SEOUL (Reuters) - Soon after North Korea tested its sixth and largest nuclear bomb earlier this month, You Jae-youn, a 32-year-old South Korean office worker, swiftly put the news behind her to focus on more immediate worries.
"We have more than enough to concern ourselves with in our everyday lives. Personally, I worry more about how much it's going to cost me to put food on the table (than North Korea)," said You, from Sejong city in central South Korea. "Talk of North Korea honestly feels distant to me."
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