Thursday, December 31, 2009

A Student's Work

a poem by one of my advanced students:

His Winter, My Winter


His winter is coming
Jingle Bells welcome him.
My winter is coming
Alarm wakes me up.


His winter is coming
Everything he sees is white.
My winter is coming
Everything I have is black.


His winter is coming
He eats many kinds of fruits.
My winter is coming
I eat a hamburger.


His winter is coming
He is throwing a snowball.
My winter is coming
I’m just holding a pen.


His winter is coming
He gets a gift, a toy.
My winter is coming
I get homework, a report.


He and I are the same person.
He is a child and I’m an adult.

Busan Part 2

Saturday began with the pursuit of finding Geumjeong Park to hike the mountain and find Beomeosa Temple. There is a cable car that takes hikers up to the start of the mountain near the South Gate (there are four “gates” near the fortress walls.) We were unable to find the cable car so we decided to hike up to the South Gate instead. A group of hikers watched us begin the climb, probably wondering why the heck we were climbing when we could get a 15-min ride up. The climb up to the “start” took about 45 minutes. We got lost a couple times but found a group of hikers and creepily walked behind them up to the top. We hiked from South Gate, neat East Gate, then walked through a small village on the way to the North Gate (the closest to Beomeosa Temple.) On the way, we ate lunch in a small outdoor restaurant/tent on the mountain. It was delicious and a great atmosphere of hikers taking a relaxing break away from the wind and cold. Upon arrival at Beomeosa Temple, the hikers mixed in with the tourists who drove up from the town to visit the temple.

Saturday evening we stayed in Hauendae and received some help from locals in finding a nice jimjilbang. I highly recommend Vesta Sauna if ever visiting Haeundae. The price was cheap and with a restaurant, small bar, numerous saunas, separate women’s only sleeping room, and computers/TV’s… it was a wonderful experience. And they were very friendly and helpful with us foreigners. The best part of the ladies-only sleeping room was observing the groups of women. On one side of the room, there was a group of younger women all laying down and chatting. On the other side was a group of older women, stretching and doing different yoga-type poses. Almost as if they were showing off to each other and challenging each other. At one point a women who couldn’t have been much younger than 70, was doing a headstand against the wall- it was quite impressive! But all the stretching was bound to work something out and soon, a fairly aggressive gaseous sound was heard through out the room followed by the giggles of the group of older women. Good times had by all!

Our goal on Sunday was to watch the sunrise on Haeundae Beach so we woke at 6am, showered and walked the 15 min to the beach. It was cold but numerous other folks had the same idea, so the beach was quickly scattered with photographers, families and young people still out from the night before. Post-sunrise we quickly headed for coffee then boarded the subway for another Busan adventure.

Our first stop was the United Nationals Memorial Cemetery in Korea (UNMCK) off the Daeyeon subway stop. The cemetery, statues, and memorabilia halls were impressive and the security was very serious about being quiet. (There were signs everywhere about being silent.) On the Memorial Wall, Pennsylvania had four walls of names of fallen soldiers and the United States had almost the entire structure. It was pretty shocking. We arrived shortly before 10am which was just in time for the UN flag raising ceremony. After walking around the UNMCK, we headed back to downtown Busan for coffee at Holly's Coffee and a movie (Avatar!!) The amazing weekend ended with a twist. We found a jimjilbang close to the subway station (our early morning train ticket meant we wanted to find a place somewhat close by). It was called Bally Aqua Land (in English!) so we were pretty confident they were foreigner-friendly. We were wrong. Immediately after entering, the receptionist quickly told us, "only Koreans here!" Back to Vesta we went... old faithful.

Thanks Busan for the memories, see you again soon.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Christmas in Busan

(Pictures for the Busan stories/posts part 1 & part 2)

Christmas morning I awoke to the sounds of footsteps above. In my mind I envisioned Santa and the helpful reindeer (Rudolph with his frostbitten nose) bringing beautifully wrapped packages to my house. Then I opened my eyes and quickly realized the rhythmic pounding from upstairs was my neighbors giving each other early morning Christmas presents. I glanced under my spirited little tree and saw that Santa had been unable to locate my apartment in Korea (the buildings DO all look alike). But on a better note, it was Busan time and I was on a schedule. No time to sulk… off to southern Korea.

