Introduction
At Monterey Language Services, we love connecting people across cultures. This year, our Global Family Celebration series kicked off with Chuseok, the Korean Harvest Festival.
Video Link: https://youtu.be/_WsyaeLVReY
Crafting the Script
The journey began with words on a page. We didn’t want a dry description of Chuseok — we wanted viewers to feel it: the aroma of sesame oil, the laughter in the kitchen, the quiet reverence at ancestors’ graves. After several drafts, the script found its rhythm, blending Chuseok’s rich traditions — foods, ancestor rituals, and festive customs — with the lived experience of one family.
At the heart of the story were Min-jun and his grandmother. Their moments in the kitchen — shaping sticky songpyeon, laughing at uneven dough, sharing stories across generations — became the soul of the video. Through them, cultural traditions didn’t just inform — they came alive, wrapped in warmth, presence, and the messy, joyful beauty of family life.
Reflecting on Gratitude
In Min-jun’s grandmother’s kitchen, laughter rose with the scent of sesame oil as three generations shaped songpyeon. These half-moon rice cakes are said to promise a beautiful life. But the dough sticks, the shapes collapse, and Min-jun thinks: maybe life isn’t shaped by perfection.
A mindfulness saying comes to mind: “You cannot feel true gratitude and remain frustrated at the same time.” In that messy, joyful moment, gratitude replaces frustration. The imperfect rice cakes suddenly feel perfect.
As the evening wore on, Min-jun realized the truth in his grandmother’s words: “Beautiful songpyeon, beautiful life.” He hadn’t fully believed her — until now. The rice cakes were uneven, sticky, imperfect. Yet the laughter, stories shared across generations, and the warmth of everyone together felt perfectly complete.
Finding the Right Visuals
Once the script captured the heart of Chuseok, the next challenge was bringing it to life visually. We wanted more than images — we wanted moments that felt real: sunlight streaming through a kitchen window onto sticky hands, children giggling as dough clung to their fingers, the vibrant colors of bulgogi and kimchi arranged on the table, and the quiet stillness of bowing at ancestors’ graves.
Each shot was chosen to convey both authenticity and emotion, creating a rhythm that mirrored the holiday itself. We wanted viewers not just to see Chuseok, but to experience it — to feel the warmth, the laughter, and the gratitude that fills every imperfect, beautiful moment of family life.
Blending Video with Reality
Watching the video, you might crave the flavors of Korea. We did too. Speaking with Korean restaurant owners, we heard the same lesson: Food made with care is a gift for the heart. Even if it’s not perfect, sharing it brings everyone together.
Chuseok, Thanksgiving, or any family meal — different foods, different rituals — but the same truth holds: joy lives in presence, connection, and gratitude.
Next time you taste something new — maybe a songpyeon, maybe a bowl of bulgogi — pause. Feel the moment. Laugh at the sticky fingers. Taste the care. Let gratitude replace frustration.
Because a beautiful life isn’t about perfect rice cakes. It’s about enjoying the moments we share.
Stay Tuned
Join us as we travel from one celebration to the next, uncovering the shared threads of family and gratitude — and delighting in the unique differences that make each holiday shine.
Monterey Language Services is launching a new series exploring holidays around the world, all connected by one timeless theme: family.
We’d love to hear from you! Share your ideas, stories, or even a little flight of fancy with us, and help make the Global Family Celebration series even more diverse, vibrant, and inspiring.
Email us at info@montereylanguages.com — your thoughts could shape our next celebration!
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