Sunday, January 16, 2011

1.11

Oh hello 2011! You have been so good to me so far!

The new year has brought with it a wonderful few weeks of Korean firsts. I experienced Korean snowboarding for the first time. Played poker and actually won money, not bad for my first time ever gambling. I saw my first homeless Koreans =(. Went to my first restaurant where you take off your shoes and sit on the floor. And peed in my first squatter toilet.

More details on that later, but first I would like to say that I love and miss you all very much. I love traveling and meeting new people, but I always seem to realize the same thing while I am gone: I already have the most amazing people in the world in my life. No matter where I go, or who I meet I feel so lucky to have you all to call my friends and family. You all mean so much to me, and I just wanted to let you know how important you are to me! I am truly incredibly lucky.

Ok with that said let me continue with the update-ness:

Last weekend was very fun. I have been spending a lot more time with my co-workers lately and it has been really nice. A few co-workers and I went out to dinner last Thursday. We had to take off our shoes and sit on heated floors. We ate a dish called Shabu Shabu. A large bowl of
spicy broth is placed on a burner in the middle of the table and you add vegetables and ramen noodles and wait for it to boil. Once the soup starts to boil, using your chopsticks, you pick up pieces of froze beef and hold them in the broth till the meat cooks. You also eat the rest of the soup. Once almost all the soup is gone the waitress brings a bowl of rice with a raw egg on top. This is added to the remaining soup and its all cooked up together. Then you eat this. So much food, but so good. Also at this restaurant, I had my first encounter with a squatting toilet, yes pretty much just a porcelain drain. I had heard they existed but was still slightly hopeful I would never have to use one, especially after having drank a few shots of soju. It really wasn't a big deal, just a funny thing to say I've done.

Last Friday my co-workers and I had a pizza and poker night. Korean pizza is very different. It resembles traditional pizza in appearance but definitely not taste. Although it taste very different, it is still good. It is very hard to find a pizza that uses tomato sauce, most have a potato paste. Toppings range from corn to sweet beef to shrimp, and sometimes they top it off with a sauce that taste something like honey mustard. However, Friday night we ordered pizza from a place that makes pizzas very much like you find back home!! As far a poker goes I had never really played before, nor had I EVER gambled. But I stretched the truth a little, said I had played a few times before, and googled how to play beforehand, haha. It actually went really well. I was surprised how fun it actually is. We played all night, and in the end I walked away with a little over double what I had originally started out with. I was just happy not too lose anything.

Sunday I decided to do some more exploring. There is still so, so much in this city alone that I have not seen. The cold can be very intimidating. But I decided to brave the freezing temps and go out to see an area called Insadong. This district has many antique shops and its alleyways are closed to traffic most days. The streets are lined with vendors selling food, antiques, spices, ceramics, art and common touristy items. I went to a really interesting little tea museum, saw some really beautiful, traditional Korean architecture and mostly just wondered around. I would really love to return to explore more when it is not so freezing outside.

This weekend has been great also! I went snowboarding!!! It was so exciting to try the Korean version of one of my favorite things in the world! It was so different, but pretty close to what I had imagined. We went a place called Phoenix Resort in Pyeongchang. We got up super early, caught the first subway to our bus, and bused a little over 2 hours to the resort. Once at the resort we were picked up by a guy from a local rental shop. He drove us into the nearest town, a tiny little Korean ski town, in a rickety old van that was missing most of its seats and doors that really didn't shut. We rented all of our equipment, pants, coats, boards, boats and headed back up to the mountain. Luckily one of my co-workers brought along a Korean friend of his, a really fun and sweet girl who translated all of this for us. The resort only had a few runs to chose from and there was very little difference between them. They were all wide, straight runs. No options, no tree trails, no variety of any sort, just wide and straight. They had speakers installed everywhere, so no matter where you were you could hear Korean pop music. The chairlift situation was very interesting. They unstrap from their boards every time and carry them on the lifts and walk off. Getting on the lifts is much like getting on the subway here. Everyone crowds into a mass group and pushes their way through. I think most of our time was actually spent in line. There were so many people. With the majority of the people still learning how to snowboard or ski, most of the runs were like a game of dodging unpredictable beginners, or newbies on their cell phones! I think it was mostly fun just because it was so different, but not because it was a good day of boarding. And I can honestly say I have never, ever been so cold in my entire life. I swear Korean cold is like no other cold I have experienced EVER! Overall though it was a great experience, so different, so fun!

So there are the highlights of my last two weeks. I hope you all are doing well and that 2011 has been good to you as well.

LOVE LOVE LOVE!

-oh, and p.s. I have been adding a little more of my soul to this lovely world wide web. This is still definitely a work in progress. Hoping to get some better pictures and more pictures up soon. I would love some feedback. But most of all just check it out, just some shameless self promotion of stuff I have been working on lately.

http://brionnahughes.com/

Sunday, January 2, 2011

expat xmas and an interesting new years







I hope that you all had a wonderful Christmas and holiday season. Christmas abroad, well it wasn't really Christmas, but it was good.

