Close

Misun #19

15. Life as a Soldier’s Spouse 

A week after settling into the military residence, I found myself longing to visit my parents. Though it had only been a week since we parted, I deeply missed my father, mother, and two younger siblings. I decided to take the train to their house and began preparing for the trip after tidying up my home.

However, just as I was finishing up, my husband’s liaison soldier arrived with a message summoning me to the company’s food warehouse.

When I arrived, I learned that the company’s sanitation instructor, responsible for ration distribution, had purchased dozens of kilograms of jawbreaker candy to celebrate the anniversary of the Party’s foundation on October 10. Each military household was allotted 5 kilograms of candy as a gift. To my surprise, I was given an additional 35 kilograms!

A soldier typically receives 24 kilograms of rice per month, equating to 800 grams a day, while each family member is allotted 300 grams daily, or 9 kilograms a month. However, I was given 2 kilograms more than the usual ration.

After returning home, I sat quietly for a long time, staring at the rice and candy I had received. The economic situation had grown so dire that once-common sweets had become a rare luxury. It felt surreal to have such a large quantity of them before me.

When I was younger, grocery stores were brimming with sweets. Back then, I could buy 500 grams of candy with just 10 jon. Those days are long gone. Now, sweets only make an appearance in stores during special holidays.

On some holidays, there weren’t any sweets at all. Children had to wait for Kim Il Sung’s and Kim Jong Il’s birthdays to enjoy them. On those occasions, a “Gift Ceremony of Love” was held, distributing bags of sweets to daycare centers, kindergartens, and people’s schools, each containing 1 kilogram of candy.

When my siblings and I were young, we rarely ate the candy produced by the Hyesan grocery factory—it didn’t taste good. Our house always had high-quality candies and snacks wrapped in cellophane paper, sent by my uncle and aunt in Pyongyang. But as the situation in North Korea worsened, those gifts from Pyongyang became fewer and fewer.

Now, with so many candies in my possession, I couldn’t stop thinking about my younger siblings. I decided to split the candies I had received from the unit, putting a portion in a bag to take to my parents and siblings.

When I shared the plan with my husband during dinner, he praised the idea. After we finished eating, he returned to the company, leaving me to prepare for the trip.

I was washing the dishes and mopping the floor when the door suddenly opened. My husband, who had gone back to the company, walked in carrying a large box. I quickly stood up to take it from him—it was surprisingly heavy.

“It’s candy,” he said. “The vice-platoon leader told me to bring it home.”

I felt a surge of gratitude toward the vice-platoon leader. He was the same age as my husband, and they had joined the military in the same year. Although my husband was an officer of higher rank, the two of them were quite close.

My husband suggested we keep a small portion of the candy at home and take the rest to my parents’ house. His thoughtfulness moved me, and I thanked him repeatedly.

The next day, I took the afternoon train from Unheung Station to my parents’ house. When I arrived, the house was empty—my two younger siblings were likely still at school. I found the key, unlocked the door, set down the backpack containing the candy I had brought, and headed to my father’s factory, where my mother also worked.

At that time, my father’s factory was running a policy that allowed people to exchange used cloth for shoes. Since goods were scarce in stores and shoes could only be purchased with a special slip, the policy was extremely popular.

My father had once been elected as the representative of Ryanggang Province to attend the 6th Congress of the Workers’ Party of Korea. However, during the mandatory medical examination for participants, he was diagnosed with liver cirrhosis and was unable to attend the event.

He later applied to the Yanggang Provincial Party to return to his hometown of Pyongyang for treatment. Unfortunately, the provincial Party rejected his request, arguing that no one could replace him due to his exceptional skills and competence.

Instead of approving his request to return to Pyongyang, the provincial Party arranged for my father to receive treatment in a special room at the Hepatitis Prevention Center on the outskirts of Hyesan City. After two months of care, he was discharged.

Following his recovery, my father resigned from his demanding managerial position, which required frequent business trips, and took on the role of head engineer for three years. However, when his hepatitis relapsed, he stepped down again and renewed his request to return to Pyongyang. Once more, the provincial Party refused. Eventually, my father settled into a position as an adviser in the factory’s laboratory.

Despite his illness, my father’s contributions remained invaluable. Even during periods when he couldn’t work for months, he continued to receive full rations and salary. When technical problems arose, engineers from the factory would come to our home to seek his advice.

During this time, my father invented an additive that significantly reduced the gasoline needed to produce raw rubber by utilizing a by-product from the steelworks. His innovation saved 5,000 liters of gasoline annually. Throughout his career, he developed 21 inventions and earned considerable prize money for his contributions.

In North Korea, rice and gasoline were among the most precious resources. The worsening economic conditions had caused severe gasoline shortages, threatening shoe production. However, thanks to my father’s invention, the factory could continue producing shoe soles, sustaining operations despite the crisis.

When the factory ran out of cloth for making the upper part of the shoe, my father devised a barter-based system where people could exchange old fabric for shoes. This ingenious solution kept the factory running and proved so effective that the practice expanded beyond Ryanggang Province to other regions. While many factories in the province ceased production due to raw material shortages, my father’s shoe factory continued to meet its national production targets.

The system also brought unexpected benefits to the female employees in the so-called Order Department, which managed the processing of used textiles. For every 10 pairs of shoes sold at the retail price, the factory collected enough fabric to produce 20 pairs of new shoes. Employees could then pay the factory for the fabric equivalent of 10 pairs of shoes, effectively doubling their output.

This process allowed employees to accumulate shoes quickly—10 pairs could become 20, 20 could become 40, and so on. Many workers profited significantly by diligently participating in this system. Beginning in 1986, this fabric-for-shoes exchange became a vital lifeline for Hyesan residents, sustaining them through difficult times for more than a decade, until 1998.

However, in November 1997, the system came under scrutiny during a government inspection following reports that some of the factory’s shoes had reached South Korea, partly due to the widespread fabric trade. The factory’s Primary Party Secretary was executed as a result of the investigation, and the barter system was abolished the following year.

At that time, my mother, who had also started working at the factory, earned a substantial amount of money by collecting fabric and selling shoes. She managed to save up to 300,000 won—a remarkable sum, considering that a kilogram of rice cost just 3 won at the time. This meant her savings could buy tens of tons of rice.

My father, who had always lived a principled and modest life, deeply appreciated my mother’s thriftiness and her ability to manage the household finances so well. Later, when my father fell gravely ill after I was married, my mother selflessly offered to use her entire savings to pay for his treatment.

Upon arriving at my father’s factory, I passed through the main gate and made my way to the laboratory where he worked. Taking a piece of candy from the plastic bag in my pocket, I gently placed it in his mouth. My father laughed, savoring the treat, and told me to go find my mother in the Order Department.

When I opened the door to the custom-made production room, I found my mother seated with her head bent, diligently working with her hands. She looked up, startled to see me, and immediately asked how I had gotten there and whether I had come with Geum-cheol. I told her I had come alone and asked when she could leave work.

My mother informed her team leader that she wanted to leave early because I was visiting, and her colleagues warmly encouraged her to go home, saying it wasn’t every day her married daughter came by.

That evening, as we returned home together, my mother was surprised when I pulled out a large package of candy from my backpack.

“Misun, how did you manage to bring so much candy? Where on earth did it all come from?” she asked, astonished.

She was in awe as she carefully opened the candy package. I explained that I had received 5 kilograms from the unit and that Geum-chol’s vice platoon leader had given him an additional 5 kilograms. I added that Geum-chol had suggested I bring it all to my parents’ house, leaving only a small portion at home for ourselves.

The candy I brought was white and delicious, a rare treat at the time. Hyesan had two food factories, but they only produced yellow candy made from starch syrup. Even that was a luxury most households couldn’t afford due to North Korea’s inability to produce enough confectionery to meet the population’s needs.

That evening, I invited my father to visit my house, mentioning that the hill behind it was full of medicinal herbs like hwanggi and jjilgwangi. I suggested he come to relax and enjoy digging for herbs, an activity he loved. My father, delighted by the idea, said he would visit if there were no urgent matters at the factory.

Later that night, I boarded the 10 p.m. train to return home. Without a travel certificate, I couldn’t enter the train car and had to stand outside on the boarding ramp. My backpack, filled with dishes my mother had lovingly packed for me, rested on the floor by my feet.

Shortly after the train departed from Wiyeon Station, the conductor began checking travel certificates and tickets. As I stood there anxiously, a soldier nearby, smoking a cigarette, noticed my unease. Gathering my courage, I explained my situation and asked for his help.

The soldier introduced himself as a member of the 312th Brigade of the command unit stationed in Unheung County. He assured me not to worry and promised to tell the conductor that I was traveling with him. True to his word, the soldier’s intervention allowed me to travel without issue.

When we arrived at Unheung Station, I thanked him sincerely and invited him to visit my house someday before we parted ways.

Walking through the valley alone at night was both difficult and frightening. The weight of the backpack on my shoulders only added to my unease, but I pressed on, drawing strength from the thought of my husband waiting for me at home. The chill of the dark night seemed to lift slightly when I spotted the faint glow of lights from the military housing in the distance. By the time I crossed the creek bridge and reached our home, I felt a wave of relief wash over me.

