Friday, December 28, 2007

Beards in Korea


I recently decided to grow a beard. There were all the normal issue's involved in this, like itchy skin while it first grows in and the awkward look until it is fully grown in. However I also realized that Koreans really do not like facial hair. Of course there are a few Koreans who like it, but the vast majority, easily over 90% dislike it and some really hate it. My students spend a good portion of each class trying to convince me that I looked more handsome without it and that I should shave it off. They say I have a dirty face. Apparently in Korea's past Beards where common, they were a sign of maturity but sometime in the last 50 years they went out of style and today they are just not socially acceptable. It used to be when I walked down the street I would get a lot of smiles from Korean women, when I first grew the beard I noticed that I was being treated differently but it took me a few weeks to realize the cause, the beard. Anyway I am not discouraged by the Korean opposition to my beard, I like it and all the foreigners dig it too. So I will keep my beard and continue to tease my students by telling them I will shave it off if they all get 100% on their tests, which they never will....

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Waegook Bowling


Today was the first of what will hopefully become a weekly bowling night. 7 English teachers from the U.S. and Canada got together and went bowling at a local bowling alley in my neighborhood in Gumi. The bowling alley was okay, the lanes were good, but the computerized scoring system wasn't perfect. There are many bowling alleys in Korea. Koreans love all things western and bowling fits the western stereotype perfectly.

Lisa, a Canadian English teacher started the Waegook(foreigner) Bowling Association on Facebook a week ago and we have high hopes of getting 3-4 lanes worth of teachers to participate. Currently there is a Sunday night soccer game that is competing with us. The soccer players said that they will stop playing outdoor soccer soon because of the temperature(it's cold...) and they will join us, so that will help.

I think once everyone hears about how much fun we had they will decide to come, it was a blast, most of the people couldn't really bowl, but they had fun and tried. I am a decent bowler, maybe 140ish average. I was by far the best bowler there today, but I know of a few teachers who are much better than I am, so hopefully they will start to come soon. We were having the most fun in the bowling hall, most of the Koreans were very serious bowlers, we were laughing,screaming,cheering and taunting each other every frame. It was a blast!

Come join us if you are in Gumi, Sundays at 8:30pm, in Hyyeong Guk Dong, near the park and the library, contact me if you are interested.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

American Thanksgiving in Korea


Korea has it's own Thanksgiving, it's called Chuseok, I added a wikipedia explanation below.

Chuseok, also called Han-ga-wi (한가위) (from archaic Korean for "great middle"), is a major three-day holiday in Korea celebrated on the 15th day of the 8th month of the lunar Korean calendar. As a celebration of the good harvest, Koreans visit their ancestral hometowns and share a feast of Korean traditional food.

Of course no one celebrates American holidays in Korea, except for people on the military bases. I was invited to go to a friends house on a military base in Daegu to have dinner with them on Thanksgiving but since I had to work that was impossible. So I ended up not doing anything for Thanksgiving, the American one, I ate some potatoes and corn but that was it. I have never been a person who really got all that into holidays so for me it wasn't a big deal but it was strange that a week before Thanksgiving I didn't even realize that it was coming up. It wasn't until I was watching the Buckeyes beat Michigan that I was told it was just around the corner. If I hadn't have had a video call to my family I might have forgotten about it completely. I also got a email from my friends in Daegu with a picture of their baby in a Thanksgiving outfit, so that would have reminded me too.

I guess this blog is pointless,its just about how easy it is to forget about American holidays when you are on the other side of the world. Christmas is celebrated here so I will be able to celebrate it with the rest of the country and my fellow teachers. Businesses and Cities have already began to decorate places with Christmas decorations. I was in Seoul last weekend and we saw a public square being decorated with a huge Christmas display and what might have been a skating rink or large stage.
I also ate at Bennigan's and they had their Christmas decorations up and were playing all Christmas music. SO I guess even without a Thanksgiving they put the Christmas decorations up the weekend after it regardless.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Halloween in Korea



Halloween is not celebrated in Korea but many kids go to English schools or have English teachers at their public schools and they celebrate the holiday there. At my school some of the teachers dress up and we take the classes to a room where we scare the kids and give them candy. I dressed up as the scream killer and another teacher at my school was a goblin nun.I scared the kids on the walk to the room by hiding around corners and jumping out at them, a few even fell over they were so scared(in the US this wouldn't be acceptable but it was expected of us here and the kids loved it,the more scared they were the happier they got) then we lead the classes in a pitch black room where the other teacher was hiding behind a table. Then I shut the door and waited until the hidden teacher was by the kids, then I turned on the lights and we screamed. The kids are scared and they love it. We then give them candy and had a brain box(pumpkin guts in a box that says brains on it) that the kids can stick their hand in, also there is Halloween music and the teachers have special lessons about the holiday for class that day. Other schools have similar celebrations. The English teachers at public schools even dress up.

At some schools all the teachers both Korean and Foreign dress up, pre-schools and daycares also celebrate the holiday. Most Korean kids are exposed to Halloween. They love it, they get candy and get out of their normal studying routine, so whats not to love. Many of the kids also dress up and they love this too.

I also know that many of the US military bases open their gates on Halloween and allow Korean and Foreign kids to come on base and go trick or treating. In Daegu their was a line of over 1000 kids a half hour before the event started.

6 Months in Korea, half way done



On November 15h I finished my 6th month in Korea. Time has gone by quickly but it also seems like I have been here for years. I have gotten to travel to Thailand, China and see quite a bit of Korea. It has been a great experience and I have learned a lot about myself and about people from other countries outside of the U.S. Most of the English teachers here are from Canada, England, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and of course the U.S. Before I came to Gumi I new a lot about Americans and Canadians but I have gotten to learn about the other English speaking people in the world. I have also gotten to learn about Korea, it's culture,customs, history, people and even a little bit of it's language. Koreans are very different from Westerners and I have learned a lot about myself through them. I have learned that I love some of their foods, especially their Kimchi. I have learned about their kindness and their tempers. I have challenged my vegetarianism, my patience and my intellect. I have gotten to make many new friends that have and will continue to change me for the rest of my life.

If anyone is thinking about teaching abroad for a year I highly recommend it, sometimes it sucks, but overall it is a great experience and at least in Korea you can make a lot of money and pay very little in taxes to Korea(less than 10% for pention,health care and taxes). I am very happy to not be supporting the U.S. Government right now, I don't agree with their policies and I am happy that none of my money will go to support needless wars. So far Korea has rocked and I look forward to the next 6 months, I plan to travel to another country before I leave during the Lunar New Year in February and I will be spending 5-6 weeks in Australia after my contract is finished.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Pepero Day


On the 11th of November in Korea they have a holiday that is similar to Sweetest Day in the States. They celebrate Valentines Day here but it is also similar to Valentines Day. The day is called Pepero Day. Pepero is a cookie stick that is dipped in chocolate in its most popular form, sometimes it has sprinkles or nuts on the top too. Also some of the smaller forms have the chocolate on the inside of the cookie. The idea is that you give your boyfriend or girlfriend Pepero on the 11th and/or flowers or other romantic gifts. As with Valentines day in the States school children exchange this candy with their classmates regardless of their romantic involvement. As a teacher I was given a ton of these sticks. The day was most likely started by the Lotte, the company that makes the original form of this candy. There is a story that it was started by young girls in Busan, Korea's second largest city, it's said that they exchanged the candy and wished that they would grow up tall and thin like the candy. Regardless it started back in 1994 and has been copied in Japan with a different candy called Pocky.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Sangju Mountain


This past Saturday all 21 teachers and staff from both the schools I work for went to Sanju Mountain for a group hike. We all left at 9am on one of the buses the school owns. We traveled a little over an hour to get to Sangju Mountain. I don't know the exact length of our hike but it was around 8km. The mountain is very beautiful. It is surrounded by a small town, I am not sure of the name of this town. The hike was mandatory which pissed me off, but it was fun. My school tries to get all the teachers together every month or two for bonding. I find it a bit draconian to tell people what they have to do on non work hours but at least we get free meals out of it. It's better than the ridiculous trainings we also have to attend on our time, those really piss me off. But TIK (This Is Korea) most management decisions here are not based on logic but are rather based on trying to control people, which is about 40 years behind the US style. Anyway, the hike was cool, a few of the teachers struggled on the hike, our owner took more than an hour after the rest of the group to finish the hike but everyone finished eventually. The top of the mountain had a temple, most mountain peaks in Korea have temples, a solar power array and a helicopter pad. There were also a few spots were you had to use a rope to go up or down. After the hike two of the teachers and I got drunk while we waited for the owner then we went to a duck restaurant, I had cod. It was a fun and scenic forced hike.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Violence in Korea


This is a letter that a Canadian friend of mine wrote about her experience with violence in Korea. I thought it says all that needs to be said, so I'm putting it on my blog with her permission.

