If you've ever binge-watched an entire season of a K-drama like "Squid Game" or "Crash Landing On You", one Korean-American expert has good news: It's likely improved your mental health.
High production values, top-notch acting and attractive stars have helped propel South Korean TV shows to the top of global viewership charts, but therapist Jeanie Chang, says there are deeper reasons so many people are hooked.
With soap-like plotlines that tackle everything from earth-shattering grief to the joy of new love, watching K-dramas can help people reconnect with their own emotions or process trauma, she says, giving the shows a healing power that transcends their cultural context.
"We all have family pressures and expectations, conflict, trauma, hope," she said, adding that watching heavy topics being successfully managed on screen can change people's ability to navigate real-world challenges.
For Chang, who was born in Seoul but raised in the United States, K-drama was particularly helpful in allowing her to reconnect with her roots -- which she rejected as a child desperate to assimilate.
But "the messages in Korean dramas are universal," Chang said. "Mental health is how you're feeling, how you relate to others, psychologically, how your brain has been impacted by things. That's mental health. We see that in a Korean drama."
Global K-drama viewership has exploded in the last few years, industry data shows, with many overseas viewers, especially in major markets like the United States, turning to Korean content during the pandemic.
Between 2019 and 2022, viewership of Korean television and movies increased six-fold on Netflix, its data showed, and Korean series are now the most watched non-English content on the platform.
American schoolteacher Jeanie Barry discovered K-drama via a family funeral, when a friend recommended a series -- 2020's "It's Okay to Not Be Okay" -- she thought could help her after a difficult time.
"There was something about it, the way that this culture deal with trauma, mental depression, just really struck a chord for me," Barry, who had travelled to South Korea as part of a K-drama tour organized by therapist Chang, told AFP.
"I started to grieve when I had not been. It was a lot of tears during that drama, but it also made me see that there is a light at the end of the tunnel," she said.
Immediately hooked, Barry said she had watched 114 K-dramas since discovering the genre, and effectively given up watching English-language television.
"They let me soften my heart," she said.
Fellow tour member and American Erin McCoy said she had struggled with depression since she was a teenager, but K-drama helped her manage her symptoms.
With depression, "when you live with it that long, you're just numb and so you don't really feel bad necessarily but you don't ever feel good either," she said.
"You just don't feel anything," she said, adding that K-drama allowed her to experience emotions again.
"There're so many highs and lows in every one of them, and as I felt the characters' emotions, it just helped me relate to my own more," she said. "I feel like I was able to express and experience emotion again."
The idea that a K-drama binge can help with mental health may seem far-fetched, but it chimes with decades-old psychotherapy ideas, one expert said.
"Watching Korean dramas can be beneficial for anxiety and depression from the viewpoint of art therapy," Im Su-geun, head of a psychiatry clinic in Seoul, told AFP.
First used in the 1940s, art therapy initially involved patients drawing, but evolved to incorporate other artistic activities.
"Visual media like Korean dramas have significant strengths that align well with psychotherapy," he said.
K-drama -- or television and cinema generally -- can help viewers "gain insights into situations from a new perspective, fostering healthy values and providing solutions to their issues," he said.
It is unlikely to be prescribed by a doctor, he said, but if a therapist were to recommend a specific drama that related to the patient's case, it could be helpful.
For example, it can provide a roadmap for patients "facing specific situations, such as breakups or loss," he said.
© 2024 AFP
3 Comments
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Tamarama
OK, so I have a confession - I have become a K-Drama watcher.
Part of the reason I think is that Korean Dramas tend to be infused with grass roots community values and universal themes like the importance of family, love, heartbreak, forgiveness, striving for success etc. All wrapped up and delivered in a kind of culturally sweet, humorous and endearing way.
I ended up there because I was abjectly sick on the violence, guns and madness that a lot of US influenced productions serve up. Like, completely sick of it.
K-Drama is the antithesis of that, and for now, and I'd take that anyday. I'm a fan.
Gaijinjland
K drama’s have always been soapy and binge worthy. That’s why everyone used to rent them from Tsutaya. Still doesn’t explain the country’s abysmal suicide rate though. Korea is the last place you want to be if you’re dealing with mental health issues.
GBR48
quote: she had watched 114 K-dramas since discovering the genre, and effectively given up watching English-language television.
I'm not the only one then. That is pretty much me.
Kdrama takes you away from the day to day unpleasantness of life in a century that has been a profound disappointment for those of us who grew up in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Every aspect of life is just much crappier now. And Western TV drama just reminds you of that. Even when kdrama takes on contemporary issues, because it is in Korea and in Korean, and the issues are just part of a fabulous narrative, its fine. The emotional roller coaster, the catharsis, it just heals the damage being inflicted upon you by politicians, activists and the economy. Western TV just doesn't do that. BBC drama was great in the 80s, but today it is just a horror show of misery and didacticism.
GPs should be prescribing kdrama to their patients.