Oct 30, 2008

Halloween, Guy Fawke's Day, and Chowder

Last night was the Gangwha crew's combination Halloween and Guy Fawke's celebration which meant soju mixed with orange soda in keeping with the autumn theme of the night. Aside from that and the mac and cheese being called mummy brains, it was like every Wednesday night: soju, makju, and later, nuribung. Any well, its always a good time. I forgot to give Matt my extra helmet which is officially the third time I have forgotten it. Oh, well. Its such a hassle getting down to Ganghwa -eup, where everyone lives. Its either at 45 minute bus ride or an half hour motorbike round down there and there is no bus later than 10 pm and drunk driving is out of the question so I always have to take a taxi and am always slammed with the after 1 am surcharge. Its still pretty cheap by western standards but its money that could be spent better. One night everyone ought to come down to my place but I don't think anyone would be up for that one. Its just too far out of the way. But I guess that's the price I have to pay for contact with my western friends and it is definitely worth it. This Friday, is the pan-Ganghwa teachers' meeting, which is a very big deal in local education. All the teachers, including the ESL and Chinese teachers, will gather for a morning meeting. I suppose that will be completely boring as most of it will be a complete mystery to me. But after the meeting the students of the particular school where we are meeting will serve us lunch and drinks. Following that, after everyone is good and liquored up, there will be a teachers' soccer match. And after that, with the afternoon having completely degenerated, we all will go to a dog restuarant. Yes, a dog restuarant. Like woof, woof (or, as the Koreans say: mung, mung). I'm sure it is as completely awful as it sounds. There is no possible way dog can taste any good. It is a delicacy to them. And like all the so called delicacies (live octopus, pickled raw crab) I have tried, I'm sure that it will be pretty bad. This Saturday is our New England night. Yes, it was completely my idea. I picked up some over priced Sam Adams from Seoul and will be making Clam Chowder. I hope it comes out well. Some of the local guys will be coming. They love clams here so I hope it will be a hit. This coming Sunday, Barb, one of the ESL teacher is leaving so we are throwing her a going away party of sorts so that ought to be fun. Well, I think I shall close with that.

Oct 28, 2008

This Past Weekend

This past weekend was uneventful for the most part. Saturday, I went into Seoul, had lunch with Paul at a dumpling joint in Insadong, bought some Christmas presents for family and friends. It will take a while for them to get back home so I figure I will start sending them out in November. I think everyone will really like what I have gotten them. They're things you really won't find anywhere else in the world, real handsome pieces. After that, Paul and I came back to Ganghwa. I made some Indian style curry, and some Gin and Tonics, and invited my neighbour over for dinner but not come. Later Paul broke open his bottle of Jameson he had gotten while he was in Ireland last week. I found it funny that a Jameson is much more expensive in Ireland than the U.S. Its 46 euros, apparently which is absolutely appalling. But, it was definitely good to have some decent whiskey. There isn't too much of that out here on Ganghwa. Sunday, I stayed on Gangwha and went to church at Sts. Peter and Paul, which is always an interesting experience. The liturgy there is very High Church, with full Catholic vestments and incense and Anglican plain chant. The service is thorough Anglo-Catholic, like the Advent in Boston. However, despite the extreme English atmosophere, including all the old hymns, it is in Korean. It is very odd. Well, its time to get to some teaching

Oct 24, 2008

At the Zoo

Today's weather is rather brisk and is the first day I have worn a sweater. Sometimes the evenings have been chilly but this is the first time I have had to wear one during the day. The sun is very bright, the rain from yesterday has fully disapated, and it is, in my opinion, a very pleasant autumn day. I mailed a second batch of postcards out to those who didn't get one for whatever reason the last time I mailed them out. I also did a little writing this morning and made some progress on my current project but nothing really substantial. I don't know if I have the patience and the fortitude to complete what I have set out to do but it passes my time and keeps me from being idle, which is something I am always in fear of being. I have four classes to teach this evening, two high school and two middle school sections. The high school section should be very easy. My students are both very cooperative and actually have pretty strong English skills. However, the two middle school classes today are the same group of kids from yesterday, with whom I always have difficulty. Today's lesson is animals and animal names. I have prepared a matching game involving animal pictures and text. I will also have them listen to "At the Zoo" by Simon and Garfunkel and have them fill in the missing animal names on the lyrics sheet I have made out. I really hope I can hold their attention. I think I may be able to is I keep my energy level very high and be an absolute goof. Well, I just hope it works out.