There's a kid in class 304 that I absolutely hate. Last year within my first month of teaching, he almost made me cry, I was so furious with him (I've since learned that there are better ways of getting a student to do what you want then screaming at the top of your lungs. Like pulling them out of the class by their ear.). He was playing on a cellphone and when I caught him he refused to give it to me, then he refused to leave the classroom, and my co teacher at the time, who was completely useless and left at the end of December without saying goodbye to anybody, stood idly by. Finally, using said-grab-ear maneuver, I dragged him down to the principals office.

Since that moment, I've refused to acknowledge this student, despite him saying (in a rude, mocking way) "HELLO!" to me in the hallways whenever we pass, or shooting his hand up in the air and going "Choyo!" which means 'me' in Korean to give an answer or write something on the board if he knows he'll get a candy. There have been so many classes where he'd be sitting at the back of the room, straining his arm for me to choose him while all of the other students were dead to the world, and I would choose another student at random just because. I hated him that much.

Well I decided a couple of weeks ago to let it go and acknowledge him seeing as how it was my last couple of weeks and I didn't really feel quite so justified on being such a hater. I even gave him a candy once for writing something on the board. And then, yesterday happened.

I'm not quite sure on all of the details, but from what I've gathered it went something like this. Their math teacher, a woman in her late-thirties/early-fortie s was trying to quiet down the class, and he would not shut up. So finally she went to the back of the classroom where he sits to admonish him personally. For whatever reason he got up, either punched or slapped her, then began to strangle her before throwing her on the ground and stomping on her. Thankfully, she is ok, and was at work today.

The student was told not to come to school today, but did anyhow and was essentially locked away in the guidance counselors office. They're talking about transferring him to another school (and only if another school accepts him) as the worst punishment he could receive, which is counterintuitive to what I think. He would be lucky to be transferred to another school, it would be getting off easy. He should go to jail.

Anyhow, it's a safe bet that I won't be teaching him anymore. I've always wanted to send him out straight away because he invariably does something disruptive, and nine times out of ten I have him standing at the back of the classroom with his hands over his head (the light end of corporeal punishment here in Korea) within the first five minutes of class. That is, if he's not sleeping by the time there, in that case, I just let sleeping dogs lie.

Mrs Shin, my favorite co teacher, and I were discussing what we would do in that situation, and she honestly had no idea, which I felt really badly about. The teacher who was assaulted probably didn't either. And Mrs Shin is a tiny tiny woman (and a MILF, haha); she's probably about half the size of me. She suggested "Wouldn't you call the police?" and the image in my head was "Excuse me, attacker, while I pull my cellphone out, I just need to make a call." And so I asked her "Well how do you do that if his hands are around your neck?" She gave me a "Mollayo" look (I don't know in Korean) and so I told her that a better option might be to knee him in the balls.
Mrs Shin: What?
Me: KNEE HIM IN THE BALLS.
Mrs Shin: Puzzled expression. So I grab my would-be imaginary attacker and demonstrate the kneeing motion. She got the picture.

I think my coworker Jennifer (one tough lady from Pittsburgh) and I should teach a self-defense class at school. Middle school is a funny age. These kids truly still are kids mentally, but they're beginning to grow into adult bodies. And, to me, it's terrifying that some of the little, and I mean really little Korean women I work with have no idea how to defend themselves. I'm not saying that I could avoid getting hurt but I could at least do enough damage that would hopefully get me into a safer situation. Poke him in the eye, knee him in the balls. Grab, twist, pull.

One thing that I'm stoked to leave behind me in Korea is the daily onslaught of casual violence. Make no mistake, what happened in 304 class yesterday was by no means casual, but routine violence is a daily occurrence in this country. It's funny, all of us foreign teachers said that what happened yesterday was something we would expect at home, something that probably wouldn't even surprised us (the teachers at my school were just shocked.), but never here. But on the flip-side, we see violence everyday here that is completely unthinkable back home. The stuff of everyday public school punishment in Korea is the subject of scandals and lawsuits back home. Let me explain.

Kids hit each other on the regular here, and don't get in trouble for it. I screamed at a first grade boy last week for hitting two girls. I made him stay behind during lunch and reamed him out until he was almost in tears. I don't really know how much he understood but I know he damn well understood "You, Canada, America, hit girls, police, jail. DON'T DO IT AGAIN." Hopefully I shook the fear of death into him and he won't grow up to beat his wife, but that probably won't happen. I walk into classrooms regularly where one kid is wailing on another, boys against boys, girls against girls, boys and girls against each other. I always make the one who I actually see doing the hitting stand at the back of the class with their hands over their head and invariably the students whine like "It was his/her fault!" but I tell them I don't give a shit, you were the one I saw hitting.

And herein lies the rub: that's just the students. Fifties and sixties-style punishments are still the norm in Korea. I must admit, I think it's pretty hilarious to make the students stand with their hands over their heads, because I feel it's harmless and really pretty funny. They get so embarrassed! I don't really feel bad about doing it as my favorite teacher of all time, Mrs Hagger, who I had a bunch of times for English in high school, used to make the boys do it with books. And boy was it ever funny. However, I totally draw the line at actually touching a kid with violent intent myself. I find it barbaric. (And I find it so funny that I now living in a society where it's necessary to make that assertion, where it's not just a gimme.) I was having this discussion earlier today with Miss Che, and she was saying that while she doesn't believe in hitting the students because she "believes in basic human rights" (I loved how directly she put that), but it puts her in a difficult position with regards to the students. Because students quickly learn that you're not going to hit them, they're less well-behaved. They honestly show less respect. So while she would never hit a student, she recognizes that because of this, she needs to work harder at discipline. But this lady can yell: when she talks you listen!

But that's just me. My office has twelve regular teachers and two 'head' teachers. And the two head teachers, who are some of my favorite in the school, regularly dish out the beatings. They have these instruments which are essentially wooden spoons except bigger that they use to whack the students' calves. But the way it's done, it's methodical, and not emotional. And for that reason it doesn't seem barbaric. It's just the way that things are done here. (I can already feel the outraged emails coming!!) Maybe I've just been living here too long. The students come in and they know what to expect, and most of the time it doesn't really hurt them, and I had one teacher explain to me that the reason they use the glorified wooden spoons is because the noise they make when they hit skin is much worse than the pain itself, and so it scares kids enough into falling in line. I've never seen a student seem too bothered by it, and I once actually interviewed a student, who I used to tutor, on this subject and he said that he prefers to be hit as it happens and then it's over, rather than having marks taken off or have to do community service or whatever. There have been times where there has been a whole lineup of kids in the office after school to get a beating, and they all laugh and joke about it. But I did see Mrs Li, one of the head teachers in my office, the other day, rap a girl across the knuckles eight times so that she was crying, and then on top of that made her stand with her hands above her head. That was a bit much.
(On a side note, the other head teacher in my office is Mr Cho, and I totally love this guy. He's one of the kindest people I've ever met. But I watched him actually bite a kid on the shoulder a couple of weeks ago as a joke punishment, and it was one of the cutest/creepiest things I've ever seen. I almost busted a rib laughing.)