However, as I reached for the door, I noticed it was locked. It appeared that Geum-chol hadn’t come down from the company since I wasn’t home. Leaving my backpack by the door, I turned back and started up the path toward the company to look for him. As I walked, I noticed someone descending from the direction of the company. The silhouette and familiar gait told me it was my husband.

“Who’s there?” he called out as he approached, his voice echoing slightly in the stillness.

“It’s me,” I replied. “Why are you coming home now? Have you eaten?”

Recognizing my voice, he quickened his pace, nearly running to me. “Oh, you’re already here! I was just heading to meet you at the train station.”

He wrapped his arm around my shoulders protectively and asked gently, “Were you safe at your parents’ house?”

The warmth in his voice immediately dispelled the tension I had felt walking through the dark valley. I smiled silently, feeling a deep happiness, and wrapped my arms around his waist in a quiet embrace.

He told me he had eaten at the company’s cafeteria, and as he embraced my shoulder, he warmly asked if I had had a good trip. The warmth in his voice melted away all the tension I had felt walking through the dark valley. I smiled happily without saying a word and wrapped my arms around his waist.

A few days later, my father visited our newlywed home for the first time. My husband treated him with all the respect he deserved. The day after his arrival, my father went up the mountain behind our house to dig for Hwanggi (milk vetch roots). For his snack, I prepared a special treat—nurungji (crispy rice crust) sprayed with sugar, pressed down so it would absorb it, and packed it in a plastic bag for him to take. Sugar-coated nurungji from the cauldron was my father’s favorite snack.

Geum-chol also arranged for several kilograms of beef to be given to my father from the sanitation instructor. In addition, a soldier from his platoon brought freshly squeezed goat milk in a basin for my father upon hearing that he was visiting. The other women from the company housing also contributed by bringing delicious dishes to share with him. They were truly wonderful neighbors.

My father stayed for three days at our house, enjoying his time picking herbs before he returned to Hyesan. Geum-chol called one of his platoon soldiers to accompany my father, ensuring he had company on his way home. As a result, my father had a large backpack full of herbs when he left.

I did everything I could to make his visit comfortable, ensuring he felt at ease while staying with us. On the day of his departure, my husband and I saw him off at the train station, placing his backpack carefully inside the train car.

My father later shared with my mother how kind and respectful everyone had been during his visit to our home. He expressed how relieved he was to know I was living among such good-hearted people. Over time, he frequently mentioned the hospitality he had received at our house.

I lived a very comfortable life in the company housing, free from the life reflection sessions I had to attend every weekend when I was single.

Unlike the dependents of civilians who were part of the Socialist Women’s Union of Korea (SWUK), the wives of servicemen were part of the General Federation of Trade Unions of Korea (GFTUK). The chairperson of the battalion’s GFTUK often forced us to participate in the organizational life, especially since my husband’s company was one hour away by train from the battalion. However, I was not called to attend any meetings, nor did I receive any interference.

Each battalion had a family platoon, whose duties included supporting military spouses, producing up to 80 kilograms of pork a year for submission to the base, farming, and taking care of miscellaneous tasks. This is why we were part of the GFTUK.

One day, I received a call from the military store in the upper unit to pick up soybean paste. I went up to the meeting point in the upper unit with the neighboring ladies to collect it.

Among those receiving goods from the military store were also civilian workers from the gas supply station. The families of the civilian workers were often upset because the pork and fish distributed by the base didn’t go to them. The store manager explained regretfully that there was no choice in the matter, as the goods were distributed based on the exact number of servicemen. However, she tried to assign extra portions to the families of civilian workers when the division was up to the military store.

When I entered the military store, the family members of the upper base greeted me warmly, as I was a new family member. Feeling embarrassed, I stuck close to the wife of the 1st platoon commander, my next-door neighbor, and awkwardly returned their greetings. I was about to leave the store after picking up the soybean paste when the manager called me.

“Excuse me,” she said. 

“Yes…?” I replied.

I put down the bowl containing the soybean paste and asked the 1st platoon commander’s wife to come with me. Shy and nervous, I linked my arm with hers and walked toward the manager.

The manager said, “Ah, I just wanted to ask you something.” 

She explained that she had heard my father had worked for a long time as the manager at the shoe factory in Hyesan and asked if she could buy shoes. I told her that my mother could help, since she worked in the Order Department.

The husband of the military store manager, a lieutenant colonel, was the chief planning staff for the gas supply station. He specialized in military welfare and was assigned only to bases that had a gas supply station. The military store manager, originally from Songchon, South Pyongan Province, had been a middle school math teacher before marriage. She was a generous and outgoing person, always trying to give as much as possible to the military and working families. She also asked if the Order Department could sell shoes in exchange for grain instead of fabric.

On my way back to our housing, carrying the supplied soybean paste, I also offered my neighbor, the wife of the 1st platoon commander, to let me know if she needed shoes, since I was planning to visit my mother the following day.

She said she would look for fabric at home to buy shoes for her siblings. The next day, my husband and I took the train down to Hyesan. Geum-chol went for work, and I went to meet my mother at the factory. I got off the train and went straight to the factory to find her.

I told my mom that the ladies at the company wanted to buy a lot of shoes. Mom thought for a moment, then said, “I have some shoes set aside to sell later. Why don’t you take them first and exchange them for fabric? You can then exchange the leftover for grain. But how are you going to carry them all by yourself?”

“I can take them with Geum-chol,” I quickly answered, overjoyed that I could keep my word with the military families. “He’s here, too, but he went to run an errand for work.”

That evening, my husband and I returned to the company’s residence, carrying 60 pairs of shoes that my mother had saved up to sell. It was at that point that I truly stepped into the economic battlefield in North Korea, a country in decline.

As life in North Korea grew increasingly difficult, people began to engage in small-scale businesses. In downtown Hyesan, a large marketplace was established, and the same was happening in Wiyeon district, where my parents lived.

I exchanged 30 pairs of shoes for fabric and the other 30 pairs for 60 kilograms of wheat-rice. An oil tanker ran every Thursday between the upper base and the People’s Army Exploration Squad next to my father’s factory.

The military store manager introduced my husband and me to the gas maintenance manager so we could load the fabric and grain we had exchanged for shoes onto the oil tanker. I climbed aboard the truck, and once we arrived, I unloaded the goods next to the sentry of the People’s Army Expedition. I then ran to the shoe factory’s main gate and called my mother from the intercom.

She soon came out to meet me when I returned to my luggage and was waiting for her. She was very pleased and praised me for the hard work. From that point on, I continued to bring shoes little by little, trading some for fabric and others for grain. That was how I became a truly helpful daughter to my parents.

Unlike other military family members, who occasionally cooked meals for the soldiers with farm produce they had grown, I couldn’t do that at the time because we were only receiving rations. And since we were planning a wedding in January the following year at my husband’s parents’ place, I was saving as much as I could from the rations we received.

I also had some money that my mother had given me upon my marriage, but I was keeping it for emergencies. My husband’s eldest sister was getting married, so we needed to save everything for her wedding gift as well. I used the wheat-rice I had exchanged for shoes to pull noodles and flour from the mill at the upper base.

With the flour and noodles, I made bread and noodle soup to feed my husband’s platoon soldiers when they visited our home. The company’s cafeteria only served rice with salted radish and soup boiled with salted cabbage three times a day, so when the soldiers visited the officer’s residence, they could finally enjoy a decent meal.

The company was stationed in a deep valley surrounded by high mountains. Civilians weren’t prohibited from entering the area, so soldiers also took responsibility for maintaining the dense forest. For the firewood needed at the military residence, three platoon soldiers would transport the logs piled in the company yard to my yard and cut them all day.

One day, I was chopping firewood with an ax and stacking it in the storehouse. I had been working all day alone, sweating, when I saw my husband crossing the creek and heading to the company, chatting with the vice platoon leader.

As I watched him pass by, even though he had clearly seen me wielding the ax and chopping wood, I suddenly felt a wave of sadness and frustration. It seemed as though he was saying, “The soldiers brought the logs and cut them up in front of the house, so the rest of the work is yours.” But then, my disappointment faded as I reminded myself that it was my job to support my husband, a military officer, in a way that relieved him of household worries so he could focus on his military duties. From that point on, my husband never held an ax, assuming that chopping and piling the wood was my responsibility.

By the end of November, two months into living in the company’s residence, my husband was dispatched to a bridge construction site in Pyeongwon-gun along with all the platoon members. In exchange, the 3rd platoon commander and his men returned to the base. In January of the following year, we had another wedding at my husband’s hometown in North Pyongan Province, where my mother, third sister, and youngest sister attended.

After the wedding, my husband returned to the bridge construction in Pyeongwon, and I moved back to Hyesan with my mother. Every two months since then, my husband would return home for a 10-day vacation. I stayed at my parents’ house when he was away because I didn’t want to be alone at the company residence.

Even when I became pregnant in February and gave birth on October 30, he wasn’t around. He came to my parents’ house on vacation 15 days after I gave birth to our daughter. Upon hearing my delivery date, he turned to the side to block my view and started counting the months of my pregnancy on his fingers.

My mother, noticing that he was counting with his fingers, slapped the back of his hand and laughed loudly. “What’s this? Are you worried she’s not your daughter? What’s the point of counting when it’s obvious she’s yours just by looking at her?!”

He muttered, blushing, “No, it’s not like that. She was due in mid-November, but the baby was born 15 days earlier.”

