Thursday, July 25, 2013

Little Things

Hello.
I've finished the first quarter of summer camp today. Been busy making things for the classes. I see a lot of people making fun crafts with their kids, and get a little jealous. But I bet those kids are the best in their class. Where I work - I have the same kids, the same mix of ok and not so ok at English. The new kid seems to be pretty good with English (for 2nd grade). He can read a bit.

But I digress. I am posting because I wanted to show you all something that makes me happy.

Yeah. Heinz Ketchup, and yes the red ribbon has Korean on it.

There are days when Korean food is very very unappealing. The high acidity of spicy foods takes a toll on you.

And that's why I bought this. I never thought I'd miss ketchup. I miss ketchup.
Try eating your fries with no salt and no ketchup. Yup. That's how they come here - unless you get the flavored ones (dry powdered flavorings added to greasy fries... very messy). Small things like ketchup mean a lot to me. I guess that is how I am American.
(oh yeah, there's also hershey's chocolate here! expensive import goods!! hahaha!)

Monday, July 15, 2013

Pretty Things (pretty random things)

As promised, here are some shots from the clothes I bought 2 weekends ago in Seoul. (or was it three now? I guess it's 3. Time flies.)

The pink shirt has white polka dots, and the sleeves are really ruffly. I'm not huge on ruffles, but Korea seems to be. The bottoms are somewhere between a skirt and shorts. They're dressy and considered very pretty by Korean standards. It's like "please wear shorts to school". I will take it. Best $45 I've ever spent. The shirt was something like $35. I know... expensive. Normally I wouldn't spend half that much on myself, but I try to look really good for school. They seem to like to show me off -- so I need to look good when they do this. Give them something to show around. Hahaha.

The dress is a simple A line that has a sparkly clasp in the sash. It fits me really nicely. Stripes are extremely popular here. I haven't worn the dress to work yet. I am waiting for a day when I know there will be people. Why wear it on a normal day and risk it getting dirty? (its being white - it screams "spill kimchi on me!")

I saw these on my way out of a Lotte Mart, and had to have them. They were on sale, 30% off, but ha, they were still expensive.
The inside says "A well-bred woman is / worth. the fairest / crown that's made of purest gold." [  / indicates a line break]

About a week ago I found these yellow socks while shopping in Daiso and had to buy them.
They make my day. Nothing funnier than mustache socks. I can't frown and look at them at the same time.

Now for some Engrish.
From an umbrella store. While the large print pink text is perfectly good English, the newsprint type black is a hilarious mix of things.
"While the best major leagye te / head for the playoffs, the Mets / ready for the blame game."
Skipping down some to the next full-ish paragraph. "as wella a series of books and articles by / and abou justices, has placed the court in an unusually bright / spotlight as the new term opens."
It's non sequitur clippings all jumbled together. :D

From a photo frame.
"Magic Circus / the children was diverted by the circus / We took the children to the circus."

And now for something completely different.

Welcome to JP - where practically everyone is growing vegetables. The corn here was taller than me by the 4th of July.
Ever wonder what happens to lemon slices outside? Me either.
I have taken to throwing all my compostable trash out the window across the way to the field. (it's an empty lot with nothing but weeds growing, and a collection of trash inside (umbrella, styrofoam etc). I don't litter. I simply help enrich the ground. You never know, someone might turn it into a garden someday - and my compost might just help them out. But I digress.. I was throwing the lemon from my lemonade out, but it didn't quite make it. It sat there, below, in the parking lot for over a month. It became a blackened ring. But it's since been washed away in the monsoon rains.
This cat has been hanging out on the wall that separates the parking lot from the field (into which my compost goes). I don't think it is stray because of how clean and well fed it looks. I guess it lives nearby.

Funny story.
So the day I took the picture of that cat, I actually went outside to throw out some trash and get a closer look at the lemon ring on the pavement. Right? So I crossed the street and this black car lurched around the corner. I made sure to be out of the way, and was standing in my building's parking, edging toward the lemon. That's when I notice the cat. And I also notice the black car pulled over to park in the street right across from my building. The driver got out and he started smoking a cigarette. He was kind of watching me a bit. I didn't want him watching me poke a crusty lemon, so I started talking to the cat. I was grateful the cat was there. I didn't stay there very long. I went inside and back up to my room, and actually decided to look out the window right away to see if the man was still there. He wasn't, him and his car were gone.
That sure was a quick cig. I think he pulled over to watch me, honestly.

This pretty kitty was taking a nap right on the sidewalk. In the evening sunlight, I didn't see it until it lifted its head up to look at me. Its stripes definitely were camouflage. Cats kind of do their own thing here, and ignore people, or avoid them altogether. There are a ton of stray cats here too. It's kind of sad.
A lot of days here, you can stare directly at the sun like this! The haze was so thick it was like its own cloud, minus all the cloudy lines.
A lit up church sign. There are crosses all over the place. But I still don't know about church-going here, since these are all Korean speaking churches. The churches with English services are all in the bigger cities.
As I was making dinner tonight, I realized that it was pouring buckets outside and the sun was shining. So I stopped to look for the rainbow and was greatly rewarded.
Today was a Monday. And a very humid one - so bad they actually had the air con on in the teacher's office. I came home with a headache. So when I bought some groceries, I also bought these:
Angel In Us coffee and a KicKer bar.
Angel in us is a chain coffee store - a bit like Starbucks. The bottle has "the world best coffee" written on it, so you know it is tasty. It's actually the first bottled coffee brand I ever bought in Korea. It's pretty good.
I bought the KicKer bar because it looked so much like KitKat I had to see for myself.
I was not disappointed.
It is one bar, approximately 5 inches long, almost an inch wide and just shy of 3/4in tall, and it's a darker chocolate than a kitkat. It's like a bigger and darker kitkat. Oh my! I'm definitely sold.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Penultimate (or two weekends ago)