So maybe you're all reading this now and thinking, what a fucked up way to think. Corporal punishment is funny? Well, we talk a lot in our culture of desensitization. From the news, from video games, from movies. And when I say the news, I don't just mean the coverage of the war, and the Columbines and the Virginia Techs, but also the rampant violent crime that exists in the everyday in the US. Granted, it does exist in Canada as well, and no one, especially me, is denying that. So this next section is a little difficult to word. Many of us living in North America are desensitized to the violence in the media, but we would still lift a finger if we heard the woman next door getting the shit beaten out of her. In Korea, that is also commonplace. Name me a foreigner who has come over here and not heard screaming in the middle of the night, or at least knows someone closely who has. So while we see it on the news, rarely does it come so close into our personal space that we have the need to do something about it. Flip over to Korea, where it's so commonplace, and even if I wanted to, I couldn't pick up the phone to call the police, as the language barrier prevents it. Maybe I should have learned how to say "The woman next door is getting the shit beaten out of her!" BUT, one thing I have become desensitized to is kids getting whacked with a wooden spoon in my office. It's still jarring every time it happens, but you come to realize, as a foreigner living in a foreign country, that there's nothing you can do to stop it. You can preach about it till you're blue in the face, but in the end, you're only here for a year (two if you're me!) and after that you'll have moved on with your own life and teachers across this wonderful country will continue to beat their kids. And that's not gonna change for a while.

It's such a strange dichotomy that exists in Korea, which goes for this issue and countless others. Violence is used on a regular basis as a means of punishment, and yet when incidences like this happen, it's a massive shock. Going back to Virginia Tech, the teachers at my school were horrified that the murderer was Korean. I had Mrs Shin rush up to me the next morning and was like "Did you talk to your parents?!?!?!" and I was like "Yeah... why?" And she replied "Well, aren't they worried about you? Do they want you to come home?" While I told them that no one in Canada or America, except hillbillies and rednecks, would think anything of Koreans because of this, I'll bet that more than a few Koreans were outraged that the Great Evil America could so corrupt one of their own.

Anyway to sum this up concisely as I'm out of time at work: Violence in the classroom sucks, but Korea is still a safer than America ;-)

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Recycling in Korea


I have been meaning to write this blog for a few months now. I was suppossed to write it last week as part of a national environmental blog day, but I forgot, so I am writing it now. Recycling is required by law in Korea. You have to separate all your trash into six separate bags. Plastics, Glass, Metal, Paper, non-food trash and food trash. The plastics, glass, metal and paper can go into any plastic bags you get from the store, the non-food trash has to go into bags you buy that are green or white depending on the size. The food trash has to go into bags that you buy that are yellow, all food you throw away has to go into these bags which are then composted. The rest of the recyclables are recycled, very little trash is actually thrown away in this system, I throw away less that than a 10liter bag a week of trash, I usually throw out my green non-food trash bag every week so it wont get stinky and its usually only 2/3 full. It is amazing to see how much of my trash gets recycled, I would say around 85% of my trash is recycled or composted with this system and its very easy, it takes me no time and I keep all the bags under my sink. I have always tried to recycle in the US, but they are very strict about what they will take. Here you can recycle any plastic, paper, glass or metal, they take it all. The bags that you buy for your trash and food waste are expensive and the money is used to pay for the landfills and collecting costs. The system is years ahead of what we have in Ohio.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

China in 4 days


I recently went to to China during the Chuseok(Korean Thanksgiving) holiday. I went with a tour group of 21 other English teachers from near where I teach in Korea. I am glad I decided to take a tour as I only had 4 days and there is no way I would have seen even half of what I did by myself in that amount of time. However tour groups allow you to see a lot quickly, but you just get to see things quickly and its a very commercialized version of china that you get to see, except for the times when we broke away from the group and got to see some of the real sites.

On the first day we left from Daegu International Airport in the morning, I went with 2 of my friends who also teach in Gumi, Mike (known as Chicago Mike, there are a few Mike's in Gumi, he prefers Michael but...) and Jenny. We also had 2 of our friends who were on the same flight with us Traci and Beard, they had a whole week off and were going without a tour group, but they were on the same flight with us, very random. Our flight was 2 hours late getting to Beijing because it was 2 hours late leaving Beijing, which I am told is fairly common. So when we arrived we were already behind schedule. After clearing customs, getting our bags and finding our entire group we were another hour behind schedule. Let me tell you that the airport in Beijing was insane, there were thousands of people outside the security area waiting for people, I have flown many times but this was something I have never seen before. Our tour had to meet but it was impossible to find people and there was nowhere within hundred feet of the gate were you could even stand let alone get a group of 22 together. Eventually we all found each other in front of a KFC and I was also able to get a double espresso from Starbucks and a mozzarella panini, go capitalism! We were suppossed to see the Temple of Heaven on this day (Sunday) but because we were late their was no time so we went straight to dinner. We always ate at very commercialized Chinese family style places that catered to large tour groups like ours, don't get me wrong the food was good and authentic enough, but I prefer to find the whole in the wall local places when I travel and being a vegetarian I was usually not very well taken care of, but this is life in a meat dominated world, you get used to it. I was lucky enough because Jenny is a vegan so she had it much worse and at least I had company in my food misery. Also one interesting thing is all the restaurants had lazy Susan style turntables in the middle so the dishes could be shared by all 8 -10 people at a table easily, very efficient! We then went to an acrobatic show, it was amazing, it was a school were they trained the next generation of Chinese acrobats and it was impressive. They had one kid who did things on a tight rope, like walk non his hands and push off into flips and land back on the rope, he also had a routine where he balanced on a ladder on the rope and jumped off of it, there were a ton of talented young kids who will no doubt end up in acts like Cirque de Soleil. After the show we went to our "4" star hotel(more like 2 1/2), it was clean and nice enough. The area of town we were in didn't have anything to do, but Mike,Jenny and I walked around our area and located a convenient store to get some supplies and alcohol, we also ate some KFC, which is everywhere in China, I saw 2 Mc Donald's and 20 KFC's during my trip. We had a drink and went to bed early, well not really it was probably 1am.

The next morning we left the hotel at 7:30am, breakfast at the hotel was good, it was always the same for breakfast a large western style buffet with some Asian items thrown in, which was perfect for me, I needed a solid meal where I could get food I can eat. On Monday we visited the Temple of Heaven, which we were suppossed to see on Sunday. It is a very large temple where they would sacrifice animals and have royal ceremonies back when china had royal families, before the communist revolution. It isn't a religious temple, but rather a royal one. After the temple we went to the Forbidden City where we saw where the Chinese emperors used to live, it was stunning, and gigantic. I took lots of inappropriate pictures here and everywhere, I am sure they will offend any Chinese who look at them, but I love to defile sacred places in my journeys, I try to be respectful of religious places, but the Political(Royal in this case) are fair game. We saw among other things the rooms where the Emperor kept his 1000 concubines! After the forbidden city we crossed the street and went to Tienanmen Square, it had all sorts of Olympic propaganda in it, but it was still a amazing site, I could just imagine the 1000's of college protesters there when the tanks came in to remove them, it's huge, like everything in Beijing, they build to impress and they do! After this we headed off to the airport where we hopped a flight to Xian. We arrived in Xian Monday night, its only a little over an hour by plane from Beijing. Our guide in Xian was a women and she was much more accommodating than our guide, Wally in Beijing, but Wally was a hoot! He was an ass, but funny. We got massages in Xian, she took us to a great place, I got a 2 hour full body and foot massage, some of our group went to a dance show instead, some did 1 hour of the dance show then 1 hour off massage, I opted for 2 hours of massage, I love massages! It was the best foot massage I have ever gotten. Our hotel in Xian was great, huge rooms and true 4 star quality.

Tuesday morning we went and saw the famous Terra Cotta Warriors
archaeological site. They have built 5 huge buildings around the dig site, its very impressive to imagine a emperor who had 10,000 life size clay warriors,horses and weapons built to take with him in the afterlife, vain, but impressive. After this we went to his tomb, the Qin King Tomb, its the largest tomb in the world, it seemed more like a park and palace than a tomb, the mound was hundreds of feet tall and it seemed like a mountain not a man made tomb. Then we went to the Huaqing Hot Spring, its a beautiful hot springs palace used in the summers by the emperor, his family and his top 100 concubines. There were separate hot springs for all 3 groups plus one for the staff, the water here was amazing, it felt like lotion when you touched it, it was so soft, i have never felt any water like it before, it is also very clean and can be drank. It's built on the side of a mountain, it would be a great place for a vacation home. After this we went to the airport and flew back to Beijing where we met up with Wally again. Wally was a funny guide, but as I said before not very accommodating, but he would always say follow wally(sounded like faw wow waaall wee), he was fun and entertaining although it was more us laughing at him, but it worked.

