"Signal the plane - An' I landed on the runway: A survivor, independent foreigner"
Monday, July 27, 2009
The Real Trip
Well, I'm finally off. Half of the reason I came out here was to polish my Korean, but I could do that with a Korean girlfriend and a textbook anywhere in the world. The other half of the reason was to continue my travel, and tomorrow that's just what I'm going to do. I just flash packed for a flight to Hong Kong that I booked not 24 hours before it departed. It's probably one of the scariest moments of my life. I'm alone, I've not prepared one bit, I speak ZERO Chinese, and I haven't even checked the weather. This is the trial by fire. How well can I survive in a totally foreign place? I guess not totally foreign, since there should be a great deal of English around. I think. Anyways, in 16 hours, the first stage of my real trip begins!
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
www.KoreanEssays.com

I enjoyed this book very
much, because I love ha-
rry potter and 'the whipping
Boy's carectors are similor to
potter and, Hagreed. My opinion
is change carectors name. And
it is not funny. It is complex.
please more funny. Like Harry
Potter or Transformers or Terminators.
This book is short, so essay is
short.
Friday, July 10, 2009
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
www.KoreanEssays.com
All I have for you this time is one essay. But it's incredible!
Topic 2: "A helping hand"
How would you feel if you saw an injured animal on the road?
What could you do for the injured animal?
I feel is so excited. and. so
suprised and I like
animal for eat meat becuuse
It is so good. but
I like eat grasses for animal too.
because It is so
cute
Topic 2: "A helping hand"
How would you feel if you saw an injured animal on the road?
What could you do for the injured animal?
I feel is so excited. and. so
suprised and I like
animal for eat meat becuuse
It is so good. but
I like eat grasses for animal too.
because It is so
cute
Monday, June 22, 2009
Tha Walk to School
Since it was so popular last time, I decided to give you a visual day in my life. Lets start in the garage.
I enter and exit my building through the garage. The actual entrance to the parking area is on the wall across from the one you see here. That silver circle on the floor is for rotating cars that pull in so that they face that entrance and can drive down the ramp to the parking spaces below the building.

Here you can see the local Buddhist temple. Unlike most of them around the world, this temple has found its way right into the heart of a city as opposed to the mountains or forests.

Turning left at the temple, I get to experience the contrast that is this city. This disgusting, grey building has been under construction for the whole 4 months I've lived here. It'll be nice to see a gleaming monolith to man's dominance of nature rather than this noisy, dirty mess.

This is our chicken place. Best fried chicken I've had in the city. You'd be surprised how many miles away from the South you can find some kickin' fried chicken!

What three block walk through a major metropolitan area would be complete without passing at least one Starbucks? What's more interesting is that immediately next door was a place called "StarBeer Coffee." Even in a country without copyright laws, however, the crack team of Starbucks lawyers can shut that operation down.

Immediately across the street you'll see the entrance to SeoGang University. I didn't even know there was a fourth university right around the corner from where I lived! This picture accidentally captured one of the phenomena I've mentioned before: notice the motorcycle using the crosswalk.

This stretch of the walk has some of the only trees I've seen in the city, so in that respect I'm pretty lucky.

Here is a terrible shot of our Ministop. It's right around the corner from Avalon, so its easy to run to between classes if you need a drink. Notice that the vehicle that slid into this photo, which is the only thing like a pick-up truck they have here.

This is probably the most important building in our lives: The orange restaurant (actually called 'KimBap Heaven'). It is directly across the street from Avalon, and we use our pre-planning time to eat before work every day. These women know us too well, but the quality is pretty good and the prices can't be beat.

Cross the street and we've arrived at the Avalon building. The first floor is a comforter store, then the 2nd-5th are dedicated to us. I don't know what all is on the rest of the 10 floors of the building, but I do know that one of them is an elevator repair company. Guess who's elevator is never out of order!

Finally, the hallways of the 5th floor. This floor consists of (from front to back along the left) the principal's office, the break room, the elementary school office, (from front to back along the right) the computer lab, the middle school pricipal's office, the middle school office, and finally the detention room against the back wall.

And now that I've walked you to the office, I'm going to leave it and head back home. I can't stand to be here any longer.
I enter and exit my building through the garage. The actual entrance to the parking area is on the wall across from the one you see here. That silver circle on the floor is for rotating cars that pull in so that they face that entrance and can drive down the ramp to the parking spaces below the building.

