You are not getting any younger... unless you are in a sci-fi movie where you travel to a planet that prevents you from ageing, or you are in South Korea.
What: I know, the first half is quite understandable (though impossible), but South Korea? Yes.
And before you wonder how this is possible, let me clarify: No, they are not travelling to space; instead, the government is modifying the official country's age counting system by passing a new law, making them a year or two younger.
South Korea's parliament passed a law on Thursday, December 8, which scrapped its traditional way of calculating the 'Korean age' and is going to adopt the international standard.
What is the Korean age?
All these systems often lead South Koreans into a conundrum for just calculating their age.
So, More than 80% of South Koreans supported unifying the age-counting system, according to a September poll by the Ministry of Government Legislation, NPR reports.
A campaign issue? South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol had promised to unify the country's age-counting systems on the campaign trail earlier this year, (he became the president in May 2022) saying that they created "unnecessary social and economic costs". (here's something else that Yoon Suk Yeol is doing and is in the news for)
Since the 1960s, Asian countries have also been counting their citizens' official ages using the international system, in which babies start at zero and years are added every birthday.
However, some countries, such as China, have their own system of determining birthdays, which is similar to the 'Korean age' method.
SEE MORE: Can RRR still go to the Oscars?