The next day we went to the Great Wall of China, it really isn't something you can describe with words, its infinitely huge, it appears as far as the eye can see, it is also very steep, at some points the steps were so steep you were using your hands to climb up it not walking. There were also so many people selling things there, they were quite annoying. Then there were the hordes of Chinese with their red hats, I don't know why but all the Chinese groups wore red hats and it was like a red sea when you saw them, there were easily 10,000 of them within sight when we arrived. It was an experience I will never forget. Of course there was also a large Olympic sign on the side of the mountain here. After the wall we went to a Peking Duck dinner, the famous meal in China, which I cant eat of course, it was delicious I'm sure. Then to a Kung Fu show, were we saw people break steal with their hands, heads and do all sorts of amazing feats. Then off for another 2 hours off massages. Then Mike and I walked around the neighborhood for a bit.

The last day we flew out of Beijing, our flight was 1 1/2 hours late leaving china, again. So we arrived 1 hour late, hopped in bullet cab(called this because they make a 40 minute trip in 25, its best to close your eyes) and went back to Gumi. I had to teach an hour after I got home. It was a great Chuseok Holiday!!!

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Just another day in the capital of the land of Kimchi


I went to Seoul again this weekend to celebrate the birthday of one of the teachers from my school, she has some college friends who moved to Seoul last week and she wanted to visit them to go out for her birthday. I got to Seoul late Friday night and I ended up staying in Itaewon, I didn't even get a cab at Seoul Station until 1am, there was a 40 minute wait in the cab line in the pouring rain, my train arrived at 12:10. The hotel I usually stay at was booked, the person in front of me in line got the last room. All the other hotels I know about in Itaewon were also booked so I ended up staying in the worst hotel I have ever been in next to the grand ole opry bar. It was unpleasant and smelly but only $30.I survived and got a hotel in Sinchon for Saturday night, it was $60 but it was really nice, marble, bath robe, free drinks in the fridge, extremely clean, etc. The name of the hotel was the Anytime Hotel. It is located behind the McDonald's and Burger King In Sinchon near the #2 exit from line 2 of the subway. I did get to eat at Pitas for lunch on Saturday, I had a delicious hummus and falafel pita wrap, it was the first real pita bread I've seen in Korea. It is across the street from Burger King in Itaewon which does have the best collection of western restaurants in Seoul. I didn't do much Saturday afternoon, all I did was rest since I didn't get much sleep Friday night. On Saturday night I took a 50 minute subway ride to COEX mall to meet some teachers and their friends at the COEX Mall Intercontinental hotel. We had some drinks in their hotel room and then they went to dinner but I took the subway back to Sinchon so I could meet up with Yubi when she got off of work and then go to Hondae to meet Robyn and Lisa and go out with them for Lisa's birthday. We met at some Hof(bar) above Starbucks and had a few pitchers and waited for everyone else to meet us. Once we had a crew of about 15 people,mostly Canadians we went to we went to Tinpan a western style bar/club where there was hip hop music and people dancing on tables. It was just like a college dance club in the states. Also Hondae is very dirty theres trash and puke all over the streets. 3 of Seoul's largest Universities are in the area so its just one big party town there. It's like nothing I have ever seen and I have seen a lot!

Sunday, September 9, 2007

Pink Eye or The Eye Disease

In Korea they treat Pink Eye a little different than we do in the U.S. In the U.S. if you have Pink Eye you are sent home from school until you are no longer contagious. There are some schools in Korea that do this too, but many of them including my school apparently do not do this. I was told by my director that she tells students to stay home if they have Pink Eye, but I was told by several of the students that they were told they should still come and they can be put in a separate room, the truth probably lies somewhere in between. Regardless of the policy of my school it seems that in general many schools in Korea allow and expect students to attend school with this highly contagious disease, this isn't surprising to me because of the high value Koreans put on education. I was also told by a student that her middle school makes students come because many students would infect each other on purpose so they could get a few days off of school, this probably happens in the U.S. too. So they just make all the infected students go to a large room and they have a separate class for them. I guess its not really a big deal to go to school with Pink Eye, you don't get fatigued or dizzy, the only issue is that you are contagious and will spread the disease to others. I can't say that I am thrilled to be working with contagious students and I will also say that if I get Pink Eye or as they call it in Korea the Eye Disease I won't be coming to work until its cleared up, but hey I guess I would get to use my 3 sick days then. All I have to say about this is TIK (this is Korea), that about sums it up!

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Seoul 2, The Adventure Continues


I went to Seoul about a month ago, it was my second trip to Korea's capital city. Every time I and anyone I know goes to Seoul we always want to go back the next weekend because it is so much fun, this time was no different. I arrived around noon on Saturday. I took the KTX train from Gumi with a short transfer in Dajeon. When I arrived I met my friend Yubi and we went to Itaewon to eat Mexican food, I love Mexican and you can't get it within 100km of where I live. We went to a restaurant called Poncho's, it was good, I had a burrito, taco, enchilada combo platter and a ultimate margarita. The food was great but it was expensive, for 2 people to eat Mexican in Cleveland where I am from it would cost maybe $20-25 and $5 a margarita, depending on the size. In Itaewon it costs $40 for the meal and $10 for each margarita, but it was worth every won. After lunch we headed off to COEX Mall. This is a huge mall that is below the trade center in Seoul. I have never seen a mall this big before, I think I saw maybe half of it and it took most of the day. I got to get a picture on the Simpson's Coach at the movie theater at the mall. I bought some popular science magazines at a book store and did a lot of window shopping. I am a mallrat and I love to see a country's malls. We also ate at Pizzeria Uno, which to my knowledge is the only one in Korea and it was delicious. I had a real caesar salad and a very good pizza, with no corn.(for some reason a lot of pizza's in Korea come with corn on them, I don't know why but I don't like it) After the mall I went back to Itaewon and got a room at the Itaewon Hotel. I then walked around Itaewon and ended up going to the Reggae Bar and met some cool people from Minnesota who had only been in Korea for 3 days. I drank their until about 3am and then I went to bed. The next day Yubi took me to Insadong an outdoor market that sells all sorts of things. We went to a toy museum, which I loved because I love toys. They had a ton of old Voltron and GI Joe memorabilia and hundreds of other cool toys, it was a lot like Big Fun in Coventry, Ohio but you couldn't buy most of the things. We then walked to the Cheong Gye Cheon river. It's a really cool park on the banks of the cleanest river in Seoul. You can swim (more like wade, but its Korea, Koreans don't really swim)in it and many people do including the two of us. After playing in the river and walking for a mile or so we ended up downtown near city hall. Yubi took me to where she works and then we took the subway and went to Sinchon where she lives. There are several Uni's (Universities) in this ares, so it is all 18-25 year olds, its like a really, really, really big campus. It's one big party. We went to a PC room here and then headed back to Seoul Station where I hopped a train back to Gumi. It was a great 2 days in Seoul, I loved my time there with Yubi!!

White Water Rafting Trip


3 weeks ago I went Rafting in Korea on a local bus trip with the Waegook Cook Bar. It was a good time. There were about 40 people who went, about 25 foreigners and 15 Koreans, it was a good mix. We left around 9:30 in the morning and it took 2-3 hours to get to the river. No one really drank on the way their, a few people might have had a drink or two but for a Waegook Cook Bus the drinking was kept to the lowest possible level. When we arrived the instructors tried to organize us into groups based on sex and size but we didn't care we wanted to be with our friends so the whole raft organizing took over 1/2 an hour. Then we met our guides and got our gear and rafts. My group had Derrick in it, the owner of the Waegook Bar and a crazy South African man. He was jumping out of the boat and attacking our poor guide all through the trip. We had a blast, we splashed all the other boats around us, jumped out and threw all the girls out of our raft many times. Our guide seemed to particularly enjoy tossing the girls off the raft. The river itself was pretty tame. There weren't any rapids that I was worried about and maybe only 1 or 2 that I wouldn't have swam through. It was a few class 3's and mostly class 2 rapids but the trip was still a lot of fun because it was a good group. The best part was a huge rock that we got to jump of off, the river was maybe 20 feet below, I did this a few times. We also got to use the raft as a slide into the river off of another rock, these were both a lot of fun to do. I also met May a beautiful Korean English teacher on this trip and I also got to hang out with many of my friends from Gumi. After the trip we had a Korean barbecue which is when you take strips of meat, I think it was beef this time, but they also do this with pork and you fry them on large skillets in the middle of the table. We also had rice and my favorite Korean food, kimchi(cabbage fermented in a red paste). We started drinking at this time and continued to drink on the bus trip back to Gumi. We also stopped at a famous dam in Korea on the way back, it was very scenic. All in all I would say it was a great trip, if your in Gumi during the summer I recommend going on the Waegook Rafting Trip, the river isn't that great but the people make up for it!!!

