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It is said that the grass is always greener
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on the other side of the fence,
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and I believe this is true,
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especially when I hear President Obama
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often talk about Korean education system
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as a benchmark of success.
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Well, I can tell you that,
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in the rigid structure and highly competitive nature
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of the Korean school system,
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also known as pressure cooker,
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not everyone can do well in that environment.
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While many people responded in different ways
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about our education system,
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my response to the high-pressure environment
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was making bows with pieces of wood
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found near my apartment building.
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Why bows?
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I'm not quite sure.
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Perhaps, in the face of constant pressure,
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my caveman instinct of survival
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has connected with the bows.
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If you think about it,
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bow has really helped drive human survival
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since prehistoric times.
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The area within three kilometers of my home
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used to be a mulberry forest
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during the Joseon Dynasty,
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where silkworms were fed with mulberry leaves.
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In order to raise the historical awareness of this fact,
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the government has planted mulberry trees.
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The seeds from these trees
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also have spread by birds here and there
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nearby the soundproof walls of the city expressway
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that has been built around the 1988 Olympics.
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The area near these walls,
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where nobody bothers to pay attention to,
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had been left free from major intervention,
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and this is where I first found my treasures.
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As I fell deeper into bow-making,
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I began to search far and beyond my neighborhood.
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When I went on school field trips,
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family vacations, or simply on my way home
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from extracurricular classes,
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I wandered around wooded areas
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and gathered tree branches
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with the tools that I sneaked inside my school bag.
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And they would be somethings like saws, knives,
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sickles, and axes
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that I covered up with a piece of towel.
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I would bring the branches home,
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riding buses and subways,
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barely holding them in my hands.
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And I did not bring the tools here to Long Beach.
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Airport security.
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(Laughter)
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In the privacy of my room, covered in sawdust,
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I would saw, trim, and polish wood all night long
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until a bow took shape.
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One day, I was changing the shape of a bamboo piece
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and ended up setting the place on fire.
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Where? The rooftop of my apartment building,
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a place where 96 families call home.
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A customer from a department store across my building
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called 911,
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and I ran downstairs to tell my mom
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with half of my hair burned.
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I want to take this opportunity
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to tell my mom in the audience today,
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mom, I was really sorry,
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and I will be more careful with open fire from now on.
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(Laughter)
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My mother had to do a lot of explaining,
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telling people that her son did not commit
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a premeditated arson.
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I also researched extensively on bows around the world.
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In that process, I tried to combine
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the different bows from across the time and places
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to create the most effective bow.
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I also worked with many different types of wood,
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such as maple, yew, and mulberry,
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and did many shooting experiments
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in the wooded area near the urban expressway
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that I mentioned before.
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The most effective bow for me
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would be like this.
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One, curved tips can maximize the springiness
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when you draw and shoot the arrow.
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Two, belly is drawn inward for higher draw weight,
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which means more power.
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Three, sinew used in the outer layer of the limb
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for maximum tension storage.
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And four, horn, used to store energy in compression.
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After fixing, breaking, redesigning,
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mending, bending, and amending,
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my ideal bow began to take shape,
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and when it was finally done,
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it looked like this.
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I was so proud of myself
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for inventing a perfect bow on my own.
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This is a picture of Korean traditional bows
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taken from a museum,
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and see how my bow resembles them.
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Thanks to my ancestors
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for robbing me my invention.
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(Laughter)
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Through bowmaking,
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I came in contact with part of my heritage.
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Learning the information that has accumulated over time
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and reading the message left by my ancestors
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were better than any consolation therapy
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or piece of advice any living adults could give me.
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You see, I searched far and wide,
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but never bothered to look close and near.
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From this realization,
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I began to take interest in Korean history,
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which had never inspired me before.
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In the end, the grass is often greener
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on my side of the fence,
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although we don't realize it.
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Now, I am going to show you how my bow works.
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And let's see how this one works.
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This is a bamboo bow,
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with 45 pound draw weights.
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(Applause)
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A bow may function in a simple mechanism,
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but in order to make a good bow,
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a great amount of sensitivity is required.
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You need to console and communicate
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with the wood material.
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Each fiber in the wood
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has its own reason and function for being,
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and only through cooperation and harmony among them
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comes a great bow.
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I may be an [inaud] student
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with unconventional interests,
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but I hope I am making a contribution
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by sharing my story with all of you.
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My ideal world is a place
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where no one is left behind,
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where everyone is needed exactly where they are,
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like the fibers and the tendons in a bow,
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a place where the strong is flexible
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and the vulnerable is resilient.
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The bow resembles me,
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and I resemble the bow.
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Now, I am shooting a part of myself to you.
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No, better yet, a part of my mind
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has just been shot over to your mind.
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Did it strike you?
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Thank you.
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(Applause)