Thursday, December 18, 2008

Sweet Caroline

Okay, so per the request of Ms Caroline Jesus, I will write something actually pertaining to my life.. here it goes.

In two days I'll have lived in Korea for three months. Seems impossibly fast, yet it's true. Yikes.

I made 3 girls cry yesterday. Not sure why that was the first thing that came to mind to write about, but there it is. I am a ruthless, cold hearted teacher. But the be fair, they made me cry last week, so I call it a draw (They were being so disrespectful that I stormed out of the room, came back in, and made them write "I will not talk when ms. K is talking, I will listen and be respectful" 50 times - that took pretty much the whole class. Then when I went off about why I was so angry, I lost it.. we all know how stoic and unemotional I am. However, there's nothing like a teacher crying to bring about copious amounts of guilt and regret. Point for me.)
Back track about a month and we come to the oh so wonderful Thanksgiving Holiday. I decided to teach the little kiddies about why we celebrate thanksgiving (the Disney happy ending version) and came to one conclusion: don't teach anything that involves the word 'Massachusetts'. All us Weygooks (foreigners) met up for a potluck style thanksgiving feast the saturday after the big day, and I will proudly say, for having no ovens or turkey, we did a damn fine job. They don't have turkey in Korea, so we subbed in Chicken. In true Lauren style, I welcomed 2 friends from Busan and 3 couch surfers in on the fun for the weekend (and then pawned them off on friends due to a severe lack of space). It was an odd, but great bunch. We had a couple from France who sold their house and had been biking across Europe and Asia for 2 years (pedal not motor), Natalie and Kathleen from Busan (see first(?) blog for our first meeting), and Dao. Now Dao is one of a kind. I'm not sure how to describe him. He went to Berkeley (or so he says) and has been traveling for years now. His real name fails me at the moment, but Dao is the Asian name he took on while touring the region. Good man.
So being that I live in a very small town, there aren't the amenities you might find elsewhere. This poses a problem. See, it hasn't happened often (because I'm cheap), but on those few occasions where you drink til dawn and wake up hungover, there is only one thing on my mind: delicious greasy breakfast - Patty's Egg Nest veggie omelet with sourdough toast and black coffee. Well that is impossible to find. So a few weeks back, my friend Steve and I decided, after about 30 seconds of discussion, to hop a bus to the nearest town for McD's. It was glorious. Of course, it took an hour and a half to get there, and then the same back. And by the time we even arrived at the bus station in Tongyeong, breakfast was no longer being served. There has to be a petition going around somewhere to get McDonald's to serve breakfast all day. If not, someone start it.

I'm beginning to hit a wall with some Korean food. It's all still delicious, and in all respects healthy, but I wouldn't mind not eating it some days. Talk to me again 6 months from now, we'll see how I've fared.

Big news, I ran in my first Korean half marathon. I was really psyched for it when I signed up, then found out temperatures in december are near freezing.. It didn't stop me. It just made me cold. In preparation for this big day, I bought new asics (READ HERE: NEVER buy asics. I'm writing a complaint to the company right after this) which, after 5 weeks of "breaking them in" still left me with 7 (7!) blisters on my feet by the end of the 21k. I have since thrown them out. Donating them to the poor would just be cruel punishment. A note about Korean races: people don't enter these for fun or with the plan of walking/attempting to finish. I was one of maybe 100 runners who was not associated with a marathon running club. 100 out of 7,000. As you can imagine, my half ass training (the longest run I went on before the race was 14k) left me running with 60 year old men. Despite that, I finished in a respectable 2:07:59. Or I think it's respectable.

Christmas is a week from today! (for you kids back home, a week from tomorrow). I officially feel sorry for Korean kids.. Most families here don't get a tree, don't do any big family event, and do one or two (if any) presents. There's no christmas songs and no decorations in store fronts. From what I hear, Koreans think of it more as a day off from work (or another day to get drunk for most of the men in my town). Speaking of, I have seen quite a few drunk people in my time, but Tongyeong takes the cake. I have never seen more staggering drunk people roaming the streets of a city on week nights. It's an off day if I don't have the pleasure of running into a man walking with his eyes closed. Anyways, back to christmas. This year my plans are as follows: 1) christmas eve at our friend's house for a christmas movie marathon, 2) christmas day brunch at a different house, 3) Nutcracker christmas evening. Then New Years will be a grand event up in the big bad Seoul. Oh, speaking of Mariah Carey, I get 3 weeks off over the holidays! whoo hoo for public school teaching! I'm taking 7 days off over christmas/new years, coming back to Tongyeong to work 2 weeks of english "camps" (don't be fooled, they are in their classrooms at school and include homework), then.... I'm off to THAILAND! I managed to swing 2 weeks off in a row in January, so now will be spending my birthday in a hammock with a coconut beverage in hand. My only goal is to do as little moving around as possible.

My next post is going to be something about the good, the bad, and the ugly..

Oh, and Caroline, I permed my hair. Cheers!

5 comments:

SSUMC WORSHIP said...

ha. very nice! i was thinking of changing my name like dao... how about oad? i thought it to be only fitting..

SAFAHL said...

Hi good blog

Colleen said...

Hi! My name is Colleen, and my boyfriend and I are living in Tongyeong as well! We have meet very few (read: no) foreigners since we have been working at a hagwon which lets out at 8 or 9 pm. We've kind of become hermits and are looking to find other foreigners in the area to hang out with. Drop me a note on my blog (whitegirlasia.blogspot.com) and maybe we can meet at some point! Happy New Year from a fellow ex-pat. Cheers!

Nick said...

I vote MORE PICTURES!!! I wish I had a picture of your face when you arrived at MickeyD's only to find no breakfast. Haha. Be good with your bad self.

caroline said...

good! you know that i wouldnt have done it for you so i am glad that you are experiencing a perm. let me know how it goes! oh, and glad to her that you are alive and well.