Monday, September 3, 2007

Thailand


Thailand was an amazing place. My adventure was a short one. I finished work at 9pm on Wednesday and had to be back at work again the following Tuesday at 1pm, well at least I was suppossed to be there at 1pm as usual things in life don't always happen as we plan them. We left Gumi at 2:30am on the night bus to Inchon Airport in Seoul, its a 4 hour bus ride. I slept most of the way, my traveling companion Mike slept the entire time, for that matter he slept the entire time on all buses, trains and planes that we took on our trip, I'm happy he was able to sleep so easily, I wish I had the same ability. We arrived at Inchon Airport 3 hours before we were to board our plane so we had a lot of time to kill. We couldnt get there any later because the next bus didn't leave Gumi until 4:30 am and this would have been to late. So we ate some breakfast, exchanged our won(Korean dollars) for baht (Thai dollars), then we started the line to wait to check in, we waited a minute for the Thai Airlines staff to be ready then we checked in, their was some problem with our e-tickets so our extremely tall(6 feet) and gorgeous Korean attendant took us to another line and sorted out the issue, after about 15 minutes we were checked in, we then went through security and went to our gate.

We boarded a very large plane, it was probably a 747, but i never checked. Royal Thai Airlines has 1st class service, they even had 30+ options for in flight meals, I got the ovo-lacto vegetarian meal and mike got the fish meal.(he's Jewish and he wanted to make sure he wouldn't get any pork) The flight was only five hours and it wasn't very crowded so i grabbed a middle row of three seats and slept the entire way besides the first and last 30 minutes.

Once we arrived in bangkok, Thailand's capital city, we tried to catch a train or bus, but it was too confusing so we grabbed a cab and headed downtown to the train station were we bought train tickets on the night train to Chiang Mai, Thailand's main Northern City where all their adventure sporting and jungle touring is based out of. We had about 5 hours to kill before our train left Bangkok so we grabbed a Tuk-Tuk ( like a golf cart but faster) and we had the driver take us to a suit shop( The Brioni Shop). It would have been better if we new one in advance but we didn't so we took our chances, the tailor he took us too made very nice clothes but it was a little pricey but still way cheaper than US department or suit shops. Mike had 2 suits made, I just got 1 short sleeve button down shirt made, I cant get shirts in Korea very easily because my belly is just to big for them. After the fitting we paid and were off to get some authentic Thai street food, so after a quick stop for some supplies we headed to a street vendor that our driver recommended and we had some delicious pad-su-u (I'm sure this isn't how its spelled but it is how it sounds to me) its a thick noodle with a semi-sweet glazed sauce and vegetables, it was really good!!! Then we drove back to the train station wrote a few emails, mostly too our mothers saying we were alive and well.

Then we got on the night train around 7pm and headed off for our 12 hour train ride to Chiang Mai, we had 2nd class sleeper seats, which basically means we had fold down beds and a curtain for privacy, it was very comfortable and we met some cool people who work for a Thai non-profit company that runs a barge that goes up and down the river in Bangkok and they have children come aboard and they teach them about environmental education.

Once we arrived in Chiang Mai we checked into our hotel the Pagoda Inn (email: pagodainn2003@yahoo.com), its a really cool hotel, it was like $12 a night with air con( thats Asian for air conditioning), it was like a mix between a hostel and a hotel, it had very nice rooms with all the luxuries but it had that small traveler feeling, it had little areas to meet and talk and a small cafe, I would highly recommend it to anyone going to Chiang Mai.

We then got picked up by Jason who owns Siam River Adventures (Siam River Adventures Website) , he took us to the Siam River, pretty far upstream 1 1/2 from Chang Mai, we had to go on a dirt road to get to the village his base camp is based in, it was really cool, we found this company in the national geographic explorer magazine so it was very hardcore and expensive, but as Jason said he is the most expensive for a reason. It was totally worth the money, it was a great trip, we rode elephants on the way to the camp and then we rode the river back, it was a very good rafting trip 7 class 4 rapids and a lot of class 3's. Then we went out in Chang Mai. Then we went shopping in their night market and bought all sorts of cool things.

The next morning we went Mountain Biking down a mountain in the Suthep National Park, it was 1200m downhill, it rocked! We went with Chiang Mai Mountain Biking , we found this company in the same national geographic explorer article. After mountain biking we got massages at the most expensive and according to Jason the nest herbal massage shop in Chiang Mai. It was called Kradangnga, its located next to the Sian River Adventures Restaurant/Shop. Now when I say it was the most expensive it was but it still just cost us $15 for a 2-hour full body massage, I love south East Asia!!!!

Then on Saturday night we hopped on the night train again and headed back to Bangkok. When we arrived in Bangkok we stayed on Khaosan Road, the most famous street for backpackers to stay on in bangkok, its a street thats also a market and bar strip. it was one huge party 24/7. We stayed at the 3 son's Inn, it was cheap maybe $18 dollars for a room with 2 double beds and air con. We shopped and got 3 more massages in bangkok, in all we had 8 hours of massages for like $70 US. While in bangkok we also saw a few temples including the famous Wat Po where the worlds largest laying Buddha statue is located, its 50 feet tall and 350 feet long and bronze, it was ridiculously huge. We also saw a Muy Thai Kick boxing Fight actually we saw a whole card full of matches, 6 of them. We did a lot more shopping too.

Then we headed to the airport and flew back to Korea. We left Bangkok at Midnight on Monday and got back to Korea (45 minutes late) around 8am on Tuesday, we then hopped on a bus and got to Gumi (45 minutes late again) at 1:15pm, we had two 45 minute delays both our plane and bus were 45 minutes late so of course we were late to work and our bosses weren't happy but whatever.... It was a great trip

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Intensive Sessions: Summer Fun


Korean parents brag about their kids private academy (hogwon) educations, its like having the best car or the biggest house, the most expensive clothes, etc. Unfortunately for the kids this means that they have to go to their regular school, ,which is private if their parents can afford it. Then they have to go to anywhere from 1-3 private academies after school and on the weekends. It also needs to be said that the public schools have classes every other Saturday for a half a day. Many kids go to school from 8am to 9pm. I have known a few kids who went from 7am to midnight. I consider this to be insanity but it does make very hard working and intelligent young men and women, it also creates extremely unhappy and depressed ones. Don't get me wrong not every Korean child goes to school this much, but if they don't its usually because their parents can't afford it. There are also many well adjusted and happy children here, but in general I find them to be very depressed and unhappy. This brings me to summer vacation. Vacation works differently here in Korea instead of getting a 3 month summer vacation they get a 5 week summer vacation and a 5 week vacation after the new year. So what do Korean children do during their vacations, relax, play? They go to school of course. They attend intensive sessions at the private academies like the one I work at. They do have less school on their vacations, most of them don't start until 9am and they finish by 6pm. Some only go for a few classes. For me this means that I have to teach from 8:30am to 5:30pm for 4 weeks, which is a bummer because my usual schedule is 2:30-9:30. I also don't really get anymore money for this because I am not really teaching more than the 27 classroom hours I agreed to in my contact. I work at a good school but I think for anyone who wants to work in Korea as a teacher they need to negotiate many things in their contract, the schools find many ways to make you do tings you are not really suppossed to do. But like I said I am happy with my school but as always it could be better, but I signed my contract, which is better than average but I have never been one to settle for better than average, I prefer outstanding. If anyone is thinking about teaching in Korea email me and I will help you to get a perfect contract, I think I know all the tricks now.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Korean Fashion: Totally 80's


