Friday, November 6, 2009

Lately

I haven't been incredibly regular with posting this year, for which I apologize again. In general, there have been a lot of ups and downs this year. Sometimes it seems like things are going along swimmingly, but every month or two something terrible happens, usually related to my job and my incompetent boss, for whose mistakes we all (Korean teacher and Westerners alike) pay the price. As some of you are no doubt aware, my salary has been reduced numerous times, as have my (and the Korean teachers') hours. In any case, there is less than 6 months in my contract, so my intention remains to stick it out. Michelle, who I was sort of seeing for several months, ended up being pretty unreliable and flakey, so that's not really such an item anymore. There are always other women, though, millions of them really. Recently, I've been seeing a little bit of a waitress who lived in Los Angeles for several years, and she seems pretty great. I've paid nearly $1,000 in student loans back in the past 3 or 4 months, starting with a $500 initial payment to get the ball rolling again. This was a good and necessary step, although with the instability at my job, it has been harder than I anticipated, but remains doable as of writing. It was one of my two New Years Resolutions this year, so it feels good to get cracking at it. Last year, I didn't feel it was a possibility, but maybe it would have been. But a lot of things were uncertain last year, and I definately would have had to suspend payment for 3-6 months when I went back to America and then tried starting over at a new job here in Korea again, and the creditors wouldn't much have liked that, I don't imagine.

These days I am only working 3 days a week. So, lots of free time, but relatively little expendable income. Still, I eat good food. I exercise pretty much everyday (100 jumping jacks/25 push-ups is the bare minimum.) I haven't been sick at all really since last spring when the yellow dust blew over from China's industrial region and played havoc with my (and most Seoulites') respiratory systems. There was one case of Swine Flu at our school, for which it was closed for a day, but then in the past several weeks, dozens of kids have been missing classes: any time they so much as have a temperature, they are sent home from school. Several more of them actually have developed Swine Flu. All have recovered, fortunately. I should probably try to get the vaccine for it or whatever, being around kids all the time I'm sure to be exposed to it again and again.

And now, for some new photographs.



My friend, Rick, about to eat chrysalis. Pretty strange taste, smell.











Albert Einstein at the wax museum in the 63 Building.


Halloween. I'm Lee Myoung-bak, the current right-wing Korean president, and my friend "Joseph" Cha Seung-ho is, of course, Darth Vader.
Just a couple of dark lords of the Sith chillin', you know...!


A mocha from my favorite local coffee joint, "Smileman Cafe." The owner, a woman named Choi Bom, is awesome and a great source of friendliness and unwavoring optimistic support. She calls me "Dark Circles" because, invariably when I drag myself into her establishment in the morning to get my first coffee before work, I still look dead to the world (still not a morning person.) When I'm having fights with my boss, her words (or, actually, word) of encouragement is always rousing and inspirational: It's that traditional Korean-Konglish word given in the face of adversity of any type: "Figh-ting!"
It's short and sweet, but as a vague, obstinate, and optimistic challange to the adversarial part of the world, it goes without compare, I think!

An advertisement for a handphone, plus Napolean on a horse!

Jja-Jjang-myun, Korean-Chinese hybrid style black bean sauce noodles. Pretty much one of my weekly staples over here!


These were the chemical guns or whatever that the government brought to our school when we had our first confirmed case of Swine Flu!


Riding in a friend's convertible on the mountain behind the Korean President's "Blue House."


Took 15 of my kids to Seoul Grand Park Zoo. Without any other teacher present, let me just say...that was quite the 9 hour field trip. Never again (without help!)

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

A Quick Update


Here are two of my coworkers, 민승희 and 최화정. Actually, 민승희 on the left was fired last week, so she's not still with us at the school. :/


Cooking burgers on a grill on top of a neighboring Hakwon where I know the owner (he's an American!) It's been at least 6 months since I've had a hamburger like this that wasn't made at McDonalds or LotteRia (the local fast food giant featuring Bulgogi Burgers!)


A businessman on the subway crossing south across the Han River at dusk.


Yours truly at a semi-famous open-air Thai restaurant in Itaewon. The restaurant was opened by a former Korean television drama actor who came out gay and was subsequently unable to work on the TV show, but went on to open this, and numerous other, restaurants that have become quite popular over the past 4 or 5 years.


김세은, aka Michelle Kim, at the Thai restaurant.



Happy Birthday again to Pop! I'm sorry to hear about Nana's bike spill, I hope that she heals quickly and painlessly.

I'll try to add more soon, I've become complacent with regards to this blog and that needs to be rectified!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Back to Korea at the Beginning of March

I should have put these up sooner, but here are some pics of my return to Korea on March 1st, 2009 and my new apartment here.


Goodbye to Mom and Ben at the Indianapolis Airport.


Clouds over Indiana.




My chariot ariveth in Chicago.


My first meal back in Korea. Banana Milk, Red Roibos Tea, and multicolored Mandu.




Erin from Mitchell and Su-han.


PK and Shannon.


Raw seafood in shells. It actually tasted okay with that pepper sauce and onions.


Some of the best Kimchi I've ever had. This stuff was crisp!


