Thursday, October 27, 2011

Across the River and Into the Trees

     This last weekend, Alice (Andrew's wife) called Ami and asked if we would be interested in going on a day trip to a mountain to see the fall foliage on Tuesday (Andrew and I had Mon-Wed off this week as the school is closed for the session change). I love Seoul so far, but the thought of getting out to see a little nature very much appealed to me, so we agreed and yesterday took a nice long road trip.
     They borrowed Alice's brother's car and about 10am picked us up at our place. Getting out of Seoul was a small challenge and we crossed the Han River twice, once going north and then coming back south, but we finally got our bearings and were soon heading east and into the mountains. Actually, I'm not so sure I should called them mountains. They were more like steep hills covered in trees. To me, mountains are formidable looking structures of nature and these looked more like bumps on the landscape. Some were large and steep but none of them rose very high and it looked as though a person in moderate physical condition could climb to the top of any of them in under half an hour. 
     The other interesting feature, this one regarding the highway, was that rather than turn and wind its way around these geological features, the road simply burrowed through them. There were a lot of tunnels, most of them several hundred meters long.
     As we passed over rivers and through tunnels and past the bumps, the trees began to thicken with some of them beginning to turn to the reds and yellows of fall and others clinging to their summer fashions. Alice and Ami spoke a lot of Korean with Andrew (he's fluent too) jumping in from time to time and at other times throwing out English to keep me informed of the topic at hand. I'm noticing that while I don't understand 99% of the words, there are some that I do and those coupled together with the context of the conversation and the English loan-words that Koreans use means I can, about 50% of the time, figure out at least what the subject being discussed is. This is something that I learned to do in Japan and it's fun to be back in the dark with a small flashlight again trying to figure out where I am. Of course, I do hope to learn more Korean in the weeks/months and possibly years to come. I haven't sat down to study yet, but starting tomorrow, life will begin the work/home routine and perhaps I can find time to do this.

Seoul is circled in green and our destination is in red (the red has been zoomed in on below).
(Click for larger images)
   
     Unbeknownst to me in the early moments of our journey, we were heading for a town called Sokcho (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sokcho). I was in the back seat having fun with the GPS feature on my new phone trying to find where we were and where we were going when I scrolled around a bit and found a large blank expanse--no roads, no rivers, no mountains, no place names. "Ah," I thought, "North Korea." And I showed my GPS map to Ami who found it slightly less interesting than me. 
     As you might have already figured out, we were more or less paralleling the DMZ which lay about 40 miles to the north while were were heading due east on highway 60. But once we turned onto the 46, we got to within about 14 miles of the border. I've watched quite a few documentaries on the hermit country and was quite excited to be in such close proximity to it--kinda like the way the you might get excited to see a dead body. North Korea holds such fascination with me mostly because I can't believe in this day and age that such a country exists, but there we were nearly within running distance of the place.
     Anyway, as we made our way to the east coast, Andrew mentioned something about Korean rest stops. Apparently, Korean rest stops were something to behold and he quite excitedly informed us that we would be stopping at one quite soon. A few minutes later, we were, indeed, pulling into one and I instantly remembered day three of my stay in Japan, when we drove from Tokyo to Kofu and the bus stopped at a rest stop. 
     I don't know if it's a continent-wide thing, but rest stops in Japan and Korea put American rest stops to shame. The Far East versions have bathrooms as big as a house, food courts with all sorts of delicious-looking dishes, coffee shops, and a store or two selling jackets, shoes, hats, socks, sunglasses and nearly any other necessity you suddenly remembered that your forgot when you packed this morning. So we stopped and had lunch. Ami and I went with the breaded and fried pork cutlet (tonkatsu for those of you who know the Japanese version) with udon soup, Alice went for the soup and kimbap (the Korean version of sushi minus the fish), and Andrew went for a hotdog because, he said, " I haven't had a hotdog in two years!" 
     After eating we hit the road again and about an hour later stopped at a smaller rest stop, this one containing a giant swing and two smaller ones. We all tried them out and were lucky not to be strong or skilled enough to go vertical, although Andrew and I tried.