Here you can see the local Buddhist temple. Unlike most of them around the world, this temple has found its way right into the heart of a city as opposed to the mountains or forests.

Turning left at the temple, I get to experience the contrast that is this city. This disgusting, grey building has been under construction for the whole 4 months I've lived here. It'll be nice to see a gleaming monolith to man's dominance of nature rather than this noisy, dirty mess.

This is our chicken place. Best fried chicken I've had in the city. You'd be surprised how many miles away from the South you can find some kickin' fried chicken!

What three block walk through a major metropolitan area would be complete without passing at least one Starbucks? What's more interesting is that immediately next door was a place called "StarBeer Coffee." Even in a country without copyright laws, however, the crack team of Starbucks lawyers can shut that operation down.

Immediately across the street you'll see the entrance to SeoGang University. I didn't even know there was a fourth university right around the corner from where I lived! This picture accidentally captured one of the phenomena I've mentioned before: notice the motorcycle using the crosswalk.

This stretch of the walk has some of the only trees I've seen in the city, so in that respect I'm pretty lucky.

Here is a terrible shot of our Ministop. It's right around the corner from Avalon, so its easy to run to between classes if you need a drink. Notice that the vehicle that slid into this photo, which is the only thing like a pick-up truck they have here.

This is probably the most important building in our lives: The orange restaurant (actually called 'KimBap Heaven'). It is directly across the street from Avalon, and we use our pre-planning time to eat before work every day. These women know us too well, but the quality is pretty good and the prices can't be beat.

Cross the street and we've arrived at the Avalon building. The first floor is a comforter store, then the 2nd-5th are dedicated to us. I don't know what all is on the rest of the 10 floors of the building, but I do know that one of them is an elevator repair company. Guess who's elevator is never out of order!

Finally, the hallways of the 5th floor. This floor consists of (from front to back along the left) the principal's office, the break room, the elementary school office, (from front to back along the right) the computer lab, the middle school pricipal's office, the middle school office, and finally the detention room against the back wall.

