I'm getting behind in my writing and overwhelmed in the sheer number of words I want to pass along. Here goes!
It’s finally September in this fine land (and in your fine land, too I’m sure) though the weather is still in full summer swing. The nights are starting to get a little cooler and are actually quite pleasant, which is a nice change. I keep trying to picture Seoul in winter mode, but it’s hard to do when the cicadas are ringing, the sun is shining, and it’s 80 degrees out. I look forward to watching the change of the seasons in a new country.
During the last weekend of August I had a most wonderful time and was fortunate enough to experience All Things Korean (ATK.) Dinners, baseball games, swimming, and art festivals - Oh My! My friend Kari just left town and had made a lot of wonderful friends, and she invited me to a going away party with one group of said friends, though these were not only friends, but a real live Korean family. Actually there were two families: Mom, Dad, Grandma, two little girls and a little boy; then Mom, Dad and a little girl, and another friend of the families was there, too. It was so wonderful and one of those MOMENTS when I just had to stop myself, look around, and think ‘holy shit, this is the kind of experience I came here for.’ There were quite a few old-school Korean values that I took notice of: the Mom and Dad of the household sat at the heads of the table, the women did all the cooking and cleaning up, people never poured their own drinks but waited for their neighbor to do so (drinks were poured with two hands or one hand supporting the other), and the guests were served first (and by this I mean they actually served me.) The meal started out with a noodle ‘appetizer’, which I assumed you chow down first and then move on to the other things. When I finished, the Mom was a bit flustered and asked if I needed more. Then someone explained that I was just Western and in our culture we eat the appetizer first, then the main course, etc. instead of doing it the Korean way where you just eat everything all at once. Living and learning in this ‘ol world, eh? The rest of meal was fantastic; I ate pig’s foot for the first time and as long as I didn’t think of what it really was, I was okay. There was some sort of breaded chicken, which I assumed was some sort of chicken bites but quickly realized they were actually chicken-with-the-bone-in-them-bites, which taught me two things: there is no tactful way to remove bones from your mouth when with company (and you have cloth napkins), and trying to eat boney chicken with chopsticks is a challenge.
Another interesting food served at the dinner was seasoned acorn jelly (dotori muk muchim), which looks like a brown mass of congealed fat, with the taste of a slightly bitter….acorn. I was a little nervous to try it, but the ajuma (an old Korean woman who has already had kids, or the grandma in this case) made it and looked at me very expectantly from across the table, so I really had no choice. I will have to give it a ‘meh’, but I am happy to know now that it’s not huge blocks of fat they’re selling at the market near my apartment. The dinner ended with a history and language lesson, and also some wonderful stories about Korea as the vocal chords were well lubricated at that point. I felt very blessed to be able to be a part of a dinner like this, especially one where so many Koreans were able to speak English so I didn’t feel left out and confused the whole time. It was extremely wonderful to be around a large extended family for a nice dinner because family (blood family, but also close F/friends and family friends) is one of the things I miss most about living away from home.
The next day was Sunday and I had the pleasure of hitting up a swimming pool on the last day that it was open! It was right near a place where our school had a field trip, (side note: The field trip was quite lack luster, which was very disappointing as I was more excited to go on it than my students were. I’m just glad I was able to sleep the night before it, which I was not able to do when I myself was in elementary school.) so I had scoped out this pool before and thought how grand it would be to swim there. And then bam! There we were. I again went with two friends/co-workers, and the two Korean guys we're friends with, plus another woman who used to work at our school. The one downfall of this swimming pool, and all outdoor public swimming pools in Korea, is the fact that you have to wear a swim cap. A big 'ol tight, ugly, black swim cap that cost 10,000 won (10 dollars.) When in

Rome...so on it I donned it and had a faboo time. Afterwards we all went to a baseball game and had a grand time. It was a bit disconcerting the w

ay all the Koreans there knew the same chants and songs and movements and things. It was almost like they had all gotten together before and practiced; I was half expecting them to get out of their seats and bust a well-choreographed move in the aisles. Each person had those inflatable bat looking things and hit them together at the exact same time and swung them to the right, then the left at the exact same time. For us foreigners, it was both mesmerizing and slightly alarming. (The picture to the left is where the 1988 Olympics were held. Now they have other sporting events and concerts there.)
This past weekend I had the opportunity to attend a Korean Tattoo Convention, called “Tattoo Virus.” Quite an unappealing name, if you ask me, but there are a lot of things about tattoos I don’t understand. As some of you know my older brother Chris has a lot of tattoos, so I have been exposed to some ‘tatted’ people in my day, but it was really a whole other experience at a convention in Korea. The culture here is very against tattoos; Korean culture is very proper (although it is ok

ay for anyone, male or female, to hauk a loogie on the street) so people with tattoos are really looked down upon. It was great to see and meet a lot of people who are doing what they want and not holding themselves to standards other people have set for them. I have included a few pictures, one of which is a woman getting some artwork done on her back; she got pins/feathers/ribbons placed into her back for some decoration. OUCH.
I did some hiking again and this time went more off of the beaten path, which e

ntailed some rock climbing and finally being alone out in the woods here. Last time I went I was alone, but the

re were still people milling all around me. This time I staked out a spot on a rock far from any path, ate a PB&J, looked at the view, and just sat. It was amazing. I watched a rather large slug for a long time (slug friend to the right), almost got lost, found a garden, and then hiked back down. Next weekend I am taking a longer trip with a woman I work with, and it’s said to be in a part of Korean not many people go. I’ll believe it when I see it.
Lately I have been very aware of some more racism towards white people/Americans here. I have not run into anything as overt as that man in the post office, but I have had a few instances of cabs not picking myself and other white friends up, or the usual of getting stared at, or shushed on the subway, or pushed extra hard getting on or off the subway. But I often wonder; was that push aimed at me because I’m white or because that person is an asshole? Am I becoming more sensitive to things people do because I have, in the past, been a target of racism? Is it racism when you think that people are being mean to you because you’re from a huge conglomerate of a country, but since you feel the same way you think they are justified in what they are doing? I’m happy I am able to be in a situation where these thoughts are coming to my mind a lot, but it doesn’t make it any easier to try and figure out the answers.
Quick happy note – I bought some plants from a guy on the side of the road who told me, in Korean, how to take care of them. I just nodded. But it’s been a week and I think I notice some growth! It makes me so darn happy to have some green life in my room.
I would like to wrap up things with another Louis anecdote. He came up to me in class before leaving for the day, again in his too small red Winnie the Pooh hat, and looked me in the eyes very seriously and asked, “Miss K, why did the tiger smell?” Well, I thought to myself, I have never heard this one, I wonder what the reason could be. “Louis, I don’t know!” “Because it ate dung.” He didn’t even crack a smile, but just kept staring at me in the eyes before walking away.
*More pictures will be added when my internet is not as slow as molasses and it's not time for bed.*