Andrew tries to get some height while the girls try not to fall.

View from the swing.

     After a quick trip to the restroom and a shot of some energy drink that tasted a little like a cross between a RedBull and medicine, we were back in the car. The further east we got, the bigger the bumps became so that eventually I could call them mountains. The trees were still red and yellow in parts with many of them still green and the road eventually dipped down as we started our decent into Sokcho. Before we got all the way  into the town, however, we stopped one last time at a very small (and unimpressive by now) rest stop to take in the view.

This is what we stopped for although I took this shot from the road.

Andrew and I thought this sign a little funny. What were we supposed to be observing exactly?
     After the quick stop, we then drove the last twenty minutes into Sokcho. I guess before and during the Korean war, this town was part of North Korea. It wasn't until after the war that it was deemed part of South Korea. To me, however, it just looked like a medium-sized sleepy town with a colorful downtown and a fishing industry (from what I could tell). It was a little strange to be looking east out over the Pacific Ocean when just a couple weeks before I was sitting with Ray and Judy, drinking wine on the beach, and looking west out over the same ocean and I had one of those moments (again) when I realized how far I was from home.
     I say that I was looking out over the Pacific but in reality I was looking out over the Sea of Japan (or East Sea if you are Korean). This Sea of Japan/East Sea thing is quite funny to me. Basically, the entire world calls it the former while Koreans refuse to do this. I'm sure it goes back to the Japanese/Korean relationship and all the trouble between the two. I have seen it for myself in my many Korean students and Ami has told me herself that Korea still has ill feelings towards Japan--although I should mention that the two countries citizens, from what I've witnessed, get along quite well. But when it comes to things like baseball or the Olympics or the naming of large shared bodies of water, Korea feels quite slighted by much of the world and feels the need to make up for this by, all else being of some small significance, beating Japan in whatever game/challenge is at hand. It doesn't matter if Korea gets second-to-last place in the world in whatever venture it is being measured by so long as it is Japan that is in last place. This is why Korea still looks to the 2002 World Cup as cause for celebration when it got fourth place overall; a feat that Japan has never accomplished. On the other side of the spectrum, it is also why Korea felt such dismay over the 2009 World Baseball Classic when the final game went into extra innings and Japan beat Korea 5-3. Ami still can't stand the name Ichiro.

This is Sokcho. The red marks where we stopped to have a walk around. The yellow marks where we stopped for a meal (a zoom in on the yellow area below).
    Back to the trip, though. We stopped at one area in Sokcho to walk around a bit and then we drove up to another area for lunch. Lunch was interesting. I don't think I've ever had such fresh fish. As we walked up to the market/restaurant, we were (or rather Alice was) accosted by middle-aged ladies imploring us to stop and look at the fish we could buy and eat. At first we just passed them by and took a look around off the pier. Andrew and I watched some fish in the water and talked about what kind they might be--they were long, maybe 6-8 inches and very skinny. Soon, though, we went back to the ladies and Alice told them something and one of them set about gathering fish out of the holding tanks. She grabbed a plastic basket and reached into the tanks coming out with a fish each time. Each holding tank held a different variety of fish, some of which were quite strange looking. After she gathered about five or six, we all followed her into the building to where there were rooms. Inside the rooms were more ladies seated before a low table. The lady who had gathered the fish then gave the basket to the seated ladies and then took our money, about $45. The ladies in the room then, and much to my surprise although I guess I shouldn't have been, started cutting. These fish were alive, mind you. They had just been ripped from their tanks and were flopping about in the basket and now they were on a large cutting table being hacked to death--although perhaps hacked is the wrong word because these ladies cut them in a very methodical way and one that they were obviously very familiar with. Real pros with the blades, I tell you.
     Once the bloodshed was over, the ladies handed us the plastic tray upon which the raw fish was laid and we carried that and another tray upstairs to the eating area. The other tray, for your information, held a plastic bag of garlic and peppers, another one of lettuce, some styrofoam containers of different pastes (aka. dipping sauces), and another bag with the head of one fish and other various body parts that had not been so delicately cut and would not be eaten raw. These parts, I later found out, were to go into a soup which would be cooked at our table in a pot over a burner.
     When we got upstairs, we sat at a long table, a lady came over and spread out a plastic table cloth for us and we got to eating. This was all quite different from the Japanese way of eating sashimi (raw fish) in that there was a lot less fuss over presentation. Nothing was beautiful in any sort of aesthetic way. Basically, they hacked the fish to death, put it on a plastic tray, sat us at a large table in a room full of people doing the same thing, and we ate. I even had to get up to go get my own beer. But I will say this.....The fish was excellent.

