Saturday, July 10, 2010

Korean Kids Melt Hearts

I am firm believer that Kate Goslin had it right.  Asian kids are the cutest kids around.  Watch these videos and try and prove me wrong.  Listening to them say "What time is it Mista Oooolf" instead of "What time is it Mr.Wolf" or completely screw up London Bridge will melt you heart.  If it doesn't then you clearly have a Mr.Grinch sized heart that is three sizes too small.

Enjoy the cuteness. 






Monday, July 5, 2010

Fukuoka, Japan

[In the past week I have watched two of my closest friends get on buses and go home to their respective countries.  To Jen and Kyle:  JSD will not be the same without you.  Thank you for making my first 4 months in Korea something I will always remember]

#113.  It is extremely rare for someone to have a child out of wedlock.  If a pregnancy does occur the child will more than likely be aborted or "deleted" as my Korean co-teacher said.  Simple keystroke on the computer.  Make an unwanted child go away.  Delete.

#114.  Continuing on the abortion theme, abortions are common in Korea.  Really common.  50% of all pregnancies end up in abortion.  Surprising  for a country that professes to be all Jesus-centric.
  
#115.  Dill pickles are ridiculously difficult to find.  It is the sweet pickles that seem to be the favorite of the Korean population.  Damn.  Point America.

Life in Pohang has been relatively quiet over the past week.  People keep leaving to go home to their respective countires.  New people keep coming.  Go to work.  Come home.  Blah blah blah.  The one exciting thing that has happened is that I finally booked my vacation destination for my summer holiday.

Myself and three other girls have decided on Fukuoka, Japan.  The flight is cheap.  Tons to see.  Relatively inexpensive if done wisely.  Our current list of things to do is as follows

1.  Go scuba diving
2.  Visit Hiroshima or Nagasaki (This could prove to be difficult considering that the anniversary of the atomic bomb is the week following our visit.  We have been told that the Japanese love Americans EXCEPT during the time around this particular holiday.  With good reason.  I guess we didn't think this all the way through.)
3.  Kyoto night bus tour
4.  Visit the various temples and shrines around the city

The list will continue to grow i'm sure but this is what we are interested in at the moment.  I am looking forward to a week of no students, no obnoxious Marines thinking they are God's gift to women and no worrying.  In less than 3 weeks I will be out of Pohang and experiencing Japan.

Let's hope these three weeks fly by...

Monday, June 28, 2010

World Cup Disappointments

[Two of my best friends in Korea are leaving this week to go back to their respective homes.  Jen will go back to Canada.  Kyle will go back to Chicago.  I know it's part of the job to make friends only for them to leave but just didn't realize I would lose so many so quickly.]

#111.  Koreans follow you around clothing stores.  Whenever you walk into a clothing store (this pertains to other stores as well but specifically clothing) the workers of the store follow you.  In close proximity.  Now I don't know if they are just making sure you know that their clothes won't fit your non-Korean body or just to make you feel uncomfortable but I've got a tip for you Korean-clothing-store-followers.  If you follow me around I will leave without purchasing anything.  Give me some space.  Let me browse and I may give you some of my hard earned Kids College money.

#112.  Koreans are not afraid to be brutally honest.  If they haven't seen you in awhile and you've lost weight they will comment.  If you've gained weight they will comment.  They don't do it to be rude or to offend you.  To them it's just stating the facts.  In America people talk behind your back about how much weight you've gained or about how that haircut makes your ass look big.  Not sure which one I would rather have.

Well the World Cup fever is slowly filtering out of Korea.  South Korea lost to Uruguay.  USA lost to Ghana.   England lost to Germany.  The majority of the people who had teams they were rooting for are now either trying to find a team to cheer for or have thrown in the towel.  There are still many teams left that are worth rooting for but some of the magic for me is gone.  There is something about cheering for your home country while in another country that makes you feel a little extra patriotic.  I still stand by my newfound respect for soccer and will continue to watch the World Cup but I think the days of me staying up until 7am to watch a game are over.  It was fun while it lasted for both my teams.

As a Cubs fan I am the master of saying "There is always next year."  In this case there is always the next World Cup.  In 2014.  Clearly I have the time to improve my soccer knowledge.