My mother laughed again, saying that baby girls sometimes arrive early, even up to 15 days. After spending 10 days in Hyesan, he left again for the base in a different province. He briefly returned to Hyesan for three days to search for a deserter and then rejoined his unit. The following year, he came to Hyesan again briefly to catch a deserter before returning to the Plain Unit three days later.

Then, my husband’s battalion got into a fight with the 19th Brigade, resulting in casualties, and the vacation for all officers was canceled. That year, I marked the days on the calendar when my husband would be home. When I counted the days before the New Year of 1990, the total number I had circled was just 13 days.

Even on my eldest daughter’s first birthday, he couldn’t make it to Hyesan. So, I took my daughter to his parents’ home in Pyeongbuk-do and held a birthday party there. During that year without him, I grew vegetables and potatoes in the front and backyard of our house. I planted garlic and potatoes, then went back to my parents’ house. When it was time for weeding, I returned home to work, and after that, I’d go back to my parents’ house again.

Unlike my sisters, who gave birth at their in-laws’ homes, I gave birth at my parents’ house.

When I was giving birth, my father rolled up paper and plugged his ears, saying he didn’t like hearing the groaning. But afterward, he named my daughter and adored her so much that he became ill when he couldn’t see her for even a few days.

Whenever a soldier visited the main base and then returned to my husband’s construction site, I would draw my daughter’s dainty hands and feet on paper and have it delivered to him. This way, he could see how our daughter was growing little by little every time he received one of my letters.

On April 6, 1990, my husband’s 43rd Brigade withdrew from the construction site and returned home.

While I was staying at my parents’ house, the 1st platoon commander was promoted, and his family moved to another base. In their place, the family of the 2nd platoon commander moved into the house next door.

Over the course of the year I spent in the company’s residence, three families, including the 1st platoon commander’s, moved out, and new families arrived.

The wives of the 1st platoon commander and the company commander were the same age as I was, and their children were also the same age as my daughter.

My husband’s company had now permanently returned to their home base from the construction site, and life settled into a more regular routine. But none of the company’s political instructors, who had been rotated every few months, attempted to involve our military families in political life.

As I led a mundane life, Geum-chol was called by the cadre department of the command and went to Hyesan. I was anxious about the reason, so I stayed awake all night, waiting for his return. The next day, when my husband returned on the oil tanker that routinely visited the upper base to load oil, he had two stars on his shoulder. He had become a second lieutenant at the age of 22, and five years later, he was promoted to first lieutenant. This meant he was being reassigned to the 3rd company of the 2nd battalion of the 310th Brigade, where he had originally belonged.

I never got the chance to see the families who were my neighbors again. It was only later that I realized that once separated from neighboring military families, you rarely get to meet them again. I still miss the families who helped me during my early married life.

The 2nd Battalion of the 310th Brigade was stationed under the Aprok River in Hyehwa-dong, Hyesan. Since my husband was a graduate of Kim Chul-ju Artillery School, he was reassigned to the artillery brigade. The 310th Brigade was the only artillery brigade in the 10th district command.

With my husband’s new assignment, I moved to Hyesan. From that point on, until my husband took off his military uniform, I lived as a military family member within the confines of that freedomless existence.

In mid-March 1991, I moved to Hyehwa-dong, Hyesan-si, where my husband had been dispatched. When I first started my marriage, I only had simple kitchenware and bedding. But over time, my household items accumulated, and when I added the potatoes I had farmed and the grain, I had a truckload of luggage.

There was no room in the second battalion’s military residence, so we ended up moving into the military residence of the Party’s Training Center with the help of my youngest uncle. It was a one-story house shared by two households. My next-door neighbor was the family of the President of the Party’s Training Center.

His wife, a middle-aged woman with two sons and a daughter, managed the military store. I still remember her arrogant attitude when we arrived.

Once an officer reaches the rank of sangjwa (between lieutenant colonel and colonel), he is treated as a high-ranking officer with immense influence, one whom ordinary officers would be wary of facing directly. Her condescending attitude felt to me like an unspoken message: “I hold great power, so you better conduct yourself properly.”

Thanks to the backing of my youngest uncle, she couldn’t mistreat me, but I was still upset and annoyed by her behavior. It was the first time I had encountered someone who belittled me in such a way. When I told my husband how I felt, he smiled and said, “Don’t sweat it. We’re not going to live in this house for long anyway.”

I tried to avoid encountering the woman next door, even though we shared the same yard. I would even stop my playful daughter from playing outside. On the positive side, I liked that my parents’ house was now close, so I often took my daughter there.

To get to my parents’ house, I had to take a train, and on foot, it took me about an hour. On the 15th day after I moved to the Party Training Center’s residence, the wife of Geum-chol’s company commander visited my house. She explained in detail the lifestyle of the battalion families:

Every Saturday, I was supposed to attend the life reflection session. I had to participate in the base’s farm work and raise a pig to produce 80 kilograms of pork a year. Listening to her about the strict organizational life, I felt suffocated and annoyed, especially after having lived so comfortably until then in the remote company residence from the start of my marriage. She mentioned that she was the chairperson of the GFTUK for the battalion families and suggested that we set an example for other companies.

No matter how much one disliked it, organizational life was unavoidable. Moreover, if an officer’s wife didn’t adapt well to this life, it was considered harmful to the officer and could lead to criticism. In some cases, it could even prevent the officer from being promoted or could result in their discharge from the military due to their wife’s poor conduct. As a result, I attended the life reflection meetings every Saturday after she visited me.

The content of the meetings was always the same: the wives were falling short in supporting their husbands, and they needed to improve themselves, especially when it came to producing pork. Most people would repeat the content of their three-page life reflection essays throughout the year. The discussions weren’t based on any real flaws; they were held out of formality. Attending was mandatory, just for the sake of attendance.

Military farming and pork production were slightly different. If I missed even one day of farm work, the produce I received was reduced. As for raising the pig, if I failed to produce enough pork in a given year, I would lose three months’ worth of rations. That wasn’t the worst of it; when the battalion’s military officers, soldiers, and families gathered, the family that failed to produce pork would be called out and criticized. While I didn’t enjoy farm work, I participated actively and raised a pig for the sake of my husband’s future.

The battalion supplied the piglet. I dug up the ground in the backyard and made a small cage to raise it.

Since I had never raised a pig before, I asked families from other units for advice and took the task seriously. I used the water left over from washing the grain to make pig feed, but it wasn’t enough. So, I brewed wine from the corn I had exchanged for shoes, added grass to the wine, and boiled it to feed the pig. I gave half of the wine I made to my husband, who loved alcohol, and sold the other half for money.

Military families were often criticized for engaging in business, but as the country’s economy struggled and food became scarce, more and more families secretly ventured into liquor production. The military’s political department turned a blind eye to it, well aware of the reasons behind it.

A year later, I fermented 150 kilograms of beans I earned from farming in the military fields, making boiled soybean lump, tofu, and using the residue as pig feed.

For the first time in my life, I made my own liquor, tofu, starch, and yeot (malt candy). My comfortable life was behind me, and I toiled like a farmworker under the sun. Since moving to Hyesan, I had been so busy that time seemed to slip away unnoticed. My parents praised me for being diligent, managing all the household tasks while raising my daughter and supporting my husband.

My brother, who had been in the military, was discharged and married. He started working in the engineering department of my father’s shoe factory while attending night classes at an engineering college. My youngest sister graduated from middle school and passed the entrance exams for a chemical college, but she decided to give it up and prepare to join the military instead.

One day, after completing her physical examination and receiving her uniform, my sister had some extra time before the uniform distribution, so she went with her classmates to see a new art film.

When she returned to the military mobilization department afterward, she discovered that her name had already been called and, since she wasn’t there, her application was canceled, and her uniform had been given to someone else.

With her missed opportunities to attend college or join the military, my sister started working at my father’s factory. Meanwhile, my youngest brother, after graduating from middle school, joined the army.

At my parents’ house, my brother, his wife, and my sister lived with my parents. My brother’s wife was a younger classmate of mine, known for her talent in basketball. Both my younger sister and I strongly opposed their marriage, but in the end, my parents accepted her as their daughter-in-law. However, my mother later regretted her decision, often beating her chest in sorrow.

In April 1992, I introduced my sister to Jeon Yong-soo, who was serving as a platoon commander in my husband’s company. On April 25, 1992, the government commemorated the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Korean People’s Army by giving all soldiers a gift: a box of food and a wristwatch engraved with “Baekdu Mountain.”

On that special day, Yong-soo, wearing his new wristwatch, and my husband visited my parents. Yong-soo had graduated from the military academy with the highest honors, joined the military, and six months later, entered an officer’s military school. He became a lieutenant upon graduation. Tall and thin, with a reserved personality, he was well-regarded by Geum-chol, who explained to my parents that Yong-soo was a responsible person who led his subordinates effectively and faithfully carried out his duties.

A few days after meeting my parents, Yong-soo visited his hometown and, after a month of discussions, married my sister.

My husband’s unit moved beyond the Hyesan Airfield, and we followed them. My sister’s family then moved into the house I had been living in. My parents were incredibly proud and happy, boasting about their two sons-in-law, both military officers.