This is the area where we stopped for a late lunch. The orange circle indicates where Andrew and I climbed a small hill for some photos. The red shows where we had lunch. 

The fish market and restaurant. The holding tanks are inside the little blue walls and are divided into sections. Each section holds a different species of fish.

The gathering of the fish. Notice the fish in the basket flopping about. Within 20 minutes, he and his friends were in my stomach.

She was a pro as she simply reached in and grabbed our lunch.

The variety of fish was rather impressive.

These ladies didn't want their picture taken for some reason, so I snuck one through the glass. They are cutting up the fish.

I was so impressed with the whole business that I forgot to take a photo when our meal began. Here it is after about five minutes of eating.
     After we ate more food than we should have, we left the place and headed out. The girls ran by a bank while Andrew and I climbed a long flight of stairs up to a structure that overlooked the ocean (see the yellow oval in the map above). We took a few pictures from up there and then we headed back down to meet the girls, grab the car, and head north. 

The pagoda-type thing we climbed the stairs up to.

A look back at the fish place we'd just eaten at.

Looking south down the coast.

West towards the town.

     For those of you so inclined, you might look at a map and find to see how close we were now going to get to North Korea. I did a little measuring and I believe we came within about eight miles. Good stuff.
     Our destination now was just north of a town called Goseong. Apparently, Kim Il Sung--the father of Kim Jong Il, the first leader of North Korea, also known as the "Great Leader", and still thought by many to be the leader of the country (although I would assume these are all brainwashed North Koreans)--used to have a vacation house in this area in the years between World War II and the Korean War.
     The house itself was no big deal aside from the look of the exterior. It looked like a castle at the top and was made of rocks and mortar. Really the only cool thing about it was the knowledge that Kim Il Sung and a young Kim Jong Il had stayed there. There was even a picture of the little guy sitting on the steps that we walked up to get up to the place. Inside the house, rather predictably, was a very small museum with large pictures and maps about the South/North relationship and all the strife that has gone along with it. I couldn't read anything but the pictures were pretty clear.
     Once we finished with the Kim house, we went to another vacation house, this one the small getaway of the first president of Korea after the war, Rhee SyngMan (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syngman_Rhee). He was a bit of a controversial figure but I don't think you can argue with the fact that he accomplished a lot in his life and was a pretty powerful man. The cottage itself was again no big deal, but the museum, which was up a few steps was better than the one for Kim Il Sung. There were artifacts that were apparently used by the guy: a pocket watch, a pair of gloves, and even one of those hot water plastic bags (which Andrew insisted was an enema bag), along with his books and various degrees from various universities. From what I could get from the whole experience and the very little I've read about the guy, he was a cross between George Washington, Richard Nixon with perhaps a little of Joseph Stalin thrown in, but I am sure that I am vastly oversimplifying it.
     After we finished with this place, we then made the long drive home. It was dark by this time and I couldn't see much out the windows of the car, so I just enjoyed my GPS a little more while Ami and Alice nodded off--Korean girls are pros at falling asleep wherever they are. We did stop at another rest stop on the way back and Andrew ate a hamburger out of a bag that looked absolutely nothing like the picture on the wall next to the price for it. While he and Alice ate, I watched a baseball game on the big screen HD that pitted the SK Wyverns against the Samsung Lions. I think it was game one of the KBO (Korean Baseball Organization) championship series. It had been a good day and a little baseball was a nice touch.

