Travelling in the U.S. ● What’s inside and outside of an American people? ● Why don’t you look like you’re in a park or a swimming pool all the time in American movies? Also, if you look at Korean blogs these days, don’t you think they’re trying to show the amazing scenery of car camping or the introduction of food? Because I have four children in my family, my house is usually a battlefield, and when people come to see me, my house is organized as if it’s a church loft meeting or something. But it’s only a day or two, too. “Can you take a picture of me?” “Okay. Excuse me, will you wear sunglasses? I will take one more photo.” When I took a picture of an American, I told him to wear sunglasses because of his cool photo. Why don’t my wife and I want to take pictures of us when we get older? For some reason, we look old when we take pictures, and it feels awkward. So I ask my wife to wear sunglasses when we take pictures. Then what about the American people here? I go to the community swimming pool where I live, and most of them wear sunglasses. This may be prejudice, but why blond hair and sunglasses look cool. Maybe because it’s hot here, I look like an actor regardless of age when I wear sunglasses in the park, mart, or wherever I go. Of course, there are a lot of fat men and women. On the last day of our trip to Chalombu, an Arizona church, we had a Korean-style lunch at Palm Springs Downtown Park. The last time we had a road trip to the U.S., we ate in Rest Area or KOA. It’s unfamiliar to eat Korean-style meals and even make ramen at a park downtown. But look over there. Doesn’t it look like a scene from a movie when a cool American couple with sunglasses sit on an outdoor chair and chat over sandwiches and tea (juice)? How does it look like to live in real Americans?