Outside with a diehard Korea fan 

The kids of Pohang with our new Korean friends

Koreans love to throw out the peace sign

Some of the ladies of Pohang

Cheesing it up with my co-worker Kyle

Friday, June 25, 2010

World Cup Fever

[Receiving packages from home when I was in college was nice.  It was usually a care package to get me through finals or a gift for my birthday.  Receiving packages while in a foreign country is like Christmas.  Thank you Mom and Dad for the packages lately.I couldn't ask for a better way to start my day than with a package from home.]


#110.  Koreans hold grudges when it comes to their soccer.  Park Ji Sung is the best athlete on the South Korean team. He is beloved by his fellow Koreans and has always been supported...until recently.  During the game against Argentina he accidentally scored a goal on his own team.  It has been more than a week since this happened and Korea has since made it to the top 16...but the Koreans are still unhappy.  My kids at school refuse to cheer for him and tell me they hate him.  Intense itty bitties. 

As many of you know, America is not big on watching soccer.  There are three big sports that the majority of the country watches:  baseball, basketball and football (not necessarily in that order).  Here in Korea soccer is one of the only sports that matters.  Soccer fever has swept the country even more than usual when the South Korean team advanced to the top 16 for the first time since 2002.  The beaches are packed with people watching the games on a huge screen.  The bars are filled to capacity with people fighting for a spot to watch the match.  The phrase, "DAE HAN MIN GUK!" (basically meaning 'again Korea') has been yelled in the streets since the beginning of the World Cup.  

Koreans are incredibly patriotic and love nothing more than to yell their coin phrase over and over again.  In Korea there are no bandwagon fans when it comes to soccer.  They all support the team and watch as many matches as they can.  Case and point, my entire Korean staff went to our school at 330am for the deciding game to watch their team advance into history.  How many adults in America would do that?  One thing I have definitely learned about America is that bandwagon fans are plenty and right now I am one of them.  The game is fast paced, the players are hot (yes i'm shallow) and the game is relatively short (only 90 minutes).  

Yup.  I'm a band-wagoner.  Before I came to Korea I didn't watch soccer.  Didn't play soccer.  Didn't give two shits about soccer.  Now that I am here and have been playing consistently on a league (before I broke myself of course) and have witnessed the madness that is Korean soccer, I have developed an appreciation for the game. 

Soccer is without a doubt the favorite sport of people around the globe.  I may have started out as a band-wagon fan but after catching the World Cup fever, who knows.  

South Korea plays against Uruguay at 11.  USA plays against Ghana at 3am.  I'm rooting for them both.  I figure i'm an American living in South Korea so that means I can have two teams.  Right?

DAE HAN MIN GUK

GO USA

Watching the Korea vs. Argentina game at Bukbu Beach

Cheering on America at Whistlers Bar

Korean man at his finest.  Dae Han Min Guk!

The Pohang crew sporting red to support South Korea

Clearly happy with the USA win.  GO USA!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Hundae Sandcastle Festival

Here is a slideshow from a sandcastle festival at Hundae beach in Busan.  The sandcastles were ridiculous, the beach was gorgeous and the city was spectacular.  Hope you like them.

(Mom all you have to do is push the play button and be patient)


Summer in Korea - slideshow maker

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Fractured Ankles in Korea

[So as many of you know...I fractured my ankle.  Leave it to me to go to a foreign country and fracture my ankle.  I  am indeed accident prone but actually FRACTURING my ankle?  Who knew.]

So this past Friday was the going away party for Mr. Nick Kelly.  Right as the festivities got underway I took a casual hop off of the patio (about 2 feet off the ground) and fell.  True. It's not even a good story.  It lacks in imagination and it in no way impressive.  It takes a long time to explain how the 2 foot fall fractured my ankle so the general story told to the majority is that I fractured it  by playing soccer.  Now, playing soccer is believable and seeing as how I already play soccer, not so out of the realm of possibilities. I guess this will teach me to not take casual hops off of patios.

