@VMIN1995 No, sorry, it doesn't matter if people are different inherently or if they choose to be different. If they're not hurting anyone, you should let them do their thing and not get on their case, and in fact you should not tolerate other people getting on their case.
If Korea being "a religious country" means lots of people are religious, fine. If it means Koreans think it's OK to harass people for not being religious, not fine. I don't harass people, Korean or otherwise, for being religious, so they can leave me the hell alone about my not being religious. I also don't harass people for not reading books. But when I was young I was sure as hell bullied for reading them. But that was "my choice". I guess I should have just accepted that I was living in an anti-intellectual culture and stopped reading, played more sports and gotten drunk at parties more. Since instead I insisted on not joining the majority culture, by your reading it was my own fault if I got beat up. Not buying it. Bullying and harassment are not OK because culture.
Incidentally I don't mind ostracism as such. I
dreamed of just being left out--I wasn't interested in what most people did, and it was perfectly reasonable for them not to be interested in what I did. If we'd all just minded our own goddamn business that would have been fine.
Also, nobody in the world
actually thinks anyone is coming onto them based on the clothes they're wearing, unless they're actually out on a date, because duh, everyone you meet experiences you wearing the same clothes, they aren't directed at some specific person. Claiming something like that is just a power play. Are you that naive or just pretending?
As a side note, it's not like I have any interest in, or respect for, the fashion industry in general. I think it's pretty rich all these classes and classes of people all going to school to learn about the most superficial, worthless stuff because their culture is obsessed with it so that's where the money is . . . and then getting all snippy because one person's style take on this nonsense is a bit more driven by personal vision and a bit more overtly sexualized than the received version. They're all still spending their lives learning how to make girls look sexy; they'd probably be moralizing a lot less stridently if they
actually had any solid moral ground to stand on. Of course most of them are mainly pissed off that she's way hotter than they are.
As to the mom, speaking as a parent myself she's a crappy mom. Religious, whatever--she's dedicated to breaking her kid down instead of building her up, and dictating to her without ever listening to her. Lots of religious parents aren't creeps.