Oct 23, 2008

Today is Still Rainy

I have just come back from dinner, and before that, I completed teaching my Second Grade Middle Schoolers. And man, are they annoying. None, not one of them can direct their attention toward me for than thirty seconds. Every game, activity, or lesson I have planned stimulates no interest in them and their effort, even compared with the other Middle Schoolers, is absolutely deplorable. I can understand not having strong English skills. Its my job to improve those skills but when the class is wholly uncooperative and has not even the slightest inclination to exert any type of effort, I don't know what I can do. I feel that I am failing these kids. I want so badly to teach these students properly but they have to meet me half way by giving me at least their attention and that's not happening. I spend 90 percent of my time trying to settle down the class. The pushup method of discipline, which works well with other classes, does not work. When I discipline them, they either laugh at me and do nothing or do unsatisfactory pushups, and never more than five. Tonight I had to get down and show them what an actual pushup is, and did 35 myself. I challenged the boys, who thought is was funny to see me doing pushups, that if anyone could do more than I, I would buy that person ice cream at that school canteen. Well, after a number of students dropping at under thirty, this big ox of a boy, was able to beat me by five. During this whole competition there was utter silence among everyone, which to me was absolutely golden. However, what educational value is there to pushup contest? I really need to figure out how to handle this bloody class. Oh well.

Today is Rainy

Today is rainy which is sort of a bummer because I had intended to go hiking. I have not been able to go this week, partly because of busy-ness and partly because of my own laziness in not getting up early enough in the morning to have a decent hike. But today, I intended to go hiking, got up early enough for a full morning of hiking, but alas, the weather was poor. It has been raining on and off the whole day and a thick mist has settled in the valley. It was not a good day for a hike. So instead of a vigorous morning of hiking, I neglected getting dressed until the last possible moment before work, made myself a coffee, settled myself snuggly under my blankets, and read the whole morning. I have been reading Charles Dickens' Bleak House, which though I am only about 200 pages into the thousand page novel, appears to becoming quite good. It is interesting to compare it with the Pickwick Papers, which I read this summer past, and is his first novel. Bleak House is one of his last, written in the 1850s. His development as an author is extremely apparent. The characters are as rich as ever, from eccentric Mr. Jaurdyce to the simple cockney street urchin, Jo. However, in Bleak House, each character plays an integral part in driving the story foward. With each character, the air of mystery unveiled at the novel's opening is in the first two-hundred pages not only not cast off, but is in fact, deepening as the story progresses. What is the true nature of the wards brought into the Jaurdyce household.? What place do they have in twisted web of the ongoing legal cause of Jaurdyce v. Jaurndyce? Dickens is able to draw us into the story, guessing as to what is really going on. The Pickwick Papers, despite its brilliant character development fails to integrate them into a cohesive story. It is a work that rests on its constituent episodes rather than the whole. Bleak House, from what I read, seems to be work, though episodic in some respects (as a serialized novel, it had to be) but seems to be able to be judged well as a whole.

Oct 22, 2008

I'm Back

I have returned. After some issues with accessing my blog at school, I am back. I will not attempt to summarise the events of an entire two month period. However, in the this brief amount of time, after a few serious trials and many small ones, I have not only begun to settle in to life in my village but have, in a sense, grown to love all the wild eccentricities that characterize rural life in general and especially rural life on a small island in South Korea. My neighbors, some of whom are civil servants and policeman, some of whom are business people, and most of whom are farmers and day laborers have all become my friends. All are accomodating and all want to make my life in their community the most comfortable it can be. Mr. Kim, a civil servant, who is my immediate next door neighbor not only makes an effort to come by my apartment and say hello several times a week but will have me over for dinner fairly often. By western standards, his hospitality would be considered extraordinary. In many neighborhoods, including my own in New Bedford, neighbors hardly see each other. In the morning they slink out their doors and in the evening, having come back from work, they slink right back into their homes just like they had gone out. This sort of behavior is unheard of here; at least in my village. Every person, including myself, is a member of a real community where people look after each other. For instance, this morning, as I was waiting for the bus to Ganghwa-eup, the main centre on the island, Mr. Kim came out of his house, and went very far out of his way to give me a ride 'on his way to work'. It is absolutely remarkable. Since the first day I have been here, locals, people with whom I would not have come into contact through work, would come by, and give me gifts of produce and seafood. I still have five pounds of salted shrimp as a testimony to their hospitability. Sure, I may gotten ill as a result of their pickled raw crab and sure, I may have not enjoyed eating live squirming octopus tenticle but ultimately it was all an expression of something that is severely lacking in my own culture: hospitality. This, I believe, is a major hallmark of truly civilized people. Our own Bible, in both the Old and New Testaments express this same ethic of hospitality. Sodom and Gommorah were destroyed not for their vile sex acts, as many people have supposed, but rather, their inhospitality to the three angels of the Lord. It isn't very hospitable to rape your guests. And Jesus, came as servant, the very paradigm of hospitality. We are reminded of this selfless hospitality on Maundy Thursday, when we wash each others feet, and symbolically offer ourselves in service to each others. These Koreans, despite all their backwardness and general craziness, have retained something that we westerners have sadly lost.