I want to take this opportunity to talk about the fashion in Korea. I know every country has their own fashion trends but I have to believe that Korea has some of the more unique ones. I will start with the t-shirts. Every t-shirt in Korea is written in grammatically incorrect English. It is so bad, I have a theory that they make the shirts wrong on purpose, because you would think that if they didn't do it on purpose they would eventually get at least one shirt right. This type of English is called Konglish, or Korean English. Another odd thing is that you almost never see a shirt that is written in Korean and if you do it is usually from an event and the Korean is the details about the event. The last thing I will say about the t-shirts is they are stuck in the 80's. I mean bright neon pink, green, yellow and orange, you know what I mean. All the women under the age of 30 in Korea wear extremely short skirts 80% of the time. They also always wear high heels, the 3 inch kind, all the time. Even when they are at the beach in a bikini they wear high heals. Speaking of the beach, the Korean bikini is usually 4 pieces, the top, which is always padded, the bottom which is usually a boy short or modest cut, you wont see any thongs here. Then there is a waste wrap and some sort of top cover. I think that many of them wear less clothes on the bottom half of their body everyday then they do at the beach. This is not to say that western bikini's are not worn because they are, but most of the bikini's are the style I described. Now don't get the wrong idea, these are the most beautiful women I have ever seen and there are a lot of them but they just seem to have a problem with the beach. They also hate the sun, women walk down the street with umbrella's when their is no rain to keep the sun off of them. This is probably why many of them have such fair and healthy skin, but I still find it strange. I have also noticed an obscene amount of converse shoes. So many people where converse, I would say more people wear converse in Korea than did back in the 80's in the U.S. Next I will discuss the Flower Boy. This is the term for young Korean men, who take more time and look almost identical to the young women of their age. Many young men fall into this category. They wear man bags (purses), have long hair, wear pink, etc. The only way to tell the difference from 100 meters is by the pants, they don't wear skirts. Another interesting trend here in Korea is the couple shirt. After three months of dating someone in Korea it is customary to buy and wear matching rings. At this point and sometimes before it is also customary to buy and wear matching t-shirts. They are usually the exact same shirt, same color, everything. Sometimes they will vary the color slightly but it will still be the same design. Some crazy couples will even take it a step further and wear completely identical outfits, the same shoes, socks, pants (usually jeans of the exact same color and design), bags, watches, sunglasses, rings and even hats. I can only assume they wear matching underwear too. The last fashion trend I will mention is the socially acceptable trend of wearing the same outfit several days in a row. For some reason it is okay to wear the same clothes more than one day in a row without washing them. Don't get me wrong they don't wear dirty clothes, but as long as they stay clean they don't seem to mind wearing them again and no one else seems to think it is strange. I like this environmentally conscious trend, but I don't think they do it to save the earth. I think it has more to do with the fact that clothes are very expensive here and it costs to much to buy a lot of outfits, so they compensate by wearing the ones they do buy more often. This is just the tip of the iceberg of Korean fashion, I'm sure I will touch on this subject again in the future.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Boryeong Mud Festival


Well I guess I am now finally recovered from the Mud Festival, that is except for my cuts and scrapes which will need 1 more week to fully heal. It was crazy. We met up at the Waegook cook at 8:30am on Saturday morning and 45 of us got on a chartered bus(no bathroom) and headed to Boryeong. When I pulled up on my scooter I could already see people drinking, I think a few of them were still drinking from the night before. We drank so much on the way down that we had to stop every 45 minutes for someone to go to the bathroom, which was really annoying, but shit happens. My biggest complaint is that we didn't get a bus with a toilet in it, a minor issue. So our 2-3 hour trip turned into 4+ hours after all the stops, and everyone was drunk when we arrived. Boryeong is a Beach city located somewhere between where I live and Seoul. It is very nice, there are a lot of nice hotels and restaurants, but for the 10 days of the Mud Fest it is just a huge party town. We all got off the bus, there were 12 of us who reserved 2 rooms ahead of time at a hotel that was very close to the action. So the 12 of us walked to our hotel. We were led by some Korean girl who we asked for directions, and since Koreans are so nice she walked us to our hotel. There was also another 2 groups of people from our bus who stayed at the same hotel, the Brits and some other Americans( a shout out to Traci, this was her crew and I know she is reading this). The hotel was nice, we stayed in a traditional Korean style room, which means no beds just a floor and some blankets, which makes it easier to fit 6 in a regular size hotel room, we ended up sleeping 9 in there but that wasn't the plan. As soon as we set our bags down we got changed into our mud clothes and headed off for the beach, we first went into the mud pool, which is a big pool filled 1-2 feet high with muddy water and people wrestle, splash and play American style football and rugby in it. This is the place where I got most of my cuts, scrapes,bruises, etc. I am very tough to knock down it takes 3-4 people to do it, or one really, really big army guy as I learned. So everyone wanted to wrestle me and knock me over all the time. Korean men love to wrestle, their very homophobic but for some reason they like a lot of male contact, I don't understand but hey it's their country. So I wrestled a few old Korean guys, all my friends and a few army guys who of course take it very seriously. As usual the more I stayed up the worst I got it in the end, damn my low center of gravity and cat like reflexes. After this we went to the Mud Jail where you can paint yourself with mud with paintbrushes. It is really a gazebo with plastic jail bars where you paint and throw mud on everyone inside. Next to this was the mud wrestling ring, its a bounce house style ring. Also the kids mud pool, no one under 14 is allowed in the adult pool, which is good because they would probably get killed. Also nearby was the mud pool zip cord, where you zip down from a 25 foot platform to a pool of mud American Gladiators style. After we got all muddy we went to the ocean which is only 100-300 feet from the activities depending on the time of day(the tide really does move 200 feet). We swam for a while got the mud off then went to the mud painting area, its like the jail only there is more mud on tiki tables with a lot more paintbrushes, there are 100's of people painting themselves with mud in this area at all times, they even have colored mud to use here. SO after this we were really muddy and we went and did some of the activities again. I forgot to mention that we were drinking the whole time while doing all of this, at this point it is like 4pm and I have been drinking for over 7 hours. We did the mud obstacle course this time to, which starts off with a rope climb, then a slide, then a muddy hill climb and a slide, mud makes it all very difficult, it was also a inflatable thing ,everything I mentioned besides the pool was an inflatable thing. (like a bounce house at a carnival). Then we decided to go shower and eat. After eating we continued to drink but without the mud. I went to bed at like 4am, I was drunk the entire day, 20 hours straight, this is the longest I have ever drank. I easily drank 30 beers. I then passed out around 4am, woke up the next day around 10am, and went back and did it all over again, without the drinking, I didn't touch a beer on Sunday, but many of my friends did, their insane, literally. I ate Pizza for lunch/dinner then got on the bus around 5pm and headed back to Gumi. Oh and yes there were still people drinking on the bus ride back and we stopped every 45 minutes again, only this time it was more for puking and less for peeing. All in all I would say this is a once in a lifetime experience and I would recommend anyone who teaches in Korea to attend the Mud Festival, its every July, this was the 9th or 10th annual one, around 1 million people go the festival over 10 day period, or at least thats what I was told, a lot of people just go for 1-2 hours, its not that far from Seoul.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Final Exams


This week was the end of our Spring II session. We had our final exams this week. One of the disadvantages to working at a good School as opposed to one of the many crappy private schools (Hog wons) here in Korea is the amount of extra work I have to do compared to many of the teachers in Gumi. Most of the English schools here just do a minimum amount of work with the students, there are a lot of games and handing out worksheets and puzzles and that kind of stuff. However there are a few reputable schools and mine happens to be one of them. As a actual teacher I find this comforting because I do actually like teaching the kids English. But the downside to this is that I have a lot of extra work to do. Normally we give the students a test or essay every week which I have to grade, this is not normal most English teachers don't give or grade papers. We also design our own curriculum, I don't have to do all my classes but I have a fair share of all the classes we teach, there are 9 foreigners at my school so I design 1/9 of the curriculum. This is a lot more work than many of the other teachers in Gumi do, but I like the fact that my school isn't a joke. That said, I hate finals week. We have to design the tests, 2-3 for each of us. Then we have to administer the tests which is the easy part, but I have 100-120 students during the week, so I have to Grade 120 final exams, half of them long essays in 2 days, then tally the scores, also the session scores, quizzes homework, participation, etc. Then add all that up give them a grade, write a paragraph comment on each student, enter their scores in the computer, than handwrite them on their report cards( I don't know why this isn't electronic, but it isn't). I also have to write a review of each of our books. needless to say this isn't a fun week.

