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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Been a While

To say it's been a while would be an understatement. Some really exciting things have happened during the past year, I just haven't been online enough to really write about them. Recently, however, I took 정원 to meet my parents. We were there from December nineteenth until January second. I'll do a post for each day that we were there to help sort out the pictures.

We took a bus to Incheon at six in the morning. By the time we went through security and finished all of the paperwork we didn't have much time look around the duty free shops.

The flight took about thirteen hours from Incheon to Atlanta. We then waited about another six hours (much of the time was taken up by going through more security, customs, and finding the correct concourse) for a flight to Albany. I definitely wasn't in any shape to drive from Atlanta to Albany during the holidays, so the wait was worth it.

In Albany we got the rental car, and went to Mom's house as quickly as possible. We showered and spent sometime with Mom before heading to bed exhausted.

Here are the pictures from Day 1:

Sunday, July 06, 2008

Busy, Busy, and then some more Busy

     To say that we've been busy is an understatement. It started just before Jungwon's graduation from the SMU Tesol Program. We had a few weekends full of her final class projects which included a foreigner interview (guess who was the foreigner), a lot of typing, and very little sleep.
     Just before her graduation, after the projects were submitted, the celebrating began. We had a quadruple date with some of her old university friends. The night began with too much soju, and ended with a few hours of sleep before Jungwon and I took our promised trip to Suwon.
     Before we left Suwon, I asked Jungwon if she thought she would like to come back to visit. She answered with something akin to, "why would I come back here?". Yet, she was very excited to go back to our old haunts. We had lunch at D-Deli, went to visit the old elementary school, and then went to the fusion restaurant named Su. In between we took a break for a few hours to catch the Sex in the City movie, and we sat for a time in a park we used to visit during our lunches. It was a good time even if we were tired from the previous night of drinking.
     The next weekend was the celebratory weekend for Jungwon's Tesol program group, G9. We went out for wine, and then took a trip to Namsan. Visiting the mountain was very different at night, and they had even changed out the art work. The evening was more relaxed than the previous weekend, but we still stayed out late, and drank a good bit of wine.
     The next Thursday was Jungwon's SMU Tesol graduation. Her mom and sister were there so I was very nervous. After the graduation program, which was a bit different from any graduation I'd been to, we took lots of pictures, went out to eat, and then Jungwon and I joined her classmates at a nearby bar for a nightcap before heading our ways for the evening.
     The next day was a workshop day for my school. We took a trip out to Namisum. The island is absolutely gorgeous, but I was wary of the wild ostriches roaming about. Yes, I typed ostriches.
quadrupal date
Suwon Revisited
G9 does wine
grad
namiseom

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Speaking of Cameras

     In my previous post I had mentioned my camera acting up. There have been times that it refused to focus, and on my birthday it totally locked up while I was trying to take a picture of Jungwon. I finally got it to unfreeze, and tried to reset its power, but it wouldn't come on for five minutes. I concluded that it was time to look for a new camera.
     I had read about the Samsung L210, and decided to check it out. I looked, and searched, and today I found a store that had some in stock. The main eye catcher for me is the dual stabilization that the L210 boasts about. The other features are nice, but the stabilization really helps out with darker pictures. Of course, even in darker light, the newer technology makes the pictures come out better anyways.
     The only downside that I have found with this camera is price discrepancies. In the U.S. it is being retailed for two hundred dollars, which would be a rough two hundred thousand won. In Korea, Samsung's home, you can't find the L210, instead you come across the VLUU L210. What is the difference? About one hundred fifty extra won, the letters VLUU stamped on the front, and what I appears to be a coupon for ordering prints online.
     Not only was this the day that I found the camera, but this weekend the store was having a huge sale and I was able to get it for two hundred eighty thousand won. Coupled with the two percent cash receipt tax return I was able to make myself feel a little better about paying the extra.
     After giving it a full charge I decided to test drive it tonight by taking pictures of local graffiti. These pictures were taken at night, with just street lamps and head lights, no flash! Clearly a step about the old clonker Nikon.


