• FrChazzz@lemmus.org
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    1 day ago

    I live in Hawaiʻi. We use chopsticks all the time. Itʻs just… what you do.

    Whenever we get takeout and they give us forks instead of chopsticks, my wife and I refer to it as “getting haloeʻd” (for those who donʻt know, “haole” is a Hawaiian term for foreigner that tends be used exclusively for Caucasian people). Thereʻs a general assumption that most whites donʻt know how to use chopsticks. Related, I was once at a Japanese funeral, eating poke and sashimi with chopsticks, and this sweet lady comes up to me and says “you use those so well!” It felt like the white-person version of “youʻre so well-spoken!”

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I stopped for dinner once at a Chinese restaurant in Mississippi run by people actually from China. I (white guy) used chopsticks and our server just stared at me wide-eyed for most of the meal. She said I was the first white person she had ever seen using them, and she’d been working there for years. That is Mississippi for you.

      I didn’t have the heart to tell her I’d learned to use them eating at Japanese restaurants.