Welcome to the Damned If You Do podcast, where two cousins share our experiences growing up as children of immigrants and how we navigate the world today as teachers, mothers, and women of color who have something to say.
In Part 2, we tackle why we didn't take up more space growing up. We unpack all things Korean-American, the patriarchy, transactional culture, and of course, our moms. Join us!
Have you ever wondered what it means to "take up space?" We, Linda and Praise, have often heard that we have a big presence. Then why do we both feel like we take up so little space? Join us for Part 1 of 2 as we dive into this!
Our comeback episode is a banger! We discuss all things related to emotions. In the past, we used to say that we only feel two emotions: happiness and anger...that is, before we started a lot of therapy. We explore our big therapy breakthroughs that have fundamentally changed us, unintentional repression, "Big G" or "little g" grief, and most importantly, how to live our best (mediocre) lives. And of course, we laugh through all of it!
It's been a minute since our last episode - because we were busy living la vida mediocre! This week, we discuss the expectations put on us by our parents and by society, and the futility of running a rat race you can't ever win. We have both committed to mediocrity and invite you to do the same!
We give our take on Shang-Chi, not as a review, but more as an experience of what came up for us while watching the film, especially as children of Asian immigrants. We talk about everything from patriarchy and double consciousness, to the lack of vulnerability shown by our parents. But damned if we didn't have a great time!
Three years, two babies, and a pandemic has happened since we started teasing the idea of a podcast, but episode one is finally here! It just wasn't the episode we thought we'd start with. We planned our first to be typical of the rest: a Linda and Praise discussion that is honest, irreverent and filled with raucous laughter. But damned if we didn't start with Covenant Fellowship Church a.k.a. CFC, which hits so close to home with the Korean-American community. With our first guest, the one and only Amos Lee, we explain what drew us in, what kept us there, and our recent role in the publicizing of recent events.