Since 1990, rations for civilians had ceased, and the price of rice, which had once been 3 won, surged tenfold. My parents, along with the rest of the people in North Korea, were suffering from severe food shortages due to the lack of rations. However, as a soldier’s family, we faced fewer hardships. We were still receiving food supplies, and I had also harvested beans and corn from the military farm. Meanwhile, my mother worked hard, trading shoes for food to support our family.

Whenever I had the chance, my third elder sister and I would wear backpacks full of shoes and go around selling them. On those days, my mother would care for my younger sibling, taking her to the factory.

The economic crisis, which had been creeping in, eventually overwhelmed the entire nation. In an effort to address the crisis, the government conducted a currency exchange in September 1992. Each household was allowed to exchange up to 5,000 won. At that time, the price of rice in North Korea had risen to 28 won and 50 jon.

1,000 won was considered a significant sum for an average family, and many households didn’t even have that much. Those who had kept money at home found themselves with worthless paper, as the old currency could no longer be used. People who held large amounts of cash would sometimes approach poorer individuals, asking them to exchange money on their behalf, offering 1,000 won in return (because the old money could only be exchanged for the new currency up to a limit of 5,000 won).

Thankfully, my mother had deposited all her savings in the bank, which spared us from the crisis. However, she was deeply upset when she learned that 30% of her savings would be taken by the state, and only 70% would be accessible. Her savings in the bank amounted to nearly 500,000 won.

I invited my brother, who was attending evening college, to stop by for dinner at my house after class. I also asked my father to visit whenever he had errands in downtown Hyesan. Every time they came by, I treated them to a good meal.

My mother, who had been saving money solely for my father’s medical treatment, started buying grain. She bought so much rice that the stored rice in the underground kimchi storage began to gather bugs. I had to spread out the affected rice, which weighed up to 350 kilograms, on the ground. For several days, I painstakingly picked the rice worms out of the rice. I gave the rice I had received from the base to my mother and kept the rice that had been eaten by the bugs. After cleaning it thoroughly, I mixed it with other grains and cooked it.

As the struggle for survival grew more intense, more people began to gather in the marketplace, and train cars became increasingly crowded with travelers carrying mountains of luggage.

I worked diligently in the army’s fields, and when I had time, I tied a cloth around my waist like an apron to collect pig grass, which I brought home. The grass was mixed with wine and boiled to feed the pigs.

The year after my husband moved to the new base, I dedicated an 80-kilogram pig to the unit, reaching 80% of that year’s meat production goal. Each military family was required to produce 80 kilograms of pork, based on the dressed carcass weight. This meant the pig needed to weigh over 100 kilograms in total to meet the goal.

The pig I provided to the unit weighed 80 kilograms, which yielded about 60 kilograms of fat (dressed carcass). When a soldier’s family successfully raises a pig and dedicates it to the unit, they receive a new piglet within 10 days.

While I was busy with pig-raising, winter passed, and spring arrived. I had some extra time before I had to begin plowing, planting, and weeding, so I washed the blankets and clothes we had worn during winter, tidied up the house, and made snacks for my daughter. I worked tirelessly.

When it was time for weed removal, we, the wives, worked until evening, moving to different fields every few days. During the weeding season, the battalion families took turns caring for the children.

In autumn, the well-ripe soybeans were slashed with a sickle, grouped together, and then transported to the yard of the military unit. We would commute to the base for several days to dry the beans. Once dried, we spread them on a large tent fabric and hit them with a stick to filter out the beans.

The more beans we collected, the wider our smiles became. Half of the harvested beans were stored in the troop warehouse, and the rest was distributed to the military families. The chairman of the General Federation of Trade Unions (GFTUK) calculated the attendance rates of the wives for the farm work and handed the report to the battalion warehouse manager, who then distributed the beans accordingly.

The wife with perfect attendance received 200 kilograms, while the one with the least received 80 kilograms. I received 150 kilograms the first year, 180 kilograms the second year, and 150 kilograms the third year.

My husband Geum-chol smiled from ear to ear as he loaded the gunny bags full of beans into the car. He patted my back and complimented my hard work in front of the other family members. Those who were watching teased him about how excited he was over the beans.

I gave 20 kilograms of the grain I received to my mother and another 20 kilograms to my second sister so that they could make fermented soybean lumps. My second sister lived in a rural area, so I always felt a special sympathy for her.

After the fall harvest, it was time to prepare for winter. Every year, the unit supplied 200 kilograms of cabbage and 80 kilograms of radish for kimchi.

The military car, loaded with cabbages and radishes, delivered them door to door. Three drivers from our battalion received 100 kilograms of cabbage—half of what the officers received. They were content, as they understood that they were getting this because of their status as military laborers. Meanwhile, the factory workers no longer received cabbage, as they had in the past. Now, civilians had to buy cabbage and radish at a high price in the marketplace to make kimchi.

I trimmed the cabbages I had piled in the warehouse next to the house, sprinkled salt on the crocks and wooden barrels, and packed them in one after another with my daughter, who was clingy and troublesome, by my side. After pickling the cabbage and trimming the radishes, I changed my clothes and went to the marketplace near the train station, carrying my daughter on my back. I had to buy peppers and garlic since the base only provided cabbage, radish, and salt. It was exhausting to walk around the marketplace with my four-year-old daughter on my back.

Afterward, I hailed a truck to take me to my parents’ house and asked my mom for help. The next day, my mother and third sister, as requested, came to my house with red pepper powder, garlic, ginger, and salted shrimp.

My mother always said that to make delicious kimchi, the pickled cabbage should not be left for more than a day to preserve the sweetness of the cabbage. Following her advice, I took out the cabbage that had been salted the day before and washed it with a hose in the yard, with my sister assisting me.

In the meantime, my mother stayed inside the house, making kimchi sauce while keeping an eye on my daughter. We were busy all day, eventually placing the completed kimchi in jars in the underground kimchi storage. By the time I finished making radish kimchi with the pollack I had bought at the marketplace, the sun had set.

After getting married, I didn’t receive any help from my husband’s family, but it was truly comforting to have the full support of my original family, who lived nearby.

I then made a delicious soup with the tofu I had made from the beans I received from the base after farming them. While we were eating, my mom said,

“You live a life of abundance because you’re married to Geum-chol. Other people don’t even dream of preparing winter kimchi because they’re not receiving rations. I don’t know why time is becoming so pitiless.”

Indeed, people were flustered, not knowing how to cope with the new reality. My parents, however, were managing a decent life, thanks to my mother’s ability to exchange shoes for fabric and sell them for grain.

My sisters were also doing well, benefiting from my father’s status at the shoe factory and my mother’s resourcefulness.

In March 1993, as the snow started to melt after New Year’s Day, our unit’s rations suddenly stopped. It was said that the base could no longer distribute food because there was no supply in the warehouse of the food policy office downtown. I was stunned. If soldiers didn’t get food rations, didn’t that mean the country was finished?

I couldn’t stay still. So, I went to my mother with the fabric I had previously collected in exchange for shoes. I submitted the fabric to the factory and received 100 pairs of shoes in various sizes and for both sexes. The price I had to pay for the shoes was large, but it was possible because I had saved up some money from selling liquor.

A few days later, I boarded the train to go to my parents-in-law in North Pyongsang Province with my daughter. My husband got me a travel certificate from his unit, saw me off, and even picked a seat for me. The shoes were checked in as luggage. I had saved enough grain to get by for now, but I thought we could end up starving if the rationing ceased for too long. That’s why I decided to go to my in-laws’ house to exchange the shoes for food.

I made some dishes for my husband to eat while I was gone. On the train, with my four-year-old daughter by my side, my mind wandered in all directions. Is this what life is supposed to look like?

I felt conflicted, facing a reality where no matter how tirelessly I worked year-round, it didn’t seem enough. Why is life becoming so pitiless when it was going smoothly without chaos when I was growing up? Is my country being affected by the collapse of socialist countries in Eastern Europe? Until that moment, I had never thought much about politics. I felt sorry for those who were struggling while I stayed afloat thanks to my parents and my husband’s position.

Suddenly, I was overwhelmed with fear for the future, realizing that my country couldn’t even provide rations for the soldiers. I fell asleep holding my daughter, who had finally drifted off after whining for a while. I’m not sure how long I slept, but I woke up to a loud noise. When I looked out, the train had arrived at Ganggye Station in Jagang Province.

The train was packed with people trying to get on and off. Shouts filled the air as passengers yelled at a woman, whose backpack was taller than she was, to move out of the way in the narrow train corridor. She had dark skin and was dressed in worn-out work clothes, struggling to navigate the tight space because of her large luggage.

The commotion continued as the train moved forward. There was a train attendant in each car, but she had clearly been absent for a while and hadn’t noticed the woman boarding with such bulky baggage. The attendant, frustrated, pushed her toward the exit, telling her to leave.

The woman, burdened with the oversized luggage, was shoved toward the boarding ramp by the attendant. I couldn’t help but sigh, feeling a sense of relief that I wasn’t living the same way, being treated so dismissively.

Before my daughter could walk, my father had made her cute little baby shoes in his workshop, and I received many baby clothes that had been worn by my sisters’ children when they were babies. Additionally, my husband’s friends gave her outfits as gifts, so my daughter was well-dressed and never lacked anything.

When my husband received meal coupons from the command, he would use them to buy hardtack (dry bread). I would fry the hardtack in oil, sprinkle sugar on it, and serve it as a snack for my daughter.

