Intrepid Girl Reporter


we’ll make our homes on the water

Considering the typhoon, it was a surprisingly wonderful Sunday.

Full disclosure, as always:Β  We brought the storm on ourselves. My friend G’s host sister, J, told her cheerfully that a typhoon was coming Sunday, but given the fact that no one seemed to be evacuating, we all laughed it off as typical Korean hyperbole.* Also, the two weather words all my students seem to know on their own are “fine” and “typhoon.” I thought this was funny.

I was wrong.

It’s been a rough week anyway for pretty much everyone I know – my friend A said that atmospheric changes were afoot, which explained my desire on Friday to personally throttle every single student in my second grade class, but I don’t know anyone on this island who made it through the week without at least once casting a longing glance back towards American shores. So ending with a Category 4 hurricane isn’t really surprising, I guess. Yesterday was cloudy, a little rainy, but about 75% of the island crew ended up seeing The Bourne Supremacy and/or wandering around looking for entertainment and/or eating Red Mango (finally), eating Indian food, receiving a free coffee mug from the only GNC in the province, and visiting the English bookstore and buying copies of Kingsley Amis’ Lucky Jim and Paul Auster’s New York trilogy. (Okay, the last part was just me.) Then G and my friend E and I went to the jjimjilbang with my host fam, where we all fell asleep on the floor and didn’t leave until 2 AM. At this point: no evacuations, no alarms, no warnings from the Big Brother-style speaker on my wall from which the superintendent declaims. I hope you don’t think I’m joking on that last part.

We woke up this morning with a promise hanging over our heads: pudding, or “ding-pu,” as HB has taken to calling it. (The first time I made it – out of boredom, on another rainy night – he called the ingredients pudding, but after witnessing its metamorphosis into dessert, decided that the name needed a change as well.) Because it was HB’s birthday party day, E and G and I ventured out into the rain to the supermarket down the street and to Paris Baguette for breakfast. It was a walk that would cost us four umbrellas. I had trouble standing upright. By the time we realized how bad it was, however, we were on a mission. Also so wet that it didn’t really matter if we got any wetter.

So we got our chocolate and our sugar and our croissants and sticky buns and green-tea-cream-cheese-pancakey-thing, and headed home, where the power appeared to be flickering, to no one’s consternation but ours. We made pudding by candlelight. We ate pudding and fried chicken with HF and HB’s friends by candlelight. At this point, trees were falling. Then we sat around and talked and read our books, in English, and took a nap, listening to the winds batter the window. When we woke up, the buses weren’t running, so we played Uno with HS.

When we finally made it to the bus station, the streets were flooded, windows were broken, and branches littered the streets. We got E on a bus to Seogwipo and G in her taxi to Hallim, and made it home, where HD, HB, HS and I ate ramen and, because I am forever behind every trend, I read more of the last Harry Potter, again by candlelight. (Side note: I can’t put it down. I wouldn’t call myself a Potter fanatic, but what I love about Rowling is her ability to create a propulsive story – i.e., I always always always want to keep reading.) Then the lights came back on, and I was able to discover that what had actually occurred was Typhoon Nari, with winds somewhere between 131 and 155 miles per hour. Oh.

This is so typical, for us to be here and have no idea that we’re surviving a massive storm.Β  It’s the grand-scale edition of getting on a bus and hoping it goes our way. Welcome to life in a foreign country. My American mother asked me today if people don’t evacuate, and HS said no; I’m not sure if this was the first typhoon to hit the island, or if it was just the first typhoon in a while, based on what she said (see? SEE?), and I don’t know if people are blase or if they’re actually freaking out and they’re just doing it in Korean. You know? I never imagined that I could experience a storm in this way. But then I never imagined a lot of things.

*There is no typical Korean hyperbole. Mistake Number One.



don’t stand so don’t stand so don’t stand so close to me
August 10, 2007, 5:18 pm
Filed under: fondness for analogies, life in Chuncheon, music, orientation, poetry, reading, U S of A

I am sick, which will either limit or heighten the number of blog posts made, depending on the effort I choose to exert when I’m forced to do nothing. As it stands, I sound like a late-stage emphysema patient. People keep asking me how I am, since the uninformed dorm resident could easily assume that I’m dying. They also keep telling me to not talk and rest my voice, which is a little like telling Paris Hilton to stop getting arrested, or telling otters to stop being cute.* I.e. it’s not going to happen.

