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The Quiet Power of Nunchi

There’s a word in Korea that never quite settles into English, no matter how many times you try to explain it. You can circle it—“reading the room,” “social awareness,” something like emotional intelligence—but those feel a little too neat, a little too clinical.  Nunchi  is softer than that, and at the same time, more precise. It lives in the small spaces—in the pause before someone speaks, in the glance that passes between two people across a table, in the subtle way a room shifts without a single word being said.   I don’t remember when I first became aware of it. Not consciously, anyway. When I arrived in Korea in the early 1990s, no one pulled me aside and said,  This is nunchi.  There was no lesson, no definition written on a whiteboard. And yet it was there from the beginning, woven into everything.   I began to notice it in the classroom. I would ask a question, and a student would hesitate—not because they didn’t know the answer, but because they w...

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