Around that time, smuggling with China was thriving, and many Chinese goods were brought into the country. I would buy a 4-kilogram bag of candy in exchange for two pairs of shoes. However, I spoiled my oldest daughter with too many sweets, and her teeth began to decay. She eventually had to have all of her molars pulled when she was still very young.

After a long train journey, I finally arrived at Sinanju Station with my daughter. It seemed that Geum-chol had called his parents in advance, because when I got off the train, my father-in-law was already waiting for me. I retrieved my luggage from the cargo compartment and climbed onto the horse cart that my father-in-law was pulling. My daughter, excited by the new experience, clapped her hands and shouted joyfully in her own words, her excitement contagious.

My mother-in-law exchanged the shoes I had brought for 200 kilograms of corn by traveling to nearby rural houses, and then traded 100 kilograms of the corn for rice.

Although there were no rations, many people in Pyeongan Province, a breadbasket region, exchanged shoes for corn. This was likely because many households had some extra grain stored from farming. Up until that point, the southern part of the country had been less affected by food shortages compared to Ryanggang Province.

Shoes were in high demand, especially among farmers, and 100 pairs were sold out in just a few days. People continued to visit my in-laws’ house to buy more. I told my mother-in-law I would send more shoes once I returned to Hyesan, so she could continue trading them for food.

I wanted to stay a little longer at my in-laws’, but I couldn’t forget my husband, who was likely eating alone, so I decided to leave. I boarded the train to Hyesan with 100 kilograms of rice and several kilograms of red beans that my mother-in-law had given me.

My sisters-in-law whispered behind my back, calling me greedy, but I chose to ignore them. I was content, thinking it didn’t matter what they said, as long as I had plenty to eat at home.

Due to frequent electricity shortages, trains were often delayed. Three days after leaving Sinanju Station, I finally arrived at Hyesan Station in the late afternoon. I had sweat pouring down my face several times, struggling with my restless daughter, who felt uncomfortable in the stifling train and kept trying to move around. I got off the train and made my way to my husband’s unit, not far from the station.

I was worried my husband had already left work, but thankfully, he was just coming out of his company unit to head home. As soon as my daughter saw him, she immediately tried to get off my back. I quickly put her down, as my shoulders were sore from carrying her.

I laughed as I watched my husband and daughter joyfully embrace each other. I teased him, saying it looked like he hadn’t seen her in years. We went back to the station, collected our luggage from the baggage claim, loaded it onto a porter’s cart, and made our way home. It was already dark by the time we arrived.

He unpacked the luggage with such delight that his smile reached from ear to ear. Fifteen days after I returned home, I asked my mother to send 50 pairs of shoes to my in-laws’ house. My husband thanked my mother several times for helping his parents, saying the shoes would be a great help to them.

Whenever my husband saw the rice bags in the upper room, he would remind me that we should be frugal with it, commenting on how other families were going without food due to the missing rations. The military base had not provided food to officers and their families for five months, from March to July that year. Despite this, we soldiers still had to participate in weekly reflection sessions and farm work as usual.

The family members often discussed when the rations would finally be released, lamenting that not only the husbands, but even the children, were starving while we spent our days weeding. In August, the unit finally distributed the long-awaited rations.

Having lived in Korea, I was used to a wide variety of dining options, so I didn’t cook much at home and often ate out. However, in North Korea, eating out is almost impossible. The country offers very few options other than the rations provided by the government, and eating out once could cost as much as 10 days’ worth of meals.

The monthly ration for an officer was 21 kilograms, or 700 grams a day, while dependents received 300 grams a day, totaling 8 kilograms per month. So, my family’s monthly ration amounted to 39 kilograms. Soldiers on active duty were allotted 800 grams a day, while those in the training division received 700 grams.

The Ministry of the People’s Armed Forces launched a campaign for the Patriotic Rice Movement, urging people to donate rice to civilians, claiming they were starving. My unit also instructed my family to donate two months’ worth of the six-month ration. As a result, we ended up receiving a four-month supply. Despite this, I was still thankful to receive 150 kilograms of grain, especially after six months of scarcity.

Around the time we received the delayed rations and harvested the beans I had grown in the unit’s field, my husband was promoted to company commander of the 312th Brigade’s 3rd Battalion. He moved first to Yongpo-ri, Unheung-gun, in Yanggang Province, where the new battalion was located.

My husband was 30 at the time. After his move to the new unit, I took my daughter and spent two days at my parents’ house because I didn’t want to be alone. I then took the train back home in the evening.

As I neared our house, I felt an inexplicable sense of anxiety. It seemed that the window was open, and the reflection of the light from a nearby streetlamp made it look unusual.

At that time, the family living next door at the Party’s Training Center had moved away, and the new tenant was hospitalized in Pyongyang for a brain tumor. As a result, both units in our building were unoccupied. Our neighborhood was home only to military officers, with civilians rarely visiting. This gave me a sense of ease about staying at my parents’ house while leaving my unit unattended.

When I opened the entrance gate and approached my unit’s door, I noticed that the lock was undone. My heart pounded as I stepped inside and turned on the light. I was shocked to see footprints and clothes scattered across the room. I froze in place. The door to the upper room was open, the rice container was left ajar, and all the bags of rice that had been stacked under the window were gone.

Only about half of the noodles I had made with corn remained. When I opened the closet in a panic, I saw that all the clothes were missing—my husband’s new uniform, my daughter’s outfits—everything had vanished. It was clear that a thief had broken in while I was away. All the food and valuable clothing were gone, and the house was left in complete disarray.

I was so overwhelmed with fear and anxiety that I couldn’t even cry. I stood there, paralyzed, repeatedly muttering, “What should I do?” as I rubbed my thighs with trembling hands.

Misun #18

14. Marriage

Our team climbed Baekdu Mountain, took pictures with the lake in the background, and then returned by bus to the athletic team’s building at the factory. After an early dinner, prepared by the cafeteria lady, we dispersed to our respective homes. We were given a two-day break before heading to Baekam for another game.

This time the games were among the forestry enterprises (림산사업소) under the Forest General Bureau in Yanggang Province. The annual games were organized to boost the morale of the laborers in the forestry sector, which is the largest in Yanggang Province due to its dense forests, the thickest in North Korea. Although we were the only team from a factory, we were part of the bureau because our factory produced various accessories needed for forest work, such as machine saws and saw blades.

When I came home from the Baekdu Mountain relay race, my mother informed me that Geum-chol had gone to collect wild greens as part of a mobilization effort by the base. She knew this because he had stopped by our house before heading out to collect the greens.

Every year in North Korea, the Central Party sends instructions to each provincial party to carry out the Foreign Currency Earning Task (외화벌이과제). The military is no exception. From universities to people’s schools, once a task is assigned, the entire country must mobilize as one to fulfill the party’s mission. Many people complain about such mandatory mobilization these days, but when Kim Il Sung was in power, everyone participated with pride, believing they were contributing to the nation’s well-being.

The Foreign Currency Earning Task occurs twice a year: collecting mountain greens in the summer and rabbit or dog skins in the winter. During the summer harvest, colleges and universities grant students a month-long vacation. Students then flock to the mountains, where they are accommodated and tasked with gathering wild vegetables like bracken. (고사리). If one fails to meet the set quota, they must compensate with money. Students from well-off families often opt to pay the financial penalty instead.

For Factory workers, the portion is deducted from their monthly wages. People’s office (인민반) that consists of a certain number of households also collect money to the same cause. 

The task was also imposed on Geum-chol’s base. Every summer, the forests in various mountains across the province were bustling with people in backpacks and aprons, gathering wild greens.

After two days off, I boarded the train from Hyesan Station with my athletic team, unable to see Geum-chol. We took the Hyesan-Gilju train to Baekam Station, where we transferred to a narrow-gauge train heading to Yugok in Paek-am County. Yugok is situated on the border with Daehongdan, near where the Tumen River flows.

All the directors of the forestry enterprises, along with their athletes, flocked to Yugok. My team occupied the only inn in the Yugok Laborers District, while other teams settled in a nearby residents’ village.

We rested on the day we arrived and began playing the next day. The forestry enterprise (림산사업소) in this district is the largest in Yanggang, with the highest number of cutting and logging workers. The playground in the Yugok Laborers District was quite spacious and well-designed.

Situated in a deep mountain valley high in the mountains, the event venue quickly filled with a festive atmosphere as numerous players from different parts of the province arrived.

I’m not sure how, but news of Jeong-nam’s and my participation in the Pyongyang games had spread. Given our history, other players seemed reluctant to challenge us.

My team won first place overall, but we remained calm at the venue, showing little excitement. It was likely because the competition didn’t involve professional athletes.

This time, our team’s cafeteria lady accompanied us to the venue. After the event, she and the inn’s chef prepared a delightful, hearty dinner for us.

For three months, we diligently participated in various competitions, including the May 1 games, the relay race to Mount Paektu, and the games in Yugok. After returning to Hyesan on an early train the next day, we went to our respective homes for a two-day rest before returning to work.

The door was locked when I arrived home. My parents were likely at work, and my siblings must have been at school. Even though I had been away for only five days, it felt as if I had been gone much longer. I looked around, searching for any signs of Geum-chol, wondering if he had come and gone while I was away.

There were no indications that he had visited. The clothes set aside for him to change into remained untouched. It seemed he had not returned from the mountains yet. “Now that the harvest season has passed, why is he still not back at the base?” I wondered aloud as I carried a basket of laundry to the river.

