Sunday, December 26, 2010

My First Christmas

  ... Away From Home.


It was pretty surreal to think that the only time I'd be seeing my family for a year was on Skype or video chat.  My birthday and the holidays amplified that feeling about ten times over, and for a few days here, I was homesick (for REAL REAL).  Extra emo after a few glasses of vino --- I maaaay or may not have cried a little bit after a wonderful Skype sesh with my family on Xmas Eve.  But anywho.


Christmas Eve I worked my usual 4-7pm class and then subbed for a 7-10pm class. No, Chungdahm does not give many holidays off. Then, it was Phil's bday (my coworker) and since he kinda rules we ended up having a long, fun night (regardless of the fact that I "was definitely going to bed early since I have to Skype the fam at 8am".... yeah, right.)


Got home at 6am, Skyped the family. Slept for 4 hours.


Christmas morning was epic. (Minus the part where I woke up a tad hungover and still had to get some last minute gifts. Happens every year I SWEAR. This meant going outside, and damn it is cold here. "But you're from Chicago, Syd" people say.  I'm tellin you, it is different here.  The temperatures are comparable, but it's unbelievably dry here, to the point where each inhale into your nostrils could possibly induce a hardcore nosebleed.)  We got together down the hall at Alex, Bryan, and Kyle's apt. Tons of Christmas music + Pancakes with strawberries, blueberries, and chocolate chips commenced. Jelly Bellys and Croissants with Nutella, too.  It was delicious and exactly what I wanted Xmas morning to be.  I was so pumped for gifts, but I tried to hide it, since we're not exactly 5 anymore.
The presents!
My presents from Nahyun. How cute right!
You might ask "Why the hell did you
get your friend industrial sized
Skippy?" Bryan. Loves.
Peanut Butter.

The Koreans never had Reese's cups. 

Kyle was happy about his Bread varieties too. Those boys are easy to  please.

 
Ski Socks, Snowboarding gloves..
and they got a Snuggie for their
favorite neighbor.  So great.



My makeshift family 
Danny in his new hat
Meat, Meat, more Meat. Coffee + Sugar
Shiesty pic... but do you see that bucket? It's a bigass Tequila Sunrise.


Following Christmas morning, I got ready for  dinner at Mercado.  This place is one of the best Brazilian steakhouses I've ever been to, and with about 25 coworkers it was the beginning of a great night.  The sangria alone made me too happy, but the prospect of going out in Seoul with everyone afterwards was icing on the cake. Or the star on top of the tree, whichever. 

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Christmas is coming!

Cookies, Candy, Christmas Tree, and Wine
(The makings of a great pregame)

Danny, Latoya, and Kenny enjoying some
Xmas cheer

Tree decorating time!

I love hosting, good company is all I need!

My cute little tree. The lights don't work, though.. wah wah.

Alex, Kyle, and Holly 

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

4 MONTHS

Welp, today hit the 4 month mark.  One of my friends told me it seems like I got here way before August 21st.  Perhaps that's because we spend sooo much freaking time together.. from work, to 4am bar nights after work, to the gym, to dinner... this is college: glorified.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Snowboarding in SoKo

It's early in the Korean skiing season, but my company planned a little 1-day ski trip to get it started.  It was ONLY 45,000Won (~$45) for a lift ticket and rentals.... I had no choice but to get back on a board and try it out again, even if the last time I snowboarded was winter '08 ---> when I was on my ass the whole way down the slopes and crying.


Vivaldi Park rents out legit equipment, and I was pleased with the "children's" board and bindings they gave me. The boots were comfortable, too, and this time around my genius friend Alex taught me that wearing only 1 pair of socks keeps your feet much toastier. He was right. Changed my entire experience.


Aside from having no gear (Illini Dance Team sweats and 2 pairs of leggings + 2 long sleeves and a North Face fleece + my NF puffy vest + nice gloves and a beanie/ear muffs .... that was about it)  I stayed extremely warm and hardly got wet from the fake snow.  This warmth and dryness ALSO meant that I was actually RIDING down the mountain - - - not just falling down it. Yes yes yes, I think I finally broke the learning curve this 5th time around, and was actually able to carve the snow and pretend I knew what I was doing alongside the Azians. 