This is the area containing Kim Il Sung's vacation house. The ocean is to the right and the two lakes are to the left. North Korea is about eight miles to the left.

The stairs leading up to Kim Il Sung's vacation house.

At the top of the stairs is this picture. I would have never known the boy that the arrow points at had it not been for Ami who told me it was none other than a young Kim Jong Il.  

Kim Il Sung's vacation house.

And the view from the top.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

The Week in Review

     Finally made it to the weekend. It's Saturday and Ami took off for an old college friend's wedding. That leaves me in the apartment alone for the first time. I've got CNN on now and am munching on potato chips and having a beer.
     Had a good week at work. After a great night's sleep in Monday night, I felt good on Tuesday. I never really had jetlag at all. Just felt a little tired on Monday and then was well acclimated by Tuesday. I think my arrival time on Sunday had a lot to do with this. But anyway, work was good. Tuesday I did a few more observations of classes and then spent the afternoon talking to Greg and the other teachers and just getting to know the place a bit better. Wednesday I had to go to a local hospital for a health check and then was at work at 11 to watch a class before lunch and then at 3 I met with the computer guy, Ken, to go over what is so far the hardest part of the job, all the technology. Ken went over all the stuff with me and while I learned quite a bit, there is still more. A lot of stuff at this place gets done via computer:  office communication, student-teacher communication, the grades, the attendance, some lesson plans, some of the handouts used in class, and probably a lot of other stuff. We have four computer rooms for the students, every classroom has a computer for the teacher, and all the desks in the teachers' room have a computer. It's a very wired up place.
     Thursday I just went in and sat at my desk all day. It was the first day of testing for the students (each eight week session ends with two testing days), so I had a short meeting with one of the other teachers about the classes I will be teaching next week and then spent the day designing a few handouts, looking through the textbooks, and writing a bit here. And then Friday I went in and learned how the school grades the final papers students write during their writing test time. Depending on the level, students are given prompts and then have two hours to write an essay. After the time is up, the essays are collected and a team of four teachers set to reading them, agreeing on certain guidelines and giving them a score of 0-4 based on a rubric. It's a very efficient way to grade the papers and I think it's more fair to the students than it is when just one teacher reads them.
     In addition to all the reading, we had a small potluck for the teachers and staff. I was asked to bring a bottle of wine and some of the others brought the same and food. I think I will get used to that part of the job. Anyway, was a good week with me learning a lot about my new place of employment.
     Ami was busy too. She ordered a lot of stuff for our place and it's all been showing up during this last week. Pots and pans, a rug, two chairs that sit on the floor, a fan, drawers for clothes, etc. She also got the gas guy to come and hook us up, the internet and cable guys to do the same, and talked to the landlady about a few issues in the apartment. So all in all, we are getting settled in.
     Last night Ami and I went out to a place called K-Texas. Was a bar/restaurant that is about a 2-minute walk from our place. I'm not really sure why it's got the name it does as the food was Korean but I did order a Texas beer which I think was nothing more than a Korean lager in a medium sized mug. They did have Guinness (which is NOT from Texas, by the way) but it was a lot more expensive than the Texas beer, so I went with that.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

All Quiet on the Eastern Front

     So let's go back to that walk I was taking to work at the beginning of the last post.
 