On this warm June day, several women were washing clothes by the river, their laundry bats rhythmically tapping against the fabric. I washed my hair, dipped my feet into the cool water, and did my laundry. The serene atmosphere made me completely forget the exhausting training I had endured.

Nearby, little children were playing in the water, their laughter filling the air. One of the women yelled at them to get out of the river because the water was becoming muddy. Startled, the children quickly scrambled out and moved to the upper part of the river to escape the women’s scolding.

When they were scolded again, the children emerged with pouts, settling on the gravel by the river to play with stones.

“Poor kids, there’s nowhere else for them to play,” I thought to myself, smiling at the sight of the children, who had been chased from the water.

The area where I live is filled only with houses, and parks where children can play are unthinkable. So, during the hot summer, the river in front of my house turns into a playground for kids. After school, the river is nearly overflowing with children.

It was such a nice and peaceful day. After finishing the laundry, I sat under the warm sun, gazing at the distant mountains in China, letting my thoughts drift away. Then, I heard someone calling my name. It was my sister, back from school. It must be past lunchtime.

My sister will also graduate from middle school next year. Once my younger brother finishes school, there will be no students left in our household. I imagine that all the notebooks I’ve been transporting from my second uncle’s house could fill a truck. Among the children, my older brother excelled the most academically.

I carried my laundry basket up to the riverbank. When I asked my sister how she knew I had returned, she mentioned that she saw my gym bag in the inner room.

She told me that Hak-nam, Geum-chol’s friend, was at our house. Hak-nam had come by on his way back to the base from the brigade to deliver a message to us.

I left the laundry hanging on the line in the yard and went inside, wondering why only Hak-nam had come home without Geum-chol.

My father, mother, and younger brother were eating when I arrived. I looked in the room and asked my mother where Hak-nam was. She replied, “He went back to the base. I was wondering why Geum-chol hadn’t come to visit since you were away, but Hak-nam just informed us that he’s been hospitalized.”

I was taken aback. “What happened?”

She explained that Geum-chol had collapsed from pneumonia and was admitted to Hospital 67 in Chundong. He had developed a fever while coming down from the mountain a few days earlier, and he collapsed upon arriving at the unit. An ambulance then took him to the hospital.

She suggested that I visit him at the hospital. Since I was off the next day, I went to Hospital 67 with a bag where gimbap and several side dishes that my mother made. Hospital 67 is a military command’s hospital in Chun-dong, where the 10th District Command is stationed. From my house to the Chun-dong bus stop, it is 20 ri and 10 ri from the bus stop to the hospital.

The journey involved going further up past the military command building, which is situated in a valley. Adjacent to Hospital 67, the residences for 10th district command cadre members are lined up. Later on, my youngest uncle also moved to one of these residences with his family. The military cadre members’ residences are not accessible to civilians.

When I reached the second floor of the hospital where Geum-chol was located, I found him standing in the hallway talking with a military officer I had never seen before. Geum-chol said that he had been waiting for me in the hallway after receiving a call from the reception.

He offered to let me into his ward, but I declined, simply handing him the bag of food. Although I wanted to stay longer and chat with him, I felt awkward being around unfamiliar soldiers.

His face looked very thin, reflecting the suffering he had endured over the past days. I told him to come home once he was released from the hospital. He was discharged in early July and returned to his base.

During the summer, I focused on training for the provincial workers’ games on August 15. One day at lunchtime, while my parents were at work and my younger siblings were playing outside, my youngest uncle visited. I was busy cleaning up the room before heading out for the athletic team’s training..

He asked me to sit down for a moment. He mentioned that on the day my third sister got married, my father had gathered with his brothers and discussed Geum-chol. My father then asked my third uncle to look into Geum-chol’s situation.

My uncle, who remembered his eldest brother’s request, paid attention to Geum-chol when he visited the command for an interview regarding the Party membership. He asked Geum-chol some tough questions during the process.

My uncle didn’t like the fact that Geum-chol, a young officer who had just graduated from military academy, was already thinking of getting married when he has earned just one star (소위). He tried to dissuade me from the relationship with Geum-chol offering that there are many cool bachelors in the command who are serving as company commanders or  political instructors with the rank of two or three stars (중위, 상위). Telling me to give it serious thoughts and end the relationship, he went back to his unit. 

I was stunned. I had known Geum-chol for 9 months and had developed a strong attachment to him. I thought my uncle’s suggestion was ridiculous. Feeling deeply frustrated, I didn’t even go to the athletic team that afternoon and stayed at home.

When my mother returned from work, I told her about what the uncle had said. She stared at me for a long time and finally said, “He must have given you that advice for a good reason, but ultimately, you’re the one who needs to make the decision. Your uncle, your father, and I all hope you find a good person to marry. But Geum-chol has also grown on me, so I wouldn’t simply ask you to end the relationship.”

That evening, I also heard from my father who had returned home late from work that uncle had called him in the office and suggested the same thing. My uncle said that Geum-chol’s family background was not very satisfactory and that there is a company commander with three star (상위) rank, and whose family background is similar to ours. He suggested to my father that I marry him instead. My father, however, let me make a decision after sharing what he had heard from my uncle.

I didn’t know at the time, but my uncle had access to Geum-chol’s personal and parental information, which is why he believed he was not a good match for my family.

I often wonder how my life might have been different if I had listened to my father and uncle. Would I have had a happier life, free from sudden, unexpected challenges at a young age and spared from life’s bitterness? Back then, all I could see was Geum-chol, and I stubbornly insisted on continuing our relationship. The whirlwind my uncle caused subsided within a day.

Unaware of the situation at my house, Geum-chol had been mobilized to work in the dense forest of Paek-du Mountain, constructing a cable car. Counting the days until his return, I spent October working in the casting department rather than with the athletic team.

When Geum-chol finally returned just before the annual winter training in December, I updated him on everything that had transpired and subtly mentioned what my uncle had said. I just told him that my uncle was worried about his young age and suggested instead that I marry a company commander with three stars instead. I was so happy to see him and also wanted to see his response while teasing him. 

“Okay, go if you like him more than you do me,” he blurted out, laughing.

“It was nonsense. I was just joking because I was so glad to see you,” I replied.

“I know. Where would Misun go apart from me?!” We both laughed, facing each other. He continued commuting from my house except when he was dispatched elsewhere.

At that time, life was becoming increasingly difficult, and hunger was becoming a frequent concern at the dining table. With the collapse of Poland in 1986 and the subsequent downfall of other Eastern European socialist countries, the socialist market was disappearing. Intellectuals who were aware of the global situation knew that the North Korean people would face significant hardships, but they couldn’t speak openly about it.

My father was among those who sensed the looming crisis, deeply concerned about the future hardships his children might face if the country’s economic situation deteriorated. He recorded these fears in his daily journal, almost like a will.

The drought and irregular rainy seasons, combined with insufficient fertilizer, severely impacted agriculture. This problem extended to the military as well, where soldiers’ meals were often limited to corn-rice and pickled radish. Although Kim Il Sung was the head of the country at that time, the real authority had been transferred to Kim Jong Il. It was rumored that Kim Jong Il kept the food shortages completely secret from Kim Il Sung.

It was rumored nationwide that Kim Il Sung was only made aware of the dire economic situation a few years later, on July 5, 1994, which reportedly led to his shock and subsequent death. The food quality in Geum-chol’s unit was poor, and many unmarried officers, struggling with the conditions on base, commuted from their partners’ homes as opposed to staying in their military residences.

As time passed, it was already the New Year, 1987. Geum-chol mentioned that he had sent a letter to his parents in early February to inform them about me and my family. He also mentioned that his parents were planning to visit soon. I advised him not to rush things. Given that I had just turned 23 and he had not yet been promoted, I thought it would be better for his parents to take their time with the visit.

I wanted to wait until Geum-chol earn another star in his rank before tying the knot, considering what my youngest uncle had advised earlier. 

At that time, I was taking a break from my job at the casting department due to an injury and was receiving treatment at home. I had hurt my shoulder during summer training and had been hospitalized for treatment, but the injury seemed to have flared up again.

One day, while an oriental doctor was visiting to treat my shoulders and arms, Geum-chol came to see me. The doctor complimented me on how well I was handling the pain.

When I returned after seeing off the doctor, Geum-chol informed me that his parents had arrived from North Pyongan Province. I tried to hide my shock and said, “Why didn’t you let me know before bringing your parents?”

“I’ll speak to your mother about it. There’s not much I can do now that they’re already here. You should meet them,” he replied.

I was taken aback by their unexpected visit. It had been less than a year since my third sister’s wedding. I worried that having another major event so soon might be too much of a burden for my parents, especially given the deteriorating economic conditions. They had gone all out for her wedding, and I knew they would want to do the same for me.

He acted as if he didn’t notice my panic and calmly sat on the floor, flipping through my younger brother’s textbook. Then, my brother burst in, covered in snow, likely from playing around in the icy river for a while. I scolded him, “Hey, shake off the snow before coming in! It’s everywhere in the room!”

As I was cleaning up the mess, my mother came home from work. Geum-chol greeted her and let her know that his parents were in town. He explained that he telegraphed his parents to come, not only because he didn’t like being alone on the base, but also because he was afraid of losing me.