The process of actually figuring out it was fractured was complex to say the least.  I got to the ER on Saturday afternoon and was given a seat on an ancient hospital bed.  Think of an ER circa 1955.  Complete with dingy walls.  Mysterious brown smears.  Beds that have the pull up rails.  The whole picture.

My doctor finally gets to me and does the 1-2-look.  Now the 1-2-look to foreigners is a look that has been perfected by Koreans.  The first look is a once over of "Uh-oh.  Not Korean."  The second is a look of fear.  "They aren't Korean.  They won't speak Korean.  Shit."  No words are necessary to convey those messages. Trust me.  After getting over the initial surprise of me not being Korean, he begins the examination.  Now in Korea the "examination" consists of asking questions about diseases and grabbing the affected area as hard as humanly possible to ascertain my pain level.  Let's just say my pain level was high enough for the entire hospital to hear me scream.  In America doctors don't grab something that looks as swollen as a small melon. No.  Absolutely freaking not.

Well the rest is a long drawn out process so the short story is...after crazy amounts of xrays, CT scan and shots in the butt (you know how those Koreans like the shots in the butt) I was told that I had a radial linear fracture.  Sweet.  A fracture from falling 2 feet.

The cast goes on next week and will have to stay on for 3-4 weeks (if i'm lucky).  I have to play in a Mudfest tournament on July 17th (imagine ridiculous amounts of mud, wrestling, volleyball and obstacle courses) so let's hope it's off before then.

And here is the ankle the morning after in all it's glory...even though the picture just doesn't do it justice.


Here it is almost a week later.  Sexy, I know.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Korean Traditions about Childbirth/Parenting

[After talking about this with my good friend Frank I decided I needed to devote a post to it. This post is devoted to the oddities of Korean traditions regarding their children.  While I do not agree with the vast majority of the way that Korean children are brought into this world or raised, I acknowledge that the American and Korean cultures are completely different.  I have a deep respect for any woman that is strong enough to bring another human being into this world.  Please take my words at face value and realize these are just my viewpoints, not an attack on the Korean culture as a whole.]

#103. Traditionally, boys were treasured and girls were thought of as 'leftovers'. Just as in China, boys were sought after instead of girls because the new male generation would be able to work in the fields and also keep the family name from dying out.  If a wife was unable to give birth to a boy, then a surrogate mother was sought after to provide a male child. The mother-in-law would choose the surrogate mother for her son.  No thank you.  If I can't provide my husband with a boy then he will freaking accept a little girl.

#104. During childbirth, the mother was restricted to only seeing things of beauty. It was believed anything that the mother looked at would influence the child's appearance such as shape and features. For instance, mothers would not be able to look at dead flowers since it would have a negative omen for the childbirth.
 
#105. The expecting mother was and still is placed on a strict diet.  The diet usually excluded spicy or hot foods, ugly foods, and broken pieces of food or even duck. Spicy/hot foods were excluded because the mother is already hot, therefore it would clash with the creation of the baby. Eating ugly food could result in an ugly child, which included bruised foods or a food that had a blemish.  Broken foods include things like broken noodles broken crackers and et cetera. Then there were the animals such as duck that were excluded from the diet since it would give the child "webbed" feet or other unwanted features.

#106.  Korean mothers are made to keep quiet throughout the entire childbirth process. This is from the belief that screaming shows signs of shame and weakness which will be passed along to the child.  If I am in the process of squeezing a human life out of my body and I want to scream there is no one on this earth that would think of stopping me.  A sign of weakness?  I think not.

#107. After birth, the baby is usually with the mother at all times, even when sleeping. At this time, the mother is only allowed to eat warm foods and drinks (even in the summer) since the mothers are considered "cold".  A common soup was "miyuk guk", a kind of seaweed soup, since it was to clean out the toxins from childbirth and was to be eaten by the mother for four weeks after giving birth.  4 weeks of the same food.  I like a bit of variety in my diet thank you.

#108. From the time the baby is young, it is a common action for parents to massage the baby's legs to increase growth and make the baby tall..

#109. More recently, parents also like to massage the eyelids of the baby while sleeping to try to get the baby to grow eye folds.

There you go.  Koreans and their childbirth and parenting skills.  I think the American way suits me just a little bit better.