Not last weekend, but the one before that, I went to Seoul with my boyfriend. His aunts live there and it was time we visit them again. They're extremely nice and kind, very giving. We didn't get there til around 9pm. And they took us out shopping - because I wanted to get a bathing suit. I also bought a dress and a dressy top and a kind of skort. It was a little expensive, but well worth it I think. (the bathing suit was actually a really good price)

I haven't actually taken pictures of the clothes yet. Ha. But I took pictures of what we did the rest of the weekend. J took me to the Seoul Museum of Art to see the Gauguin exhibit, and then we went to the castle near there. I digress.


This is us, finishing our iced coffees before going inside. 
This is Minho from SHINEE who joined us. (j bought me these socks the night before during our shopping excursion)

I can't really show you much since pictures were prohibited. 
The exhibit is called Gauguin and After. They put modern works amidst works of Gauguin to show what he's inspired. The concept was rather interesting. You would view a bunch of Gauguin, and read about his life during that period, and then move to a room with some modern art. To be honest, I didn't understand most of the modern art pieces (especially how Gauguin had any influence). The strangest one was a video of a performance. A guy had sassy attitude women of color and drag queens tsk, head waggle, chomp gum &etc into mics like a choir and he orchestrated it with Wii batons. I didn't really understand it. 
Regardless, I love looking at art. 


A tree outside the museum. It is so awesome and gnarly.
 An art installation outside the museum. It's cool and all but... I can't help but think of Slenderman. The figures (there's more than this one) stand here and there in the little wood.
This is at the entrance to the museum. 

We wandered from there, with no real plans. 
And got to see the guard wander through with.. the flag I think it was. I am not sure why. They were in period dress and carrying glaives. 
Flags and glaives. 

From there we ended up here. 
The ticket reads Deoksugung Palace (λ•μˆ˜κΆ). These guys were awesome actors. 

Oh yeah, before I go any further, I forgot. Before going in Deoksugung, J and I gawked a the new city hall building. 
The building with the flag is city hall, the old building. The building directly behind it that looks space-age and glass and is an interesting shape - that is the new city hall. 

The day was almost as hot as Satan's armpit, so the
first thing we did was get iced tea.
J probably doesn't like this picture, but I like it. He makes this face when it comes to food.
After watching the ducks in the lily pond that you can't really see behind J, we went walking. 
Here's another shot of my legs. Either I really like my socks or I like my legs. You can decide and have a laugh.


One of my favorite things to do is look at the ceilings in palaces and old buildings. They really loved to decorate everything so ornately. (temples too!)
So I guess when Asia opened up to Western trade, there was a push to build the European styled palace you see back there. The point was to display Korea's modernity, and avoid colonization. 
The western style building even has a big green lawn with a fountain and reminds me of something out of Jane Austen. 
The back of the throne room building. 
The front. Yup. J would walk on the king's path. For some reason I don't have a picture of the inside, but it has very high ceilings with a big hanging ceiling thing around the throne. I wish I knew what that thing was called.
Formosa tree in bloom. 
Oldest, old and new all in one. (well okay i guess you can't really see the older city hall, but you can imagine it right there)

I leave you with a picture of J in front of a bell and a.... I forget the Korean name.. it's a machine of war - rocket launched arrows. One spark and you can shoot 100 arrows at once! 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Dynamic Life Korea? They weren't kidding.

Hello. I realize I went from weekly to biweekly here.
When I was in orientation for this job, they told me Korea changed its national motto. It used to be "land of the morning calm" and now it's "dynamic life, Korea". That means life is changing, a lot. I live in one of the most "rural" areas of the country, and my school is super rural... and yet we still have a lot of the "bali bali" "hurry hurry" lifestyle. If you thought your 6 year old had no patience.... my 7, 8, 9 year olds have none to speak of. But I digress.

I took pictures from the weekend but haven't had the time to upload them. So here is a picture I just took.
Today my school had a field trip to this high school that focuses on skills, one of which is cooking. So the kids all made cookies. I made some too. :D But these cookies I'm holding were cookies the students gave me. Aww. One is a panda and the other is a girl's head. Aww. My 5th graders like me. Maybe it's because I let them watch Mr. Bean. But it's like this - we have a deal. They behave, and we can watch 3-5 minutes of Mr. Bean. (sadly i can't trust the other grades to behave even with that kind of deal. my kids beg like none other, so if they were bad, they'd whine and cry and beg and plead for Mr. Bean... and I'd have to listen to it until "byebye time". what's worse is the kids that really want something will stick around after class to continue begging. There are only 5 minutes between class periods, so getting kids out the door on time is EVERYTHING. Because I have 5 minutes to pick up previous stuff and set up for the next class, or to run to another classroom with my stuff. (sorry i'm digressing))

I love field trips. It provides a natural environment to speak English. And the best part is, the kids don't fight me. They have no idea they're "learning". They pretty much have to speak English to me most of the time anyway but on field trips they often have more things to tell me or show me. Or as we do something, it gets explaining.

Anyway I have things to do, and sleep needs to be attained. I'm trying to always get 7 hrs of sleep. It's so hard.