Christmas to me is being home with my family, tamales on Christmas Eve, Christmas music, cinnamon rolls early Christmas morning, the smell of a real Christmas tree, last minute runs to Fiesta Foods because its the only store open and we forgot something important, the whole family coming over for dinner, playing games, sneaking away with the cousins and and my sisters to go look at christmas lights around town, and more than anything just spending quality time with the most important people in my life.

Christmas here wasn't nearly as important as it is at home. There were decorations and christmas music, but overall people didn't seem to care much. My students weren't even excited. They told me that in Korea it is celebrated more with your girlfriend/boyfriend/significant other, than with family. Many people go out to dinner with their partner and buy them a gift. Young children spend it with family. Not nearly as celebrated as in the states, but they go to church, have a family dinner, eat cake, and open a present.

Christmas day really just felt like any other day, so I decided that I would find some Christmas spirit. I decided to go to the busiest shopping district, Myeong-dong, by far the most crowded, craziest shopping area I have ever been in. According to Wikipedia the floating population of Myeongdong is estimated to be around 2 million a day. There were christmas decorations and music and Koreans dressed as Santa!


I mostly just wandered around, in and out of shops, and through the maze-like streets. Its was exciting to be around so many people, and so much color and neon. And it smelled delicous from all of the street vendors. I bought hodo-gwaja (translates to walnut cakes). They smell like doughnuts and maple syrup. They are little pancake like balls filled with walnut paste and a walnut. They sell them everywhere, even in the subway station. They are very yummy.

After exploring Myeong-dong I went home and made myself a Christmas dinner, curry and wine, my favorite! Totally expecting to have a mellow Christmas night. But plans changed quickly and I ended up in Hongdae with my co-worker and his friends. I quickly found out how Christmas is really celebrated by younger Koreans. The rest of my night involved a lot of dancing, most notably to Spice Girls and the YMCA, some drinking, and meeting random friends and a lot of Christmas merriment. It was really fun.

This last week work has kept me very busy. We currently have intensives. While Korean children are on winter vacation from school we offer morning classes in addition to the evening ones. I teach morning classes a few days a week. My class is a listening and speaking workshop, which involves me playing a TV show and having the kids discuss and answer some questions about the show. This past week's lesson: Sabrina the Teenage Witch! So fun, the kids loved it! My night classes are going well. Although for one lower level class, the kids are about 8-9 years old, we are reading Arabian Night short stories. Reading a story where the sultan beheads his wife after she "takes other lovers" and main characters with names like Scheherazade, Masrour and Shahryrar is more than a little challenging. Thanks to whoever decided 9 yr olds could pronounce or even like a story like this.

Although I worked until after 10 on friday, my co-worker and I decided to go out for new years. We planned on a mellow night, but of course that is nearly impossible in Seoul. We went to a small Australian bar in Itaewon. The owner is an old hippie with long hair, but bald on top and strangely no Australian accent. He was very nice and sat and talked with us for a while. We rung in the new year in this quiet little bar, but soon decided to go see what else was going on. We went to a few different places and then decided to go home. Catching a taxi was impossible, and the subway was closed and wouldn't open again until 5am. So what did we decided to do? Of course we made the responsible decision of going back to a bar and playing darts and hanging out for about 2 more hours, until the subway was up and running again. Highlights of my New Years Eve, falling on the ice, delicious Kebab/sharawma, claiming I was really good at darts,dancing to Backstreet boys, and falling asleep on the subway at 5:30 in the am. I really hope this isn't a preview to the rest of 2011.

I hope you had a fantastic NYE! I wish you lots of love, adventure, and happiness in the new year! Miss you very much.


a little gift to you....

Brionna's suggested listening for a wonderful beginning to the new year, old, new, completely random, but all very good:
  1. All I Want Is You -Barry Louise Polisar
  2. Own Stunts -Breathe Owl Breathe
  3. Rattle Your Bones -Black Whales
  4. Anything At All -Tristan Prettyman
  5. Discovery Park -Jordan O'Jordan
  6. Brusies -Chairlift
  7. Hysteric (Acoustic) -Yeah Yeah Yeahs
  8. Fly Mama Fly -Moondoggies
  9. Forever Young -Bob Dylan
  10. If You Aint Got Love -Mason Jennings
  11. Not Tonight -Tegan and Sara
  12. The Reeling -Passion Pit
  13. Slowness -Calexico
  14. Like a Wheel -The Tallest Man on Earth
  15. Those To Come -The Shins
  16. Swept Away (Sentimental Version) -The Avett Brothers
  17. True Love Will Find You In The End -Daniel Johnston
  18. Who Knows Who Cares -Local Natives
  19. You're Not Broken -Sera Cahoone (My current favorite!)
  20. Firecracker -Ryan Adams