     I got up on Monday after being in bed for about 6-7 hours but sleeping probably just 4-5. I'm not sure but I might have been too tired to sleep. Either that or the new environment and the fact that a certain cat was bouncing around the room were probably contributors to a rather unrestful night. I don't know. But I got up around 7am and unpacked a little. I then decided it was time to take a shower and was not so pleasantly amused to find that getting hot water was not as simple as just turning on the faucet and moving the lever to the left.
     Some of you might remember that my first shower in Japan was a cold one because I couldn't get the flame started to heat the water. Well, it turns out that my first shower in Korea was also a cold one. Ami got up and told me that what I thought was a thermostat on the wall behind the tv was rather a control to turn on the floor heater (more about this later--in another post, most likely) and to also turn on the water heater. So we turned it on and tried the water....nothing. Then we turned it to a different position...nothing. Then again...nothing. All of this was taking time, of course, and I didn't want to show up to work late, so I said some expletive that I will let you imagine and told her I'd just wash my head in the cold water. So I did and then grabbed my backpack and took off.
     Armed with just a memory of the maps I showed you below and the location of the sun, I started walking. I knew I had to go north and west and I knew that I could probably get there in about a half hour. As a runner I am intimately familiar with how long it takes me to run and walk certain distances.  So I headed to the main street north of my apartment, took a left and walked until I could see a park to the north between the buildings. I then crossed the street, walked up a side street and followed the perimeter of the park until it put me on a somewhat busy road.  All was going well until I got to another major road and thought something was wrong. From memory I thought that my school was just before the next major road. "Hmmm," I thought, "Maybe I need to head west until the next major road." So I headed west but was disappointed not to find my school where I thought it might be.
     As I had left with an hour to spare and thinking that it would take about 30 minutes to walk there, I knew I had time to figure this out. So I looked around and took a deep breath and tried to figure out what I was doing wrong. It was then I remembered the laptop in my backpack and the maps that I had posted below saved on a file in "my documents". So I stopped at a short wall, set the laptop on it, and found the images. "Ah ha. I needed to go more north after the park." Turns out that my school isn't at the first major intersection but the second one. So I went back and corrected my mistake.
     Ten minutes later I was walking into the building and up the stairs. The school is located on the 4th and 5th floors of what looks like an office building and as I walked up to the front desk, I reminded myself of all the time and effort and money it took to get this job so that I could live this adventure. And now, I was finally walking in to my new place of employment. Job well done.
     A few minutes after telling the receptionist that I was there to see Greg, he came out and we finally met--after months of emails. He seemed like a good guy and we went into his office to talk some more. We talked of my flight over and the apartment for a little while and then turned our attentions to the job. He then gave me a tour of the school introducing me to people along the way. I met a few teachers, some of the staff, and said hi to a few of the students who looked at me with curious looks in their eyes.
     At noon Greg asked me if I'd like to go to lunch so we went across the street to a small Vietnamese place where I had curry noddles and after that we came back and I went to observe two classes. Both classes went well and I came away from them thinking that there were many similarities to the school in San Jose I'd just come from: students the same age, classes about the same size, the feel of the place pretty much the same, and even some of the same textbooks. All in all it seemed like to was going to be an easy transition.
     After another short meeting with Greg, I took off to walk home. This time I didn't take any wrong turns and was home in about 30 minutes. Upon my arrival, Ami informed me that the problem with the hot water was that we had no gas coming into the apartment. She had somehow figured this out during the day and had the gas guy come by to get things up and running. So we both took a hot shower and then headed out. Ami had gotten herself a cellphone while I was at work and we both walked down to get me one--my first smart phone. It's got all sorts of apps, most of which are rather useless to me as they are in Korean, but perhaps I'll learn enough Hangul to understand them someday. In the meantime, I enjoy the GPS, subway, weather, and chat apps.
     After we got home, we ordered a pizza and I had one of the beers that my school put in my fridge (a gesture that didn't go unnoticed by me). And that was the end of my first full day in Korea. A good day methinks.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Welcome to the (urban) Jungle

