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Seoul National University Med Student's Pure Definition of Hard Work

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·5 hours ago

원본 (Korean)

Translation + Context

FT = ForbiddenTome — tap to see Korean slang explained

Some Seoul National University med student claims he's all effort-pilled OO (119.200) 2020.12.08 00:21:29

It's a video that was uploaded to YouTube

According to him, it seems like he made it up purely through effort without any background or help

He was basically saying all that Sky Castle type stuff is complete bullshit, with that kind of vibe ㅇㅇ

But when we dug into this fucker's background

His dad's a doctor from Seoul National, his brother went to Seoul National for dentistry, he himself went to Seoul National

And his mom also went to Seoul National or whatever ㅇㅇ

He went to Hana High School and got all the expensive private tutoring

Got early education since elementary school and there's even someone doing consulting for him

Despite all that, he's saying environment and stuff like that aren't what's important

Kids who had everything from the start don't seem to realize what's different about them compared to everyone else

7 comments

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I used to think they could get away with saying stuff like that since they were only talking amongst themselves, but lately I've been feeling differently. It's not like we're living in an era where people don't understand hardship until they're 29—people nowadays have plenty of access to understanding what average or struggling life looks like. Saying stuff like that just seems kinda shallow to me.

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There was some research or survey result floating around communities about how people trust experts who align with their views more, and they make excuses to ignore experts who don't align with them. (Like with climate change and stuff.) Since accepting opinions that differ from yours is annoying and drains a ton of mental energy, it's not really about 'how credible is this expert'—it's more like 'if I don't like what you're saying, I won't believe it no matter how much of an expert you are.' I'm guessing that Seoul Nat'l guy just sucked up the 'I succeeded through effort' narrative like water, but probably didn't really see or didn't pay much attention to how he had better starting conditions or how people from less supportive families struggled. That's just how people naturally operate unconsciously.

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These guys understand studying is a talent but why do top schools like Korea, Yonsei, Ewha, Hongik, SKY, Sungkyunkwan always look down so much?

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Because they don't wanna believe talent is a thing.

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bruh if THIS is what hard work looks like, I'm out 💀 Seoul med students really are built different

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okay but why do I feel personally attacked by this? I thought I studied hard until I saw this

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Sure, people say 'you can do anything with effort,' but most med students and traditional medicine students come from wealthy families. After graduation, getting a license, and opening a practice in Gangnam.

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I've worked at small, mid-size, and large corporations, and the higher you go, the better the educational backgrounds and the more stable the family finances are. It's not 100%, but in terms of ratios, there's a huge difference between the backgrounds of people at small companies vs. big ones.

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lmaooo the comments section is gonna be flooded with people justifying why they don't study like this 😭

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The med students I've known even talk in their sleep about studying. They literally organize their whole day around solving problems they couldn't figure out and it's a constant thing even in daily life.

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I know 6 people from Hana High School and whether they're just special or whatever, they all lived really well. Their newlywed homes were in Apgujeong, Banpo, Hannam—basically the priciest areas—and they all had their weddings at 5-star hotels.

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Kids from school districts in Gangnam and Moksil think everywhere outside is basically a theme park or something. They genuinely don't think of it as a place where people actually live. That's why they freak out if you try to send them outside Seoul. Since they only hang out with their own circle, the perception gap is that huge. Even 60-year-olds who've never left Seoul have similar perceptions.

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I grew up in that kind of environment and that mentality doesn't change until you go somewhere like America and realize you're just a marginal person from an Asian backwater country—that's a harsh wake-up call. But when I went to the third world and saw preschoolers working alongside their parents, I realized I wasn't special or anything; I was just lucky enough to be born in Korea and benefit from it. That humbled me. Nothing's scarier than being a frog in a well.

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