One of the last runs of the day. The sweatpants lasted! Success. 
Video of my mad skillzzzz on Facebook

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

First Thanksgiving in Korea.... plus 4 days of Birthday

When my Birthday and Turkey Day rolled around,  I started to miss home. For once.
 (Kidding. But not really.)

So the branch emailed us the inevitable "Hey the company is taking away our annual Turkey lunch because of budget cuts, yada yada"

BUT we could pay 12,000WON to have turkey and all the fixins delivered to the school on Thanksgiving.  Of course I was in! .... just didn't know how good it would really be. 

....it was deece. This Turkey was delivered to us with stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy, vegetables, cranberry stuff, and pumpkin pie... NOT BAAADDDD. (the pictures don't do it justice..whatsoever..I almost didn't post these cause it looks so booty)





The REAL DEAL was that following Saturday, when a few friends and I gathered in Alex, Kyle, and Bryan's room for dinner.  It was a potluck of sorts - Alex made a risotto, Jieun and Justin brought guacamole/chips & kimbap, Danny made pasta with an amazing veggie sauce, I whipped up the garlic mashed potatoes, Bryan built a huge salad, and Nahyun made little sandwiches and some Korean rice-filled things (yubu cho bap).  The rest was from Costco- rotisserie chickens, apple pie, pumpkin pie, baguette bread, sparkling cider, and wine.  EVERYTHING WAS DELECTABLE.  Honestly, everyone brought amazing dishes, and we were all so impressed with each other's cooking.  Insane food coma ensued, but not until more birthday cake was eaten - this time Hello Kitty cake!! (From Jieun, such a sweetheart. And Nahyun got an amazing blueberry bday cake from Bryan)





Can't forget all of the wonderful, adorable and thoughtful gifts from my students and friends-- everything was so unexpected and I could not have possibly felt more loved!  Seriously, in 3 months, I didn't think it was possible to build such great friendships.  I almost cried like 5 times and probably thanked everyone about a hundred... it was a fabulous birthday to say the least. :) :) :)





Wednesday, November 24, 2010

November 24th, 2010

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Shit, I'm 23?

Monday, November 22, 2010

3 month mark...

I feel like I JUST POSTED 'TWO MONTHS' abouuuutttt a week ago. And all of a sudden it's November 21st???? Shoot no, it is now the 22ND, and I turn 23 years old in TWO DAYS.

Annnnnddddd it's the last week of my first term with Chungdahm. New classes, new students, new classroom, etc. all start up again next Monday. I'm gonna miss most of these lil nuggets, I mean they're my first bunch of students EVER.... (tear)... but I'm sooo ready to say BYEBYE to a few of em!

Cheeeerrrssss!!!

Monday, November 15, 2010

Seoul Lantern Festival

  These pics didn't come out great 
but the Seoul Lantern Festival was sick. 














                                  
More people than Disney World. Damn ridiculous.

Dragons











 String of lanterns

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Testing Week, PTOWN POST, & Pay Day #2

All of a sudden I feel like I got really busy, so I haven't really been on this thing. Now I'm trying to update and the internet at Paris Baguette is less than stellar. The owner wants me to teach him English, though... so I'll keep coming here until it pays off (in free coffee of course)
:)

My second real-life payday happened last week and HOLY MOLEY is it nice to make $$$.  I want people to understand something. If you're not pleased with your salary and/or schedule in the states, COME WORK HERE. Honestly we probably work 50% less than what is considered 'standard', and make double. Not to mention I will never have to make a 7:50 a.m. train again. Just saaaaaaaaaaaayyyyin.

Week 11 just passed and the end of my first term with Chungdahm is almost here. During week 10, all students had their level-up tests (just 3 straight hours of reading, listening, writing, speaking evaluations), and it seemed as though most of my students tried extremely hard to get to the next level of classes. What I thought was going to be stressful ended up being a piece of cake on the instructor side... honestly, teachers might say that they hate standardized testing procedures -- but that's some bs in my opinion. I can think back to the hours spent at Queen of the Universe (yeah, that's what my elementary school was called) taking state-wide tests while my teachers were just chiiiillllinnnn all day. 