My traveling partner and I took the high-speed KTX from Yongsan (in Seoul) to Busan. We had one quick transfer and we were there in a little more than 3 hrs. During the stops/transfers on the way down, the train stopped for maybe 2 minutes tops. They stopped, you jumped off or on, and it started up again. If you missed your stop or were dilly-dallying too much, you were SOL until the next stop.

On another note, not once were our tickets checked. We spent a little under 50,000w and were never given the satisfaction of presenting our ticket stubs! But I digress…

Upon arrival in Busan, we didn’t miss a beat. We took a bus outside Busan station and headed to our first stop- Taejongdae Park on the southeastern tip of Busan. This was a last minute destination on our tentative itinerary, but looking back, it was one of the best. Walked the entire park, down to the beach, to the lighthouse, saw the different statues and temples. Took lots of pictures and since it was Christmas, the park was overflowing with families. The outfits were at both extremes. Some people were decked out in hiking gear, while others were dressed to the nines and walking the park in heels.


After the grand tour of Taejongdae Park, we took a bus to the Tagalchi Fish Market. Well, we took a bus almost to the fish market, but traffic wasn’t moving, so another passenger told the driver to stop and about 2/3 of the bus riders hopped out and walked the rest of the way downtown. The fish market was incredible. It was a Friday evening, so a lot of the inventory was somewhat low, but the environment was just as colorful.

Walked downtown Busan, lights on all the trees and families taking their Christmas walks. The streets were jam packed and the buzz of the holidays was in the air. Felt great. We picked Big Sugar’s for dinner and enjoyed some pizza, homemade potatoes (chips), and martinis. Post dinner, we walked off the bag of chips we ate, and continued our walking tour of downtown. We jumped right into the mix and entertained many of the locals with our Christmas hats and aggressive picture-taking. From there, we hopped on the subway and headed to Pusan National University to find our sleeping spot for the evening.

After a very large beer at WA Bar near the university, we began our jimjilbang search. Found a lovely one at a good price. It was close to the Oncheonjang subway stop and conveniently close to the mountain we were planning to climb the following day (although we didn’t know this upon arrival at the sauna.) This particular jimjilbang brought its own adventures when it came to sleeping time. The showers/bathing areas were normal, but the sleeping room was co-ed. I felt very safe, but the sounds old men make in their sleep are sure to bring nightmares for years to come. We grabbed some blankets (toddler-size) and blocks of wood (pillows) and found two spots near the wall, away from everyone. I put in my earplugs and readied for dreamland. At 4:30am I started dreaming that I was being kicked in my leg, behind my knee. It didn’t stop and eventually I shook awake realizing I was actually being kicked in the leg. I looked up to see a man shoo’ing me away. Apparently I was sleeping too close to he and his wife’s “area”… sorry buddy, but this place was packed and it wasn’t like I was trying to move in on your romantic evening. Needless to say, I grabbed my stuff and jumped over my friend to sleep on the other side. Oh, and through out the night, there was a drunk man sitting by himself in the next room (the “restaurant” part) shouting to himself. He was very angry about something; I’m just not sure what. Perhaps the kicker shoved him away too.

Saturday we did an INCREDIBLE 8-hr hike… will write more soon.  Baby steps for this one.. it was a wild weekend to say the least. 

 

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Is it really Christmas Eve?

It's hard to believe it's Christmas Eve... just got home from work and am officially starting my vacation (10 full days!) My Christmas Eve dinner consists of a glass of wine (compliments of Chile) and a bowl of cereal. Unfortunately, I didn't portion out the cereal and milk appropriately, so while my cereal box is still good for another bowl, the milk's all used up. This particular holiday bowl is cereal with a splash of milk.

KKW Christmas festivities:

There isn't much Christmas hype around Yeonsu (aside from the dance party Christmas Music Baskin Robbins blasts 24/7). But, today my school had our "Christmas party." Through out the day, we had three different Golden Bell Word Contests (three different levels). For the first couple of rounds, my supervisor said the definitions in Korean and they had to write the English word. For the harder rounds, that's when I came in. They all groaned because they knew it would be more difficult, but they survived. We dined on tteokbokki and bags of different "chips." I think I ate tteokbokki on and off for 7 hrs. It was amazing.

Not sure if Santa will be able to find my place this year... all the apartment buildings tend to look alike and the fog/smog can be thick. Hopefully, Rudolph will help him out.  (yep, I went there. made Rudolph red... all this teaching is starting to get to me... I'm corny enough as it is!)


Cheers!