My new aparment. The sign says "Bibeolri Hilseh."
I live in Beverly Hills! :D






My kitchen area.


My living room/bedroom area.


My front door/bathroom/laundry room/shower room area.


The view out my window.




One of the central sites in Seoul, Namsan Tower. Just up the main street from my apartment a few miles!

Sunday, February 8, 2009

"Man Booked for Trying to Talk to Foreigners"

While I was looking around the Korea Times publication's website, I saw several other interesting stories like one titled, "Man Booked for Trying to Talk to Foreigners." After merely reading the title, I could see the entire scene in my mind: Soju bottles everywhere at some late night restaurant; an old drunk adjushi; foreigners eating conspicuously at a nearby table; apologetic waitstaff physically trying to prevent any bother; incredulous voices rising ; eyes widening at the foreigner table; and finally, the arrival of two gray-uniformed police officers, eyes rolling, to restore order in spite of the egos involved.

My version may be off in some of the specifics, but the article I read did nothing to disconfirm the basic narrative I'd concocted.

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2009/02/117_39161.html


He was just trying to, "learn English from the foreigners." Poor guy; everyone in Korea can sympathize with that noble aim, it's just that he seems to have chosen the wrong time, venue, and (most likely) sobriety-level to pursue it!

Namdaemun a Year Later

Reading this article at Korea Times.co.kr, I learned that it has indeed been nearly a year since that arsonist burned down Namdaemun Gate, and more about the progress of the restoration efforts.

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/art/2009/02/148_39164.html


Check it out if you'd like to hear the postscript on my entry from last year about the desecration of Korea's #1 National Treasure!


Monday, November 3, 2008

Korea Watches Obama vs. McCain '08

I'm simultaneously excited and anxious about the election in America these days. Last Wednesday, I cast my absentee ballot via e-mail for Obama in Monroe County, Indiana. I really think he will be the better candidate this time, as most of you already know to be a complete understatement from me, and although we haven't ever talked much politics between us here at this blog, it's clear to me that, even apart from the wars, willful deception, and eroding of civil liberties within America under President Bush, that the Republicans must go.

The stories I had been hearing about the disasters in the American economy have finally come home to rest here in Korea, as they have in almost every economy in the world over the past few weeks. The other day I was trying to send US$150 home to mom so she could pay my storage facility bills and it cost me 233,000 Korean Won, or what would normally be around US$230. The Korean Won has devalued to the point that my nearly $2,000/month salary is now really more like $1,300/month. If I'm going to be bringing any money home at all when I change it all out in December, something is going to have to change, starting with failed American leadership.

Related to the election, I asked some of my 13 year-old Korean students on their internet homework who they thought would win the American election and got some humorous responses! I'll include a couple here:

"I think Obama will win the United States presidential elecion.
Yesterday, I saw the newspaper.

And I saw the news about United States presidential election.
Democrat Barack Obama looked calm and genial.
But Republican John McCain looked pressing.
So Obama will new United States president."

"I think 'Democrat Barack Obama' will be the USA's president.
Because Obama will be president, people won't racial discrimination anymore.
And Mcline is slandering Obama now.
That's very bad thing.
The president is representative of the country.
So the president have good personality.
So I think Obama will be president of the USA."

"오 바 마
O BAMA
you know that he had get more votes.
(I hope the black man will win.)
(I don't like women.)
(Plus, I don't hope that O BAMA will do the same thing as LEE MYUNG BAK please.)
And I think he is a good character.
(Don't you think women will be so fret?)
I hope very hope O B A M A please."*

*This guy's post is interesting for two reasons: 1st, it shows the Koreanized Hangul spelling of Obama (오바마) and, 2nd because it showcases this kid's unabashed sexism and apparent belief that Obama is still running against Hillary Clinton like back in the Democratic Primary!
ah-hahahaha! Lee Myung Bak is the current Korean president, an unpopular Conservative.

"Ahh.. Hi Jonathan
...I don't know that thing detail, but I write by my own knowledge
I think Obama will elected president because Obama is more friendly and popular name in Korea that mean Obama is more popular in the world (average)
I think so....
and Obama is will be reception policy
So I like Obama
But It can false think or false information!!
Bye Bye"

"..................huh?
Well, Let's start the main topic.

Nowadays, Amearica's vote result is getting 'hot potato.'
Because If McCain is elected, We could eat abnormal beef at least in 10 years.(...)
That means, if McCain is elected, Lee Myung Bak and McCain will play each other like child.(of course, it is black humor;한국말로 하면, Mc가 되면 2MB랑 짝짜꿍 잘 놀것이다.)It means, McCain has less support->Obama has more support->Obama will be elected.
conclusion is:
오 바 마
O BAMA."**

**This guy's post relates to the fact that all Koreans are generally terrified that American beef (which they only resumed importing again back in February after a ban since 2003) will expose them to "Crazy Cow" (a.k.a.-Mad Cow Disease), and the popularly-held belief that Korean Conservative Lee Myung Bak will work more closely with American Conservative John McCain in conspiring to make the Korean people eat "dangerous" beef indefinitely!