Graffiti L210

Birthday Came and Went

     Well, my birthday came and went without a hitch. It was actually pretty relaxed. I ran a couple of errands and rested while Jungwon took a midterm, then she took me out to interesting restaurant/bar/gallery named N To.
     N To is nicely decorated, a little dark, and not very popular. The lack of popularity is partly because it is in the basement of the building that houses the more well known School Food Lounge. People were sitting on the sidewalks waiting to get a table at School Food Lounge. Including ourselves, there were only three tables taken at N To.
     We ordered a wonderful "Apple and Brie Cheese Salad", and carbonara pasta. The pasta was good, and the salad was excellent.
     The art displayed around the place was mediocre with a splash of "oh that's nice" here and there. However, the interior decor more than made up for the flatly painted rectangles. The lighting was pretty cool, and I really liked the tables.
     If someone ever suggests that you go to School Food Lounge, while you're waiting for a table I suggest popping over to N To instead.
     Unfortunately I didn't get any pictures of Jungwon that I think she'd want the world to see. She had been stressed because of the midterms and class projects for a few weeks, and just wasn't feeling photogenic, and I didn't have many chances to take pictures because my camera started to go crazy.

Wayne BDay 2008

Monday, March 24, 2008

Hong Kong

     Plus One sent me to Hong Kong last week to get my E-2 visa. The reason that they send their teachers to Hong Kong is that it is supposed to be a one day process there. Yes it can be one day, but the policy is two days. Luckily the lady that works there has a heart of gold and she did mine in one day, and I was able to catch my flight.
     I had a working day to kill while I was waiting on my passport so I decided to kill it by going to see the largest-outdoor-bronze Buddha in the world. It was a good choice as it really did kill most of the day. I left the consulate at about ten in the morning, and I made it back just a tad after three. And that included taking a detour to look around Kowloon station.
     To get to the statue take the Tung Chung line on the Hong Kong subway system. You want to go all the way to Tung Chung, currently the last stop on the line. When you are exiting the station just follow the signs for Ngong Ping. The fare for the cable car was less than $100HK for a round trip.
     Just as a side note. The Incheon airport in Seoul is now trying to double as an art gallery. They had an interesting, though slightly annoying display of art by Nam June Paik set up on the first floor.

hongkong

Plus One

     I have officially started at my new job. It's amazing that I can work a "long" day at the school, eat supper, buy some necessities for the apartment, and still get home before seven. Coupled with the fact that the owner of the school keeps telling me not to rush or to try to go through the lessons in a certain amount of time, I am feeling mightily relaxed. The school has this crazy new idea of actually teaching the kids so that they learn, not to level them up in classes, sell books, or to feed the mommies' egos. The difference between this school and everywhere else that I have been is like night and day.
     The school has recently moved into a new building. They own the whole building, and it is very well designed. I personally wish I had one less window so that I could have more shelf space, but after the plastic wrapped window experience of POLY I will not complain at all. I am up on the third floor. I have my own room that I teach two and a half set of kids in. In the mornings I teach my prekindergarteners. These are children that are Korean age six (four to five years old by western counting). They are learning English at an alarming rate, and they are reluctantly relinquishing their dominance in our power struggle. Originally there were seven students, but we gained another student last week. I teach the same children from nine:thirty until three in the afternoon.
     After the prek'ers I swap to my first graders. On Monday, Wednesday, and Friday I teach what is dominantly a reading and conversation class. These students are a kick to work with because their English is very good, but this is their first hakwon experience outside of Kindergarten. They had very little concept of how to keep up with their homework, so I bought them a set of notebooks to write everything down in. These classes run from three:thirty until five, with a ten minute break near the middle. The Tuesday class is a mix of some of my reading students, and a couple of students from another reading class. The schedule is the same, but this time we study a north American science textbook and do a small experimenttowards the end of class. It is really fun, and I think I enjoy it as much as the children. On Thursdays I go home at three.


PlusOne

Monday, February 25, 2008

Fire Ants

     When I first looked around this neighborhood it was dark, and hideously cold outside. I did not know exactly where I was, I only had a faint map and address that I had printed off the internet. The streets were not brightly lit, and I stumble across this monstrosity of a graffitied building. I had a feeling that my new apartment was not going to be in an ideal neighborhood. I finally found the address, and half a block away I found a well lit and manicured area full of new wealth and vigor. "At least the neighborhood is only half bad." I thought.
     For the past couple of weeks that night stumbling about in the near dark and freezing temperatures had tainted my view of the southwestern part of my neighborhood. However, during the past few days I have attempted to acquaint myself with this area. Happily I can say that my first impressions were wrong. The graffiti was only to say that the building had been condemned. The streets are dark at night, but they are safe and the neighbors are friendly. There is a bit of revitalizing construction going near my building, and apparently money is being poured into the area's general vicinity to make it more akin to Seolaemeoeul, or Insadong. The more that I look around the neighborhood the more I get a feeling of the Fine Arts building back at GSW. There is a mix of design companies and other studios peppered about the general populace. Although it is not terribly visible, their mark is on the town.


Sinsa