'Hitting mung': In stressed-out South Korea, people are paying to stare at clouds and trees
Asia
Hitting mung: In stressed-out South Korea, people are paying to stare at clouds and trees
By Michelle Ye Hee Lee
November 25, 2021 at 8:38 a.m. EST
SEOUL Tucked away in a side street near an urban park named Seoul Forest is a tea shop that barely seats 10. Here, you cant talk. Your phone must be on silent. No shoes allowed.
The rules have one aim. Relax. Just space out.
As South Koreans
enter the living-with-corona phase of the pandemic, some are easing back into social life by visiting public spaces where they can be alone and do very little. Nothing is the new something in South Korea as people desperately seek refuge from the pressures of living as functioning adults in a global pandemic in a high-stress and fast-paced society with soaring real estate prices and often-grueling work schedules.
At a
Space Out Competition this year, competitors sought to achieve the lowest heart rate possible while sitting in a healing forest on the southern island of Jeju. The contest has spread internationally since it began in 2014, including to Hong Kong and the Netherlands.
And the concept is seeping out into a handful of public spaces in South Korea. This month, theaters throughout the country premiered a movie simulating a 40-minute plane ride above and through clouds. Tickets for
Flight, a project backed by Megabox, a major movie theater company, are just under $6. A tagline reads: Take a brief rest through the fluffy clouds.
Its a sequel to a movie released this spring, Fire Mung: 31 minutes of footage of a burning campfire.
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By Michelle Lee
Michelle Ye Hee Lee is The Washington Post's Tokyo bureau chief, covering Japan and the Korean peninsula. Twitter
https://twitter.com/myhlee