And now that I've walked you to the office, I'm going to leave it and head back home. I can't stand to be here any longer.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
www.KoreanEssays.com
It's essay time again. We had a grading party at my apartment this weekend. Here are the greatest hits:
The lowest level had a series of half sentences that mirror the reading chapter exactly (supposed to have been about seahorses...). All they had to do was copy the second half of the sentence straight out of the book. Instead, Fiona decided to get creative:
She is a small kind of fish.
It is smallllike a airpline.
It has a fly.
A seahorse is as small as old shoes.
It looks like a very old.
There are many kinds of seahorses find.
They are really swimmers.
They move as slow as windand airrprane.
The can also fly.
They are different from hair.
The male seahorse keeps its babies .
That is .
(Eventually, Fiona decided to just quit and leave the ending blank.)
If you were looking for the definition of confused, Daniel in the upper level has got you covered:
"These cities like Seoul are mostly in Korea because They were made on a plain surrounded on mountain (it looks like valley) or a valley which is a plain on mountains."
This one speaks for itself.
I have 'make alphabet book' club.
It's very boring.
I don't like this.
I like music clubs.
Because I like music very well.
If I was elected leader of a club.
I'm who very many working in the my club.
Who's name is bestest beautiful.
And who has who's music.
It's very important.
The lowest level had a series of half sentences that mirror the reading chapter exactly (supposed to have been about seahorses...). All they had to do was copy the second half of the sentence straight out of the book. Instead, Fiona decided to get creative:
She is a small kind of fish.
It is smallllike a airpline.
It has a fly.
A seahorse is as small as old shoes.
It looks like a very old.
There are many kinds of seahorses find.
They are really swimmers.
They move as slow as windand airrprane.
The can also fly.
They are different from hair.
The male seahorse keeps its babies .
That is .
(Eventually, Fiona decided to just quit and leave the ending blank.)
If you were looking for the definition of confused, Daniel in the upper level has got you covered:
"These cities like Seoul are mostly in Korea because They were made on a plain surrounded on mountain (it looks like valley) or a valley which is a plain on mountains."
This one speaks for itself.
I have 'make alphabet book' club.
It's very boring.
I don't like this.
I like music clubs.
Because I like music very well.
If I was elected leader of a club.
I'm who very many working in the my club.
Who's name is bestest beautiful.
And who has who's music.
It's very important.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
The Reaction
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Confession
If I were any sort of real person I wouldn't sneak out of my apartment at midnight on a desperate hunt for corn chips. In one of the trendiest cities on the Asian continent. Even Eurasian continent. In pajama pants and dress shoes. Without socks. In a country that uses corn as a garnish.
God I wish I had a casual pair of shoes. And why oh why were there *that* many people using the elevator tonight? I've never seen that many co-tenants. And did I really have to go to the Family Mart on the main street? Only to settle for these things?
God I wish I had a casual pair of shoes. And why oh why were there *that* many people using the elevator tonight? I've never seen that many co-tenants. And did I really have to go to the Family Mart on the main street? Only to settle for these things?
Friday, May 29, 2009
Quick update
Hey everyone,
Sorry to have left the blog standing for so long. I've sort of fallen into a routine just to grind through the semester, but its finally over. Summer is about to get brutal here, and we have a new teacher from Canada just in time for him to suffer. He's replacing the guy from Savannah who has been here for a year and three months, who was sadly the closest person to me on this continent.
The previous Korean president committed suicide last weekend, so that's dominated the news rather than North Korea's latest tantrum for attention. In other news, swine flu has arrived. A westerner brought it over to another institute. Everyone there got 10 days paid vacation, but the bad news is Koreans are hysterical about this whole epidemic. The drop in enrollment, as disease crazy Korean mothers whisked their germy little brats to another school, effectively closed an entire chain of hagwons.
Cross your fingers Avalon doesn't get hit or I'm out of a job! If you never heard I was going to be an executive consultant in my free time, then you're actually on the right page. The gig fell through being that someone who held the job previously asked for it back the day after it was offered to me.
Miss you guys
Sorry to have left the blog standing for so long. I've sort of fallen into a routine just to grind through the semester, but its finally over. Summer is about to get brutal here, and we have a new teacher from Canada just in time for him to suffer. He's replacing the guy from Savannah who has been here for a year and three months, who was sadly the closest person to me on this continent.
The previous Korean president committed suicide last weekend, so that's dominated the news rather than North Korea's latest tantrum for attention. In other news, swine flu has arrived. A westerner brought it over to another institute. Everyone there got 10 days paid vacation, but the bad news is Koreans are hysterical about this whole epidemic. The drop in enrollment, as disease crazy Korean mothers whisked their germy little brats to another school, effectively closed an entire chain of hagwons.
Cross your fingers Avalon doesn't get hit or I'm out of a job! If you never heard I was going to be an executive consultant in my free time, then you're actually on the right page. The gig fell through being that someone who held the job previously asked for it back the day after it was offered to me.
Miss you guys
Thursday, May 07, 2009
The Yardstick
There are several ways through which we could measure how far Korea is behind on race relations, but since I'm supposed to be working right now I will just give you this one. The students are reading a novel about a middle school boy who has a science accident and turns invisible. Adventure ensues. When asked to write about the novel, this is one yardstick by which we can guage civil rights progress in Korea. Lifted from sentence #1:
"Justin is a Negro then his friends are banter Justin."
"Justin is a Negro then his friends are banter Justin."
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
KoreanEssays.com
Topic 3:
Book Report "Invisible Boy" In this story, why do you think Justin wants to disappear? Have you ever wanted to disappear? Why?
Meriel:
Book Report "Invisible Boy" In this story, why do you think Justin wants to disappear? Have you ever wanted to disappear? Why?
Meriel:
Read 'Invisible boy' and...
I read 'Invisible boy."
I difficult to me. So I well can say answer to first qustien. First qustien is 'Why do you think Justin wants to disappear.' I think long time, but I can. So It's pass. The second qustien is 'Have you ever wanted to disappear? Why?"
Umm,I some time want disappear, sometime is because, I'm disappear, play behind, I can behind well. but always disappear and anybody can see me. So I want some time disappear or sometime not.
I difficult to me. So I well can say answer to first qustien. First qustien is 'Why do you think Justin wants to disappear.' I think long time, but I can. So It's pass. The second qustien is 'Have you ever wanted to disappear? Why?"
Umm,I some time want disappear, sometime is because, I'm disappear, play behind, I can behind well. but always disappear and anybody can see me. So I want some time disappear or sometime not.
Monday, April 27, 2009
Oh, by the way...
This was not given to me but rather to my friend Caroline. That doesn't mean I can't share it! An Easter card, by Androied [sic].