Around that time, I was being approached by matchmakers frequently, and Geum-chol was aware of it since he had visited my house often.

My mother was initially puzzled but then suggested inviting his parents over, since we already had ingredients for a big celebration in preparation for Kim Jong Il’s birthday, which was the next day, February 16.

So, it was decided with my parents that we would hold the engagement ceremony on February 17. They agreed to accept Geum-chol as their son-in-law. At that moment, I felt like I had everything in the world.

My mother gave my parents-in-law 100 pairs of shoes in various sizes as they were heading back home. I later learned that they traded these shoes for 200 kilos of corn, which was a significant help given the food shortage at the time.

After our engagement on February 17, 1987, Geum-chol and I got married on July 9 of that year. I was the only one of my seven siblings who had a “love marriage” rather than an arranged marriage. Additionally, Geum-chol’s parents were the only in-laws of my parents who had no notable social status or wealth.

Before our marriage, I was unaware that my in-laws were in the lowest social and economic standing among the in-laws of my siblings. It was only after our marriage that I discovered my father-in-law was a horse cart carrier. Geum-chol had previously told me his father was a pharmacist. He had lied because he feared that our different family backgrounds—my father being a manager of a well-known factory—might prevent us from marrying.

My youngest uncle had already been aware of Geum-chol’s true background when he reviewed his documents, which is why he initially tried to end our relationship. Despite this, my uncle attended our engagement ceremony and later managed to transfer Geum-chol to the active-duty 43-Ski Brigade in May.

Moving from a reserve brigade to an active-duty one was no small feat, but my uncle’s position in the political department of the command made it possible. Geum-chol’s colleagues envied him for this achievement.

At that time, I was lost in dreams of a bright future, blissfully unaware of the challenges that lay ahead.

In May 1987, Geum-cheol was transferred to the 43rd Ski Brigade, which was assigned to a bridge construction project in Pyeongwon County, South Pyongan Province. Pyeongwon County borders Pyongyang’s Sunan District, where Sunan Airfield can be seen in the distance.

The youngest uncle who used to work in the 6th Corps, graduated from Kim Il Sung University of Military and Political Science (김일성군사정치대학) and was appointed as brigade notification officer (여단통보지도원) for the 43rd Brigade’s political department, while stationing in Gapsan. His job was to report directly on the conducts of the brigade’s commander, political commissars, and the brigadier to the Notification Department of the Ministry of the People’s Armed Forces.(인민무력부 통보과). This position intimidated all military officers and soldiers alike. The youngest uncle, who diligently carried out his duties in the 43rd Brigade, was soon recognized for his competence and promoted to the political department of the command. (상좌).

Just a few days before my wedding, the rainy season began. My mother lamented that my father had chosen July for the wedding despite it being a rainy season. She seemed worried because of a local saying that if you marry on a rainy day, you’ll cry for the rest of your life. My father defended his choice, explaining that the seventh of July was the day when Gyeonwoo and Jiknyeo (the Herdsman and the Weaver) met, so he hoped my marriage to Geum-cheol would be a happy one.

On July 6, my parents-in-law from Pyeongbuk Province arrived in Hyesan to attend the wedding. My eldest sister, second sister, and their husbands also came from far away. Only Geum-cheol had yet to arrive. The rain continued to fall without stopping.

At dawn on July 7, the day of the wedding, the rain gradually lightened, and by morning, it had stopped completely. The sun came out, and the weather cleared up. I went to the train station at 9 a.m., the time the express train from Pyongyang was due to arrive, to pick up Geum-cheol. The station was bustling with people—some there to meet arriving passengers, and others ready to depart.

I checked the notification board, which read, “The arrival time of the Pyongyang-Hyesan express train is currently undecided.” With a sigh, I found a crowded seat in the station’s waiting room and sat for a long time.

Around me, people were grumbling irritably: “What’s wrong with the train that used to run on time? It’s always delayed these days. It’s so exhausting.” 

As I left the station’s waiting room and walked alongside the wet road, my thoughts turned to Geum-cheol, who must have been enduring a difficult journey on the delayed train. Above, the rainy sky was scattered with clouds drifting quickly. I couldn’t help but laugh to myself as I watched passersby on the rain-soaked sidewalk, darting away from the puddles splashed up by passing vehicles.

“How bored and hungry must the people on the train be?” I wondered. Geum-cheol must be starving by now, with no food left. It was one of those moments when I realized, once again, how the times I was living in were gradually changing—and not for the better.

When I was younger, meals were sold on the train during my trips to my second uncle’s house to pick up notebooks. But that service no longer existed. The sales office for such packed meals was abolished probably due to the nationwide food shortages.

Sometimes, larger stations in Gimchaek or Hamheung would sell meals, but the quantities were often insufficient to meet the demand of train passengers. It became common for travelers to board with their own food to eat until they reached their destination. While one or two meals could be prepared, making multiple portions risked spoilage, leaving passengers unable to eat them.

This made long train delays particularly painful, as all passengers were left waiting, hungry, throughout the duration.

When my mother heard that the arrival of the train was uncertain, she sighed. She glanced at the prepared food and informed everyone helping with the arrangements that the food would be served to the guests now, even if the wedding had to take place later.

My mother busily served food to guests from both families, and I helped her carry dishes with diligence. Amid all the commotion, I returned to the station three times to check on the train’s status, but each time was in vain.

After feeding all the guests, I had a late dinner with my relatives and parents-in-law. Everyone was exhausted and soon went to bed. I slept on the bed prepared in the storage room.

The next morning, rubbing the sleep from my eyes, I told my mother, who was busy preparing breakfast, that I would go to the station to check the train’s arrival time. Upon entering the waiting room, I looked at the notification board, only to find it unchanged from the day before. With a heavy heart, I turned around and headed home.

At home, the kitchen was bustling with preparations for the wedding guests on the second day, but I was so exhausted that I went to my bed in the storage room, lay down, and fell asleep. An hour later, I was jolted awake by the noise outside. When I stepped outside, I was overjoyed to see Geum-chol, wearing a backpack and a combat bag, being greeted with shouts of joy. I was so surprised and happy that I couldn’t find the words. I helped him take off the backpack he was still carrying. I couldn’t stop laughing, realizing that the train station’s notification board had likely not been updated.

He went to the river to wash up, grabbing a towel and soap, and I followed him with a basket of laundry. While he washed his hair, I kneaded the clothes and asked him a flurry of questions.

“What was it like to move from a reserve unit to an active duty unit? What did you eat on the train? How did you feel when the train was delayed and stopped for a long time?”

At my relentless questioning, Geum-chol smiled and asked me to slow down. I told him how happy I was to see him, and we both laughed, facing each other.

We couldn’t get married on the seventh of July and instead tied the knot two days later, on July 9. Unlike my third sister, I didn’t move into a married home immediately after the wedding, so the ceremony concluded without needing to carry any prepared luggage. 

After the wedding, all the relatives boarded the train to return home, and my house was once again filled with quiet.

Geum-chol was on a 10-day vacation and had to return to his base after a week. The marriage still didn’t feel real to me. On our wedding night, Geum-chol drank heavily, consuming all the drinks poured by my uncles, and soon became drunk. Disliking his drunken state, I chose to sleep alone in the storage room, leaving him in the bridal room.

Geum-chol was assigned to the 2nd Company, 2nd Battalion of the 43rd Brigade in Unheung County, which is about an hour away from Hyesan. The tall mountain visible right in front of Unheung County Station is called Bokgaebong Peak (복개봉), where a vast forest unfolds.

In the high mountain village, there were more immigrants than native residents. The military residence we had to live in was a shared building housing four households, with doors connecting each unit. Our compartment was the second one, with doors on both walls leading to the first and third households. Until then, I had never seen a house like this in my life, and the thought of how we would manage living here filled me with apprehension.

Before my husband returned to bridge construction work in Pyeongwon County, he took me to his company in Unheung County. We got off at Unheung Station and walked a long way along the uneven gravel path. The villagers, lounging nearby, stared at us—me in my city clothes and him in his military uniform.

After nearly 40 minutes of walking into the valley, we came across a reservoir. A little further up, across a brook, we found two residences. Geum-chol pointed to the first one and said that would be our home.

He stood in front of the house and called out to the open door. A woman emerged from the nearby warehouse and greeted us; she was the wife of the 1st platoon commander. She ushered us into the room, but Geum-chol stepped out to check on his company.

The wife of the 1st platoon commander mentioned that her two sons were at the kindergarten in the upper unit.

“I’m from Pyongsong,” she said. “Having lived in a big city, adjusting to life in a mountain valley like this—farming—has been quite frustrating. Still, being able to send farm produce to my family is rewarding; it’s probably my only joy.” She laughed as she spoke, clearly delighted to meet someone new for the first time in a long while, especially a young woman who would soon be moving into the residence.

That evening, Geum-chol and I enjoyed dinner that she had prepared before returning home on a late train to Hyesan.

Two days later, I boarded the train with Geum-chol as he was returning to his unit at the construction site. We were traveling together because he was going to visit his parents’ house in Bakcheon at their request. I was simply thrilled to travel by train with my husband for the first time.

