the financial strain it would otherwise cause me.

by rb808on 11/27/18, 11:18 PM

Actually sometimes I really fantasize about a 3-6 month stint in prison - am I the only one. Surely it can't be that bad If Martha Stewart can do it. Imagine no commuting or on call support or social engagements or children's homework or chores. bliss.

by matty22on 11/28/18, 3:22 PM

I'm from the US, but spent 2 years teaching English in South Korea. I interacted with very few adult Koreans who weren't teachers, so I can't speak to the 'overworked, stressed Korean businessman' stereotype. However, schooling for kids there is a lot different from schooling here. If you think your American kid is overworked and is given too much homework, it doesn't hold a candle to what Korean kids are put through.

From the age of 7 or 8, they are doing full days at school and at least 1 after school hagwon (private academy). That ramps up as they get older. By 10 or 11, they are doing full 9am-9pm days. Middle and high school kids are more like 9am-9pm in class and I've had kids tell me that they go home and study until 2 or 3am, regularly. I routinely had kids breakdown and cry.

After a while I realized that in a small way I was helping contribute to the continuation of this lifestyle and I soured on the whole teaching English in Korea thing and moved back to the States. I loved Korea on the whole and would go back in a heartbeat, but not as a teacher.

by jonnaton 11/27/18, 11:04 PM

My immediate response was “this sounds like an amazing idea”. Now I think I need a break.

by jillesvangurpon 11/28/18, 9:54 AM

Doesn't sound that different from people staying in a monastery for a while. Used to be pretty common. But monastic life is not so popular anymore so there are fewer of those around.

by pmiller2on 11/28/18, 1:09 AM

I'm not sure why I'd want to pay someone else for this when I can do the same thing at home by unplugging my internet for a day.

by blondie9xon 11/27/18, 11:14 PM

I am a bit confused by this, "South Koreans worked 2,024 hours in 2017." That does seem demanding but I am not sure how the US wouldn't be ranked higher where the minimum for full time employment is 2,080 hours a year. Can anyone clarify?

by kingkawnon 11/28/18, 12:27 AM

Sounds like the movie Old Boy getting closer to reality

by TheAdamiston 11/28/18, 12:39 PM

People do this in America as well. Possibly for other reasons. Article: https://splinternews.com/roleplaying-jail-in-iowa-with-ameri...

Book your own stay: http://www.hamptonjail.com/

by benatkinon 11/28/18, 12:59 AM

Here's a similar sort of odd business in the US that I read about today: https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/arts/all-the-rage-tempes-sim...

I don't think stuff like this is very useful to learn about what it's like to live in a country. These are really tiny niches.

by decebalus1on 11/27/18, 11:31 PM

I recall also reading something similar about Japan a while back.

EDIT: found it https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-03-16/japan-s-p...

by new_guyon 11/28/18, 1:43 AM

I think society (in general, not just Korean) is fundamentally broken when people are actually considering something like this.

The Korean Government reduced working hours from 68 to 52, it's still 48 too many (see the four hour working week)

Life is for LIVING. Too many people forget that.

by jihoonkon 11/28/18, 11:50 AM

Hi I am a korean, but this is the first time I see this. It is not a universal culture, but something unusual. I was surprised that Reuters reported what local people did not know.

by carbocationon 11/28/18, 12:07 PM

This is a particularly effective submarine advertisement.

by pcurveon 11/28/18, 2:57 AM

2000 inmates in 5 years... at $90/days. Hrm. I guess they have a lot of multi-day guests doing hard time, otherwise this isn't too sustainable.

by aqme28on 11/27/18, 11:13 PM

Wow this is straight out of a major plot point in "Sorry to Bother You" (which was a great film if you haven't seen it).

by ultim8kon 11/27/18, 11:56 PM

Dear meteors, please hit the earth soon! I cannot stand humanity anymore.

by GrumpyNlon 11/28/18, 9:41 AM

It strikes me, that we first have to question the newsreport on accuracy. Thats the state we are in now.

by reactionon 11/28/18, 1:29 AM

Has anyone a meditation retreat? Sounds a bit similar to escape and take a break without the prison life.

by TheFunBurglaron 11/28/18, 12:10 AM

One prisoner was heard to remark, "I'm having the time of my life."

by kbos87on 11/28/18, 3:50 AM

Whenever I feel like my life is too driven by work and guilt driven by capitalism here in the US, a glance eastward is a great level setter.

by quickthrower2on 11/28/18, 1:52 AM

Almost satirical sounding.

by CharlesDodgsonon 11/28/18, 11:42 AM

are we not all prisoners of circumstance?