My only salvation is that I am leaving in just a little over 7 hours to go to the Mud Festival, its a party that draws around 1 million people to a resort town in Korea where they have a mud party, everyone gets all muddy and drinks excessively. It's gonna be awesome. I will write about it in my next blog.

Friday, July 6, 2007

Seoul, 4th of July and Canada Day


Last weekend I took my first trip to Seoul, S. Korea's capital city. I took the KTX train from Gumi to Seoul Station. Their are 3 types of trains that can get you from Gumi to Seoul. I don't know their Korean names but one is called the slow train by foreigner's, it stops at every stop between Seoul and Gumi, this train takes 3/12 to 4 hours and costs $15 each way. Then their is the regular train it only stops at major stations between Seoul and Gumi, it takes 3 hours and costs around $21 each way. The fastest train and most expensive, about $28 each way is the KTX train. It takes about 2 hours and 10 minutes if you can catch it in Gumi, it only stops in Gumi 2 times each day. The option I used was to take the regular train to Daejon and transfer to the KTX to Seoul that is the most common KTX option as you can do it at anytime of the day, this way takes about 2 1/2 hours and costs like $1 less. The KTX is the fastest because it makes the least stops and because it is a newer train and can travel at much faster speeds than the regular trains.

Once I arrived in Seoul I met a friend and she took me around the city. I got to go to a authentic Korean lunch at her family's house. I also went to the electronics market which is the largest in the world. Then we went to Gecko's which is one of the most famous foreigner bars in Seoul. It's in Itaewon, which is near the military base and where you will see the most foreigners in Seoul, its also where the most foreigners live in Seoul both military and civilian. I parted ways with my friend here and met up with some of my fellow teachers from gumi. It was the Saturday before
Canada day so all the Canuck's were looking to go drinking. We got 3 hotel rooms in the art district and then we cabbed it back to the Rocky Mountain Bar in Itaewon, this is another foreigner bar. It's located next to Hooker Hill which is pretty much what it sounds like but it is also the main street in Itaewon for bars and clubs. After a couple of hours we went to the UN Bar which is very close to the Rocky Mountain and Gecko's. We ended the night here and went back to our hotel at around 6 a.m. There is no official closing time for bars in Korea and I am finding out that leaving a bar when the sun is up is common.

We stayed at a really nice hotel and the weird thing is that you don't need a credit card to get a room in Korea. So I took full advantage of their trustfulness and stole two really nice 500 thread count pillow cases and a plush towel. What can I say nice linens are impossible to find in Korea. We checked out of our hotel around 2pm and went to Ali Baba's a middle eastern restaurant in Itaewon. We then went to the main shopping area in Seoul, I don't know its name but every designer shop I have ever heard of was here and hundreds I have never heard of. We then went to the electronics market again which is not near the other shopping area. We bought an espresso machine which was very tough to find in Korea and I bought a rice cooker for $35 which is a very good deal they sell for $60 in Gumi. We then went to an Italian restaurant which wasn't to bad and then took the regular train back to Gumi, we got in around 1am and then I scootered back to my place which is about a 10 minute ride from the train station.

The 4th was 2 days later I had to work 12 hours on the 4th because we had our textbook workshop in the morning before class. After work me and some fellow American's went to the Waegook Cook Bar and drank heavily, we then went to a local school playground and did what Americans do best, blow shit up! We bought fireworks at the Dollar Store and yes they are real fireworks not the grocery store crap from the U.S. We bought Roman Candles, big bottle rockets, spinners, sparklers, the ones that shoot colored fire out of them in the air, black cat's, etc. You can buy these everywhere its heaven!! We then got politely asked to leave by a maintenance guy who was very happy that we were picking up the trash and putting it in a bag, hey were inconsiderate Americans but were not litterers! But seriously we were being cheered on by a few Koreans, they were happy to see the show. We then went back to the Waegook drank some more and went home, not to bad of a 4th celebration for being half way around the world.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Getting a Korean Driver's License and scooter plates


Getting a driver's license in Korea is pretty easy but it is a unique experience. First of all I am lucky that my school is very helpful. (and insistent that you get a license,which is partially why there so helpful)One of our administrators drove me to the capital of our province, Daegu, to get my driver's license. It is only about 25 minutes away and easily accessible by train for me, but since I had no idea where to go once I got there the ride that Jay gave me was greatly appreciated.

I feel it needs to be mentioned that I am the only foreigner in Gumi that I know of who has a scooter and is legitimately licensed, registered and insured. Most teachers don't have any sort of license let alone registration or insurance.You really don't need it unless you happen to get in an accident or pulled over by the police(which is very,very rare). Even if you do get pulled over they would most likely just let you go instead of dealing with you. It is possible to get a ticket for not having a license or even have your scooter impounded, but I have never heard of either happening. However, my Hog Won (private school) is particular about following the rules which is good since most Hog Won's just break laws and have no regard for their teachers rights. My school is the exception.

The first thing I did was buy my scooter from a legitimate source, a bike shop. There I obtained my title for the bike. Then I got insurance for about $170 for the year, this includes theft and accident coverage.(my scooter is worth about $900 but foreigners are targets for theft so I felt this was a good deal) The next step was to take the title and insurance paper's to the local Hyonggok City Office and register my scooter. This costs about $30 for the fees and taxes(thats sales tax and all cost's,pretty cheap by US standards). At this point my scooter was legitimate I had a license plate and theft and accident coverage.

The last step is to get my Korean Driver's License. I have a valid Ohio License, so I took that to the Daegu City Hall, paid about $40 (stamp fees,test fees,license fees) and got my license. You have to fill out everything in triplicate and its all in Korean but luckily my friend knows a lot of Korean so he helped me. You also have a quick physical exam and eye test.Then you take a 20 question computer exam on Korean driving laws. This was difficult considering there is no material in English to study from. The test is also in broken British English, I managed to get a 65% and passed, I don't know what the minimum required score is to pass but I think it might be 65%. Regardless I passed. Then they took my Ohio License and gave me a Korean one, it's valid for 10 years. I am suppossed to return it when I leave and get my Ohio license back but since my Ohio one expires in February and I will already have a new Ohio license when I leave. I am going to keep my Korean License as a souvenir of my journey.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Koreans are very kind, Baby Hens are common and Scooters are fun!


I met some really nice Koreans this week. Over the weekend I went to the Waegook Cook and I met two Korean women who I talked with for over 3 hours, they were very helpful and taught me a lot about Korean culture and language. That same night I also talked with another group of 4 Koreans, two couples, they also were very friendly and helped me to better understand their culture and they wanted to know about American culture too. It seems that most Koreans I meet will go out of their way to help you and love to discuss Korean ideology and they want to know about American Ideology as well. However, the best example of Korean kindness I have seen so far happened to me at the ATM. I put my card in and instead of getting the usual menu that has a prompt for English I just got a screen entirely in Korean and I could not get my card back. I still have no idea what the screen said but I asked the lady next to me if she spoke English(she didn't)but when she saw my screen she stopped what she was doing and called the bank and had them send a tech guy their to retrieve my card. She waited with me for 15 minutes for him to arrive. Then she explained what had happened and then waited another 10 minutes why he got my card back for me. Then she got her money out said goodbye and was on her way like it wasn't even an inconvenience for her. I was blown away by how helpful she was.

I also have to tell a story about teaching this week. One of my youngest students a girl about 9 or 10 years old came to class with a baby hen in her backpack. At first I didn't know what was going on, all the kids were very excited and I kept hearing a chirping noise but I just figured it was coming from outside. Then I realized it was coming from the classroom and I put it all together. The students kept saying "Pia Pia" which means baby hen in Korean, but I had no idea what it meant at the time. The girl had bought it on the street for 50 cents before class, I had no idea what to do so I grabbed a Korean teacher and she seemed un-phased by it. She took the bird to the office but it in a box and told the girl to get it after class. Then she went back to teaching like it was a regular occurrence. I can only assume that this has happened before because none of the Koreans seem to think twice about it. All of the Western Teachers were very surprised by the reaction of the usually strict
Korean teachers. We were also surprised that they sell animals on the street to children like this.When in Rome...