Today I went to E-Mart by myself to get μ•½ , medicine, which is – almost unbelievably – pronounced “yahk.” Like yuck. After a certain amount of time around others I tend to get sort of antsy and need to explore by myself, so being sick was actually quite convenient: it allowed me to take a taxi on my own, describe my symptoms to the pharmacist (although, after she proceeded to ask me some questions in Korean and then saw my confused look, said pharmacist asked, “Do you want me to speak to you in English?”), ask questions regarding the location of plastic spoons. Etc. Also, now I have yogurt, and although my yogurt was strawberry, it came with two pomegranate yogurts free (“service,” as they say here). And sushi at E-Mart is sold a la carte for approximately $.60 per piece. I did choose to invest.

Tomorrow I’m going to this “traditional folk village,” aka Probably Korean Shakertown, but Gwi Ohk is so excited, and it’s hard to not feel the same way around her. Then Monday: DMZ. I’m performing in the talent show on Tuesday, so getting my voice back by then would be ideal.

I’ve started looking for some Vachel Lindsay online. Even though I seem to recall not liking him much before, I read a line in After Henry from him –

I brag and chant of Bryan Bryan Bryan

Candidate for President who sketched a silver Zion

and it really made me want to read more, probably because I think I subconsciously miss America. And cheese. I talked to Candace the other day and started naming off foods I wanted and they all had cheese as a major ingredient. Soon I’ll be sitting around listening to nothing but Aaron Copland and dreaming of QDoba.

I’ve also been listening to Tegan and Sara’s “Walking with a Ghost” on repeat, but I don’t think that has anything to do with the U S of A.

*At the DMZ there’s apparently this Otter Research Center, since otters are the only mammals that can successfully pass from North to South Korea without getting blown up by land mines. I am not making this up. And I am so excited.

tonight’s dedications:

Momma, I got your package πŸ™‚ I will call you when my voice comes back.

Roommates, I love you both.



genius party

Standard conversations with my teachers:

HILLARY Bang-teacher!

BANG-μ„ μƒλ‹˜ (teacher) Yes?

HILLARY Doesn’t your last name mean “room” in Korean?

BANG-μ„ μƒλ‹˜ You call me over for that? That is not question.

in Korean

KIM-μ„ μƒλ‹˜ We talk about location. So right now I stand in front of the

HILLARY Oh! Blackboard!Β  I know this one!

KIM-μ„ μƒλ‹˜ Um…yes.

Note:Β  we learned “blackboard” on the first day. I tend to get so excited when I recognize words, however, that I call them out regardless of their relevance.Β  It should come as no surprise to anyone, then, that Bang-μ„ μƒλ‹˜ had to reassure me repeatedly tonight that she does not think I am stupid.

Here is Bang-μ„ μƒλ‹˜:

And here is Kim-μ„ μƒλ‹˜, shown here with my friend Ariah:

And here is part of our class at a hof called 75 (or μΉ μ‹­μ˜€ , if you’re into that sort of thing):

This was, of course, pre-Korean haircut. On this night (Thursday), it was just our class. Apparently we are so well known for our poor performance that the advanced teachers actually make fun of our Bang and ask her how the dumb class is going, and she gets really heated on our behalf.

Friday was all the beginning classes’ party. This is post-Korean hair. Which is $8, so I highly recommend.

The club was called “STOP!” Our teachers reserved tables for us and set a cover charge. Note:Β  In Korea, hugging is regarded as strange, but drinking with your teachers is totally acceptable. The above is an abstract depiction of noraebang.

Korean hair:

Something was funny, obviously. You can see the top of this Yoshitomo Nara shirt (also $8, incidentally) that says “mumps.”

These are the pitchers our teachers bought us. Lest you think “Oh, that’s not so big,” let me inform you that my friend Andy, who is shown above holding the aforementioned pitcher, is 6’8″.

The rest of the subjects I have mentioned in previous entries as needing discussion also require photo viewing, and I do not wish to overwhelm the reader, so I’ll deal with these topics incrementally. I will leave you, instead, with some lyrics to a song that I like. Also, I did not bring any books of poetry with me, so I am putting out an official request: blog readers, send me poems you like.


orange ball of peace - the mountain goats

 

they wanted me to be a lawyer. 
they wanted me to work in a machine shop. 
they wanted me to be a designer, 
but I came out on top. 
I'm a fire-man. 
I'm a fire-man. 

stand and watch the smoke. 
see the flames rise to the sky. 
I stand and watch the flames climb higher. 
I feel the smoke get in my eyes. 
I'm a fire-man. 
I'm a fire-man.