Anyways, those are just some of the more humorous and more well-informed opinions from the students, but they, like the adults here too, are curiously watching to see what America will do on November 4th. Personally, I'm with them in hoping that all Americans will cast a vote that strengthens the Korean Won (so I can keep some of the money I'm making over here!) and, to a lesser degree, so that the poor Koreans won't have to keep worrying about "Crazy Cows" rotting holes in their brains (with regards to that issue at least, sometimes I think that they already have!)

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Vietnam: First Night/Second Day: Hue

That night, after rushing back to the airport, I took a local flight from Hanoi to the 18th century capital city of Hue. Hue was the only city that the North Vietnamese were able to hold for more than a few days (in fact they held if for several weeks) after seizing it during the Tet Offensive. Bisected by the Perfume River, the city had a slower, prettier feel than Hanoi.












The view from my hotel balcony in the morning.

























A view of the Perfume River from the back of a motorbike.


My first terrifying ride on a motorbike!





Bullet holes in the wall surrounding a tomb complex.


The path around the wall to the tomb complex. Kids kept coming out of the forest on the right side trying to sell us stuff.


There two of them are now! I could never figure out where they were coming from, there didn't seem to be any dwellings or modern buildings around the place.





They opened these gates only once, to carry the Emporer's body into the tomb. Haven't opened them again since.


Met this from London, Sabrina, later in the trip. She was interesting and we talked about politics.



There's our tour guide, speaking first in Vietnamese and then in English, to try to explain the things we're seeing.


There's the entrance again.

From whence we came...


































This is the top of the Perfume River, formed by the joining of two lesser rivers.


Then we went to the second of 3 tomb complexes for the day...










Blending in...

Tour guide and people on the tour.





















The Emporer buried here while he was still alive, before 1933 I think.







Then we went to a small stretch of road outside of Hue where the locals made art, fans, conical hats, and (pictured here) colorful incense.






The most important items for sale, however, were liquids. I drank a lychee juice and then I drank some sort of Lipton's tea I think. It was so hot outside...




Then we went to the third and final tomb complex.













Bill and Colleen Dee were an incredibly interesting couple. He fought around Saigon during the war after the Tet Offensive while his brother fought farther north. After the war at some point, he married his Canadian wife, Colleen, and eventually they decided to come back to Saigon and teach English to the kids, which they are currently doing. His brother has no plans to ever return. They promised me information about teaching in Vietnam, and I need to follow up on that and see how they are doing. We talked about a lot of stuff, especially history, current Vietnamese (and Korean) politics, and the war.


Me on the other side of the lunch table with Laura (I think?) and a woman who was doing college in Thailand but had come back to visit her homeland whose name I've forgotten.


Sabrina, Bill, and Colleen; interesting people all.


After lunch we went to the Citadel, an ancient square-shaped oriental capital city, similar to those found in China and probably some places in Korea, too, in some ways. Inside, hundreds of bullet holes and impact marks commemorated the intense battles that took place during the 1968 Tet Offensive as, after 2-3 weeks of Communist control, the American and ARVN troops fought house-to-ancient-house to retake the old capital.




There were bullet holes in the elevated wooden part of this building. Apparently, the Americans were in there firing to the right back into the complex where the Communists were holed up.




Bill said that one of his big impressions of Vietnam before he went to war was a TV image of an American soldier and others pinned down just at the near side of the pictured bridge. He said the soldier stood up and ran somewhere else and something like his hat fell off, but that he seemed okay. Bill said he always wondered if that soldier had survived that battle, let alone the war. It was amazing to be in a place like this and to hear a story like that that took place in exactly this location.


The direction the Americans/ARVN were facing.














Crossing the bridge between some lotus ponds.


Fish feeding on something.




This reminds me of some cats I've had!














If you displeased the Vietnamese Emporer, apparently he had you boiled in one of these!






Bullet holes in the floor around the entrance to the mandarin's clothing area. I guess the Communists must have been inside this building at that point.

At this point in the day, my camera's battery started to die...
:(
A lot more to see, but I couldn't get pictures of most of it, tragically. I had left the spare battery back at the hotel.


This is a Buddhist statue from the pagoda on the Perfume River that became famous because it housed the monks who became famous for immolating themselves in protest of the Diem government's pro-Catholic/anti-Buddhist policies. Even as the war between the Communists and the American-supported Diem regime was raging, there was a miniature civil war taking place throughout the countryside between the Catholics and Buddhists, with disasterous consequences for the Buddhists.
--------------------

After the Buddhis pagoda, we all got on a medium-sized river boat and travelled a little bit to the point where we randomly were to be dropped. Bill, Colleen, and Sabrina were going for a beer and dinner and invited me to join them, which I desperately wanted to do, but the breakneck pace of my trip wouldn't allow it. I had fewer than 30 minutes to get to the Hue bus terminal before the last bus leaving for Da Nang would roll out, so I said hasty goodbyes to the friends I had made that day, envying them their uninterrupted comaraderie, and jumped in a taxi back to the hotel, then rode the hotel's motorbike taxi to the bus terminal, and rode a local bus, which the hotel had warned me was dangerous, for about 4 hours down the beautiful coast to Da Nang. Pictures of that next time.