Sunday, May 30, 2010

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Damyang

Finally. After two weeks of wanting to go but first being deterred by poor weather and then me getting sick, we made it to Damyang.

The town is famous for bamboo, and a huge tourist destination is its bamboo forest.

It's only 13 miles north of Gwangju, but the bus ride takes about 40 minutes. They've finally turned on the air conditioning on most public transportation now, so it felt good to sit under a cold breeze. 

We walked through the forest, ate some street food, and hung out with the pandas. 




However, the best part of the entire day was the cab ride home from the bus terminal. The cab driver and his car reeked of body odor, he ran people off the road and flew through red lights screeching his horn, and blared this song and two others by the same music group. Priceless. 

Saturday, May 29, 2010

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Korean Medicine

After two weeks of a nasty cough and terribly runny nose, my face erupted into intense pain Thursday morning. After a quick check on WebMD, I diagnosed myself as having a sinus infection. When I woke up Friday morning in even more pain, I decided to go to the doctor.

Two of my friends had been sick when I arrived, and so told me to go to the Ear, Nose, and Throat doctor they went to. They told me he spoke English and gave me the directions. I followed the directions they gave me, and did end up at a doctor, but it was a pediatrician. And SHE spoke at intermediate level English.

Anyway, after the nurses tried for a good 5 minutes to figure out what my first, middle, and last name were from my registration card, I went to see the doctor. Once I was out, I paid, went downstairs to the pharmacy, got a prescription for 3 days, paid for my meds, and left. All said and done, it took 30 minutes for about $25 for the visit and the medication. If I turn in my receipts, I will get reimbursed for most of it. I love Korea.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

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Childhood

In class, one of my brightest students grabbed my hand and was admiring my painted nails. She then said "My mother says painting your nails is..." and she said the rest in Korean, which made them all laugh. When I asked her to explain, the gist that I got was that her mother doesn't think a child should waste their time with trifling activities. If they have the time to paint their nails, they should spend it studying.

This girl is only 11, and though I find it somewhat sad that she has spent her 11 little years working really hard studying, it's sure paid off for her.

In Korea, the kids have adult-level pressures on them to constantly learn and succeed. In America, I don't think children have nearly enough. Maybe both countries should find a happy medium.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

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Tequilaz

It's been three months since my last burrito and margarita. So when I found out a Mexican Cantina opened in Gwangju in February, I rallied the troops to go find this holy grail.

It's about a 10,000 won cab ride away from us. If you live in Gwangju, tell the cab driver "Chundehumoon" and he'll know what you mean. Take a right at the Dunkin' Donuts and it's in the second alley to the right.

The food wasn't bad, nor were the margaritas.

However, when you want to make Mexican food in Korea, you do the best with what you got. Thus, the food had a homemade taste to it. I got a strawberry and a cherry margarita throughout the night, and neither tasted like it's flavor. But they were pretty smooth and filled the void in my Korean life. 

Speaking of Korean life, this is drawn on the wall of the Speakeasy, the foreigner's bar downtown. I thought you might enjoy it :-)


Friday, May 14, 2010

1 comments

Teacher's Day

Teacher's Day in Korea is this Saturday. Yesterday, I was going through a marathon of classes covering for another foreign teacher's vacation. I had 8 classes all in a row with barely a break, so at the end of the 7th, as I'm about to crash or leap out of a window, one of my students brings me a letter:

It reads: 
Dear Cayce Teacher
Hello, I'm Judy. After some days, it is 'Teacher's Day.' I am thank you for teaching me. My Listening and presentation developed by you. And, I got 'Level up!' I think one of the reason that I can level up, it's listening! I wrote little of key words, and I got a good score of listening. Thanks for teaching me. <3
And, you know, I got a compete of Speaking. You fixed my writing and make my pronounciation better. And Heojung teacher said to me, "Good pronounce.' I was very happy!
I hope GI teacher is you. Because your class is very fun and you are very good teacher. With you, the class will be fun. 
Cayce, Thank you for teaching me. Have a nice day!
2010.5.13
Hoping to be your favorite student, 
Judy*
I <3 AVALON! I <3 AVALON! I <3 AVALON!



I love being a teacher sometimes :)