Another thing that I've become a part of here is our branch's student newspaper, the PTown Post. They needed a new editor-in-chief of sorts, so Vasuda (another newbie coworker) and I have been working every week to get it together. This term we had a lot of student input, and some of their articles are unreal. Our cover story was written by a Masters student (the highest level of courses at Chungdahm) and it discusses the ever-so-controversial and timely debate over the necessity of Hagwons, or academies. **Hagwons are the 'after-school schools' that so many Korean students attend, oftentimes more than 1 each evening. Some of my students finish school, hop from one academy to the next, and then come to their 3-hour English class with me. (And they still work their butts off. Rare breed of kids, I'm tellin ya.) 
The PTown Post also has some great poetry written by Masters students, a comic strip drawn by Ann, one of my elementary students, and the Shout Outs section is pretty hilarious. Once we send it to print I'll try to get it on here somehow. 


Welp, I gotta get to sleep extra early since our co-worker camping trip turned out to be an absolute success. TOooOOOooo much fun. - - - I could not possibly be happier that I was placed at Pyeongchon, these people RULE. 

Monday, November 1, 2010

Bloody Halloween

Halloween is not widely celebrated in Korea. 

Actually, it's just another day when they can look around and say, "What the f**k are these stupid foreigners doing now?"

When I asked my students what they were doing for Halloween... *blank stares*. "Just studying.."
When I asked them for suggestions on what to wear for my costume... "Witch. Pumpkin. Ghost!" 
When I mentioned the words "Trick or Treating"... all they wanted was for me to do tricks. 

Not surprising that these kids just study all weekend, even when there's an American excuse for a holiday happening. Hopefully they at least got some candy and sugar to stay awake. 

Anywho, we "dressed up" Saturday night, and I say that very lightly because there was ZERO effort put into any costume. Danny was "Harry Potter" (aka Danny.. plus my eyeliner on his forehead in the shape of a lightning bolt scar), and I was "Tina Fey" (aka "Sarah Palin" with my new red peacoat, a pencil skirt, heels, my glasses, and a ponytail. Only thing missing was an American flag pin and devil horns).

FAST FORWARD TO CLUB GO GOs IN HONGDAE.
All is just dandy, music's great, buzz is increasing, and I'm gettin my juke on with some Army dudes. Suddenly, there's some glass shattering around us - likely from someone dropping it off the platform while grinding with some fat girl on the poles. 

Shit that hurt. (look down.) HOOOOOOOOOOLLLLLLLLYYYYYYYYYYYY SHIIIIIIIIIII*************TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT

"OH MY GOD, that's coming from my foot!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" 
('That' refers to the puddle of blood forming around our dancin' feet.)

So Army boy and I dart to the bathroom, where my high heeled shoes are pooling with blood, the big vein on top of my foot is squirting EVERYWHERE, and I'm holding on to the sink trying not to faint. 

Just to give you an idea of what this projectile bloodshed looked like, watch this stupid vid: 

All I have to say is THANK GOD I was with Army boys at that moment in time, otherwise it woulda been: Ambulance - in Korea - without insurance. 

They squeeeeeezzzzedddd the glass out of my foot (nearly fainted), stopped the blood from pooling all over the women's bathroom (bitches were no longer in line for the potty), and eventually wrapped my shit up with a piece of someone's caveman costume (from the bar floor). Awesome.

Of course my night wasn't over after this dramatic display of Halloween-ness... would you really expect me to head home? Obv I sauntered on over to the next club with them, looking kinda sweet with my blood splatter. Then, as fckin usual, my feet get stepped on, and the wound opens up AGAIN

Yadayadayada, 
I finally make it home at noon the next day (Yes, American breakfast WAS necessary..even if I went 2 hours north to get it)
Can't get my shoes off due to pooled up dried blood all up in there,
Turn my bathroom into a murder scene,
Wash that shit and wrap a sock around the cut,
Go to sleep. All day. 


LIFE.