We settled into a military compartment on the train. Shortly after departure, the train police officer (경무원) came around to inspect ID cards. He instructed me to move to the civilian compartment, but Geum-chol handed over his ID card and explained that we had just gotten married and were visiting his home. The officer nodded, saluted, and wished us a nice trip before moving on. I felt a surge of pride at being a soldier’s wife; my heart fluttered, and I couldn’t stop smiling.

In those days, marrying a military officer was considered a mark of high social status. When I dated and married Geum-chol, my friends and those around me would jealously remark, “Her father is a cadre member. That’s why the military officer is marrying her.”

Later, I learned that nearly 80% of the officers’ wives were women who had previously worked as teachers or doctors. I also overheard people whispering, “How did such a handsome man choose her? She must come from a wealthy family!”

Given this context, I often thought during my marriage that Geum-chol chose me, a sports athlete, largely because of my father’s and youngest uncle’s positions. Whenever I heard such whispers, I would feel insecure and sometimes take it out on him, which seems ridiculous in hindsight.

The in-laws’ house was a standalone structure with two rooms and a kitchen. A small fence surrounded a vegetable garden, and there was a storage shed in front of the house. Attached to the outside of the kitchen was a small guest room.

As soon as I arrived at his parents’ house, I sneaked a glance at the upper room. During our courtship, Geum-chol had mentioned that one wall of the room was filled with a medicine cabinet, and I was eager to see it. However, no matter how hard I looked, I couldn’t find the medicine cabinet anywhere.

After we arrived, my sisters-in-law came home from work. The first sister-in-law, still single, is my husband’s older sister, while the second is his younger sister. The third sister-in-law is the same age as my youngest brother, who is a middle school student. Geum-chol’s younger brother was serving in the military.

My mother-in-law, knowing we were coming, had bought a basket of freshly picked peaches. She also prepared our bed in the guest room, which was cooler than the other rooms. It was my first time sleeping inside a mosquito net, and I felt excited. I pushed the bowl of peaches inside the net and crawled in quickly.

Geum-chol, who was smoking outside, joined me in the mosquito net. We chatted comfortably as I enjoyed the peaches. While listening to him talk, I suddenly asked, “You mentioned that the medicine cabinet filled one wall at your house. Where is it?”

He chuckled and replied, “There was never such a thing. Your family was so well off that I just embellished the story.”

“Oh, how funny! And I heard from your mother today that your father pulls a horse cart. Did you also lie about him being a pharmacist?” I asked.

“Oh, that’s right! He pulls a horse cart for the Parkcheon Pharmacy. Were you upset because I lied? I’m sorry. I said that out of fear I might not be able to marry you,” he admitted, and I couldn’t help but laugh.

Still curious, I asked, “Speaking of which, how did you get into military school?” At this, he sat up from lying on his stomach and, looking serious, replied, “Why? Do you think that might be a lie, too?”

Feeling a bit nervous at his serious expression, I replied, “No, it’s not that. I mean, to be admitted to a military school, you need a good family background and strong academic performance. I know candidates must excel in every way to receive a recommendation…”

Geum-chol laughed after glancing at me as I stammered.

“I was recommended to military school because of my good family background. My father pulls a horse cart now, but he wore a military uniform during the Korean War, even though he enlisted toward the end. My father and mother served in the same unit.”

Geum-chol continued, saying that his parents had worked hard to raise their children and send them proudly into society, even though they weren’t cadre members or as well-off as my family. He also asked for forgiveness for the lies he had told, explaining they were meant to help him win my heart.

“I don’t think otherwise. After all, we’re married now. I also know you’re only a year older than me, not four. Your mother mentioned it at the wedding. What matters is that we like each other and that we’re together now.”

My husband was 24, and I was 23 when we married. It wasn’t until the wedding that I learned his age and understood why my youngest uncle thought Geum-chol was too young to marry.

That night, I nearly finished off the entire basket of peaches while reading a novel. Geum-chol, surprised by my constant crunching, said with concern, “You won’t be able to eat breakfast tomorrow if you keep that up!” Sure enough, the next morning, I struggled to chew rice. I had eaten too many peaches, and my teeth felt so sour.

Coming from Yanggang Province, where fruits were precious and expensive, I indulged in peaches like a glutton. Still, I felt happy. After one night’s sleep, Geum-chol returned to his military unit.

I stayed at his parents’ house for a few more days, getting to know my in-laws through many conversations. A few days later, I boarded the train to Hyesan and returned home.

Once home, I rested for a few days before going to my village office (분주소) to register for marriage on my own. Geum-chol had prepared the necessary documents in advance so that I could handle the paperwork alone. In North Korea, a wife can register for marriage by herself if she has a military service certificate confirming her husband is a soldier.

Before the wedding, I resigned from my factory job and gathered all the necessary documents. I also said my goodbyes to sports team members, Jeongnam, Instructor Eo Jonggil, and the soccer players. My last match was on June 25, just before my wedding in July. 

After registering my status as “serviceperson support” in the occupation section of my resident card at the village office (분주소), I needed to go to the military safety department in Unheung county to register my residence. I requested my father for a travel certificate, which was needed to visit the county. Given that it was a border town with many revolutionary historic sites, traveling within the same province required a travel certificate to purchase a train ticket. The control was particularly strict. I could get away with it if my husband, a soldier, accompanied me, but without him, I risked being fined or even jailed for lacking the proper paperwork.

The administrator at my father’s factory, responsible for applying for travel certificates with the city people’s committee, had held her position since she was single and was well acquainted with my family. She attended my wedding and had offered her help if I ever needed anything.

She issued a certificate for my trip to my husband’s parents, and this time, after two days of requesting it from my father, I received the necessary certificate. Only after registering my residence and submitting the food suspension documents to my husband’s company could I receive rations as the spouse of a serviceperson. The morning after my father handed me the document, I traveled to Unheung County to complete the registration.

It had been 20 days since I returned from my in-laws in Pyeongbuk Province. While running around dealing with paperwork, I had been scratching mosquito bites that turned into blisters. Those spots on my legs became inflamed, and I developed a fever that caused significant pain. After a few days, my entire legs swelled up from the pelvis down, making it difficult to stand or walk properly.

“Oh, what kind of mosquitoes are these in the South? They’re so scary and strong! Mom, it hurts so much!” I cried out to my mother in tears, overwhelmed by the fever and unbearable leg pain. Without going to work, she took me to the doctor.

Fortunately, it wasn’t malaria. The doctor prescribed me medication and ointment, explaining that I had a fever due to an infection from the mosquito bite wounds. I barely made it back home with my mother’s assistance. As a result, I was bedridden for over a month. My parents were very worried, but I couldn’t get up.

While Yanggang Province has many mosquitoes, the itchiness typically subsides after a few days. However, the bites from mosquitoes in hotter areas seemed to be different.

During my long illness, I recalled a history book I had read. It described how slaves thousands of years ago were tied up by a water hole, covered in honey, and killed by mosquito toxins. “It’s already unbearable to deal with just a few mosquito bites like this. If those slaves suffered and lost their lives overnight from mosquito bites, how terrible their pain must have been,” I thought, suddenly feeling a chill run down my spine.

In early September, my fever gradually decreased, and the pain began to subside. I was eventually able to walk little by little.

Until then, there had been no news from Geum-chol. I often lay in the empty room, grumbling to myself about not receiving a single letter from him.

One day, I stood against a fence in front of my house, counting the cars passing along the road on a ridge in Jangbaek County, China. It felt good to be outside after such a long time. As I turned my head casually, I noticed a military officer walking in the distance, carrying a backpack and luggage in both hands.

I had no idea who he was until the officer came almost right in front of me. My eyesight might have worsened from lying in the room for over a month. When I finally realized it was Geum-chol standing before me, he exclaimed, “How have you been? Why can’t you recognize me? What’s wrong with your face? Have you been ill?”

As I took the luggage from his hands, I couldn’t help but sob. It was a moment of unexpected joy, and I found myself laughing and crying as I entered the house with him. I helped him unload his luggage and backpack and then sat down on the gudeul (the flat stone used for floor heating).

I asked, “How did you get out? Are you on vacation?”

“No,” he replied, “we are switching with Platoon 1. This time, Platoon 1 is going to the construction site.”

It was good news. His battalion had reportedly arranged for a shift with the 1st platoon, taking into consideration the newly married Geum-chol. That evening, my house felt like a holiday. My mother prepared a feast of delicious dishes for her son-in-law, and Geum-chol eagerly devoured everything without hesitation.

A few days later, I accompanied him to check out his company’s vacant residence. The 2nd platoon commander had been discharged and had moved out all the household items except for the iron kiln. It was said that they had asked the 1st platoon commander’s wife to sell it to the new family moving in.

We paid 50 won for the iron kiln. Since it was already installed, there was no need to bring the aluminum kiln that my mother had bought for me; we only needed to transport bedding and household items.

My husband had previously asked my mother not to buy any furniture for us, as military families have to move frequently. I agreed with him, wanting to avoid burdening my parents, especially after their significant expenses for my older sister the previous year. So, on the day we moved to our company residence, we only loaded blankets and some kitchenware onto the train.

My mother gave me 500 won as an allowance when I left. At that time, rice cost 3 won per kilogram, so 500 won was a significant amount of money.

The day after moving into the company residence, I used the money my mother gave me to buy a cupboard, dresser, and cabinet at the military store. Other families in the residence were surprised to see all the furniture we had, especially since we were a new household. Thus, my life as a military spouse began at the end of September 1987.