Lastly I bought a motor scooter this week, its 100cc and seats 2. It's red and has 3000 miles. It cost me $700 and another $100 for insurance for the year. Scooters are very popular in my town with western teachers and Koreans. It has been a lot of fun driving it around. I have already taken it to the top of our mountain road on Gumo San and to all my favorite local hot spots. Its nice to be more mobile.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Luxuries of Korean Life and Bars


This week I hired a maid to clean my place. For twenty dollars a week she cleans my apartment and does all my laundry. In the U.S. I could never have afforded this Luxury. We had another holiday this week on Wednesday, it was Korea's Memorial Day. On Tuesday Night the entire staff of my school went out to eat, apparently this is something that we do every month or two. We went to a very nice restaurant near downtown across the street from the cities park. I had the best shrimp fried rice I have ever eaten, of course it was called something else, but that is what I associated it with. The hardest thing to get used to for me when eating out in Korea is that they share everything, everyone eats off of everyone else's plates and there are many side dishes that people just eat from. They even share big bowls of soup, they all just dip their spoons in and eat. The soup is just too much for me, I can handle the side dishes but hands of my en tree and I don't share soup! They did have dark beer at this restaurant, which is a huge plus as its difficult to get here. After the restaurant we went to the Waegook Cook Bar, Waegook is the Korean word for foreigner, so the bar is called the Foreigner Bar, it has a western menu and a better selection of drinks than Korean bars(called hofs). The owner is a South African man named Derrick, he married a Korean woman and now lives in Gumi. Here is a link to the Waegook's website, it has their menu and more. www.waegookcook.com After the Waegook we went to the Nori Bong (Karaoke Bar) that is conveniently located below the Waegook. At the Nori Bong the Korean teachers sang a bunch of Korean Songs then a few of the other western teachers came down and we started singing american songs. At the end of the night I had managed to lose my voice again but I had it back the next day.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

The Week I lost my voice


Let me start by saying that teaching is difficult if you cant speak. If their are any mute teachers reading this blog, I take my hat off to you, its not easy. The week started off well, but then on Wednesday I started to feel sick, by the end of the day my voice was vary horse and I was congested and feeling a bit feverish. When I woke on Thursday morning I could not speak at all and I mean at all. I couldnt even make a sound. This obviously presented me with a few problems for teaching that day, in the States I simply would have called in sick and been done with it, but In Korea you only get 3 sick days per year, they require a doctors a note and since I am knew I didn't want to call in anyway. So I went to work and was amazed at how compassionate all my students were to my illness, they were on their best behavior and they all seemed genuinely concerned for my well being. So I used a lot of the tapes that accompany our books, handed out a few crossword puzzles and had the students do some book work and I made it threw the day without incident. On Friday morning when I woke up my voice was still horse but I had it back again and I was able to go back to business as usual. On a separate note I watched several Cleveland Cavaliers playoff games this week, we are currently up 3-2 in a best of seven game series against the Detroit Pistons, GO CAVS!!!!!!!!!!!!. I am able to watch TV from the States via a device called a slingbox, it is hooked up to my TiVo back in Cleveland and it streams(plays video for the computer illiterate)live TV and all my recored shows directly to my computer in Korea. I can watch all the same TV I did in the states, its wonderful. However even if I didn't have a slingbox I would be able to see the s as they played them live and during prime time on cable here in Korea. They love basketball and have had most of the playoff games on cable here this year. They also show a few regular season games per week I am told. Its a very small world! The last thing I will talk about is trash. Its different than in Cleveland. In Korea you have to separate your trash. They sell prepaid bags for your Food and non recyclable waste, which you are legally required to separate.The fine is steep if you are caught putting trash out incorrectly, several hundred dollars for repeat offenders. They also require you to separate your recyclables into bags(any plastic bags will do, you don't have to buy these), you have to separate Plastic,Paper, Glass and Metal. So basically under my sink I have 6 different trash bags, two of which cost me money and there not cheap, its like $1 a bag. I of course am happy about this as I recycled back in Cleveland and I am happy they don't add food waste to their trash dumps, this is a much better system than in Ohio. Its more like California's or so I'm told as I have never lived their. In Lakewood the city where I lived in Cleveland you had to use blue bags for recycling but you could buy them or just use blue grocery bags and you didn't have to sort it, the city took care of that.

Friday, May 25, 2007

The First 10 days


Well I have been here over 10 days now, the time has flown bye. The first few days of school were hard. I was jet lagged and there were a lot of new procedures and policies to learn. Teaching has been a challenge so far, but most of the students have a good basic understanding of English so it has been manageable. I teach writing and speaking/listening classes. The school is like an office building in the US, it has around 10 classrooms that vary in size but the largest will hold maybe 15 kids. I am going to try and figure out how to add pics to this blog soon, so you may be able to see what I'm talking about. My biggest complaint to date is that they don't turn on the air conditioning until people complain, but at least we have air and when it gets real hot they will have it on all the time. The kids are just like kids in the US, some are nice others are rotten. In general they seem more respectful of teachers than in the US but there are exceptions. I think I have been received fairly well by them, they seem to listen and do what I say most of the time. They listen more than the Special Ed kids I worked with in the US for sure. The curriculum that we use is fairly straight forward and with a few exceptions the text books are pretty easy to teach and straight forward for the kids to follow. I am glad that I signed on with a school that has a set curriculum and lesson plans, I would not be happy if I had to create my own right now. The school is in the middle of a commercial section of town, their are hundreds of stores,restaurants,schools,churches and Bars(called Hofs) within a 10 minute walk from the school. There are not any American chains within walking distance but there is a McDonald's and a Pizza Hut within a 5 minute cab ride.(I haven't been to either yet) There is a Lotteria (pronounced La Teria, I probably spelled it wrong but that's close),a Korean version of McDonald's about 100 feet away and also my 2 favorite restaurants to date, Suk Bong and a Korean Sushi Place with a name that's in Korean which I don't know and couldn't spell even if I did. The Suk Bong is a sandwich shop which makes egg sandwiches, its two pieces of toasted white bread, scrambled egg, cheese and toppings of your choice with a sweet sauce and hot sauce, its delicious. The Korean Sushi place makes Sushi Rolls, only there larger and contain cooked meats and fish instead of raw meats. It's not actually sushi but that's how we foreigners refer to it. Besides teaching I have gone out to several restaurants and Hofs. I went to VIP's an American style buffet place that's in downtown Gumi, its a lot fancier than a buffet place in the US, think Olive Garden Quality in a buffet and that should give you an idea, not great but sufficient. I also have been to a Korean Sashimi restaurant twice now, this does serve actual raw fish, its real Sashimi. I went to a place that they give you meat and you cook it yourself on flat top grills built into your table, since I'm an ovo/lacto/pesco(eggs,milk,fish in Latin) vegetarian I didn't eat the meat, but I was there and I got a veggie soup. Yesterday was a national holiday here in Korea, it was Buddha's Birthday, so we had the day off. 3 of my fellow teachers and I went to Daegu(the capital of the province I'm in) It's a large city with over a million people, its about a 25 minute train ride or drive away. We saw a Baseball Game, the Samsung Lions (my provinces team) verse SK(not sure what it means), the Lions won in a slug fest 9-6. Then we went to a commercial electronics store street that has around 50 electronics store next to each other, I bought an Olympus Digital Camera, it was about $80 dollars cheaper than in the US I figure and it included a free case, 1 gigabyte memory card and 2 batteries. I would say I saved around $125 US in total buying the camera in Korea. After that we went to Subway for subs and then to the movies to see the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie. The movie was the same cost as the US and subway was like $1 more expensive. The Baseball game was $8 for good seats and beers were only $2 per can and they give you the can unopened, which in Cleveland, where I'm from would mean that opposing players and bad officials would probably be stoned to death by full cans of beer, but Koreans are less violent than pissed off clevelanders.