This is the point in reading the card that I assumed Android had misspelled something along the way. Mommy?
But then:

Easter basket? Grenades, a gun, and a knife.
(The backwards 'F' characters signify a sort of laugh.)

This is the point in reading the card that I assumed Android had misspelled something along the way. Mommy?
But then:

Easter basket? Grenades, a gun, and a knife.
(The backwards 'F' characters signify a sort of laugh.)
The Lantern Festival
Lots of lanterns, old people carrying lanterns, and floats in a two hour long parade! Fun weekend activity, even though the weather kinda sucked. Check out the parade of photos, which can be so much more quickly uploaded to facebook than to blogger.
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Menu Update
While in the market, we got some fresh food that's only available out by the clean rivers and such.
Bing Eo and Eun Eo:
These are minnows and some other slightly larger fresh water fish, both of which you can only get from the streams outside of Seoul. Good luck pronouncing them! We, of course, got them fried up crispy. I ate the big fish's heads. Kinda a psychological barrier, but nothing wrong with them I guess. I'm told though that you can eat the minnows live in the winter. An adventure that awaits me!
Clams:
Special southern clams! We ate them two different ways: once as some sort of room-temperature spicy salad (kinda like chicken salad I guess)...
and once boiled in broth.
They were really tiny, but so delicious.
Acorn Jelly:
The translation always sounds gross, but its literally a jelly made from acorns, so what am I supposed to do? I've had this in Seoul on several occasions, but this was a specialty of the market's. I've never seen it with so many veggies stirred in. Particularly good!
The Conclusion of the Mystery Trip
It started, of course, like any good trip starts: me, running across the platform, unshowered and unkempt, to a train that is going who knows where. That's not actually how it started per se. It started with a phone call ten minutes before the train was scheduled to leave, 1 minute of clothes, 8 minutes of terrifying taxi, then running across the platform to the train going who knows where. I literally boarded the train and the guy on the platform was holding it. As soon as I stepped on, the train left. Couldn't have cut it closer!
I was glad that I made it though, because we went to a southern province to see some cherry blossoms. Though the blossoms were about a week past prime and thus unimpressive, the weather was beautiful and it was nice to get some fresh air for once. We went to a big outdoor market where I got a bunch of grain (for mixing in with my rice at home to liven things up).

We then walked to the nearby Buddhist temple for some quick photo ops.




Fun trip! Thanks Inhee for planning it all!
PS The bus was hilarious


I was glad that I made it though, because we went to a southern province to see some cherry blossoms. Though the blossoms were about a week past prime and thus unimpressive, the weather was beautiful and it was nice to get some fresh air for once. We went to a big outdoor market where I got a bunch of grain (for mixing in with my rice at home to liven things up).
We then walked to the nearby Buddhist temple for some quick photo ops.
Fun trip! Thanks Inhee for planning it all!
PS The bus was hilarious
Friday, April 10, 2009
Mystery Trip
I am less than three hours from leaving on a trip. I have no clue where I am going. Wish me luck.
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
Menu Update
When I'm not eating dog, I'm eating very traditional Korean food. Namely, the mountain of side dishes. I've done this before and it is both delicious, healthy, and affordable. This time was a special treat however, because we got to enjoy Lotus-leaf Rice. How do you make Lotus-leaf Rice? Take some delicious rice mixed with a few nuts, beans, and seeds, then wrap the mixture in a lotus leaf. Steam the whole little package so the rice soaks up the flavor of the rice. Serve with a mountain of side dishes and enjoy!
Sunday, April 05, 2009
Let the Engrish Begin!
Inspired by my friends recent discovery of a shirt that featured a picture of a chic, Asian woman and the word 'Rolita,' I went on my own hunt for crazy English. Spring is almost here, and the shirts are only just starting to make their way out. With the help of Caroline, Blake, and InHee, I managed to find some good one's for you. Here's the first batch of Engrish shirts:
DONKEY
The mud houses, cave dwellings, and donkey carts on the parched
landscape do not fit the image of China whose frantic development
has catapulted its economy to the fourth largest int he world.
The mud houses, cave dwellings, and donkey carts on the parched
landscape do not fit the image of China whose frantic development
has catapulted its economy to the fourth largest int he world.
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