     Monday as I was walking to work, I almost punched myself in the face to see if I was dreaming. As I looked around and saw signs in Hangul (the Korean script), and Asian faces everywhere, and tall buildings, and street vendors cooking food, and tiled sidewalks, and smelled all the different aromas (some good, some less than so), I couldn't believe where I was and it felt great to be back in Asia.
     The plane ride over was rather uneventful. The only interesting part came when Ami and I were going through security at SFO. We had both taken off our shoes, emptied our pockets, taken our laptops out of their bags, and put everything into those grey trays. As we got close to the x-ray machine, I leaned in to get the security guard's attention, "Uh, we have a cat and how do we get her through?" The lady looked a little surprised as if this wasn't something she'd ever heard before. 
     "Well," she paused to think, "can you take her out of the bag and hold her and walk through so that we can scan the bag?" 
     I was surprised by this and said, "Hold her and walk through?" 
     "Yes," she answered, "We need to scan the bag. Will it (the cat) let you do that?" 
     "I can try," I said while I opened up the carrier, scruffed the cat (Stella is her name) by the neck and pulled her out.
     Ami looked a little shocked by this turn of events and I instinctively drew on my years of working at vet hospitals to control Stella as she and I walked through the scanner and waited for the bag to come through the x-ray machine. Good thing the scanner didn't go off as she and I walked through as the guard probably wouldn't have known what to do. Once Stella was back in her carrier, Ami and I grabbed our stuff and we moved on to find the gate.
     The rest of the trip was rather uneventful until we got to Incheon (the airport that serves Korea). Ami and I had to split up to pass through immigration as we hold different passports. On the other side of immigration we reconnected, found our bags, and then Ami had to take Stella over to a pet claims area while I waited with all our luggage. Once Stella was cleared for entry, we exited out to join the general public where Andrew was waiting for us. It was good to see him and he directed us towards the bus area and within 15 minutes or so, we were all riding the bus into Seoul.
     I have to say that through all of this it never hit me that I was really in another land so far away from home. When I went to Japan, I remember being both intellectually and emotionally aware of my situation. But for some reason, though I was intellectually aware, I didn't really feel much. I'm not sure if this is because it's the second time I've moved overseas or because I wasn't as nervous as I was before or both or something else, but walking through the airport and riding the bus into Seoul didn't grab me as much as it had when I went to Japan. Don't get me wrong, though. I was (and am) happy to be here. It just doesn't feel like I've gone so far this time.
     Perhaps it did start to hit me a little though when we started getting into Seoul. The first thing I think any foreigner will notice when he/she travels to a place where a foreign language is spoken is the signs. I started seeing bright signs in Hangul and I knew I wasn't in America anymore--though perhaps I could have been in Cupertino. The signs and some of the architecture looked a little different and the names of places written in the English alphabet that I could read were a bit different: Mr. Pizza, Joe's Sandwich, Family Mart, etc. Of course, some of them were the same: Starbucks, 7-11, Burger King, and a few more.
     After we got into Gangnam, we got off the bus and met Andrew's wife, Alice. Alice is the name she goes by, but she is Korean. Because of all the luggage, we had to get two taxis and then we rode to my new neighborhood. I'm not sure if I'm going to explain completely correctly, but I'll try. Let's start big. I (and you) live on planet Earth. Then we can take it down a notch and say Asia (for me, not you). Then down to Korea, and Seoul, and Gangnam and finally Samsung. So I live in a neighborhood called Samsung which is inside a district called Gangnam which is in a city called Seoul and on and on. You get the idea.
     So we got into Samsung and the drivers let us all out on a street corner near my place, but as none of us had any idea of the exact location and as addresses work differently here, we'd now have to look around a little--which wouldn't have been so hard except that it was dark. Alice went off one way and I went off another and as the numbers started to get closer to ours I figured I was on the right track and indeed I was. Within a couple minutes I located the building and then went back to collect everyone and the luggage.
     Andrew had the combination to our place. Yes, I said combination. Our place has no key. There is a door to the building where you have to put in a code to enter the building and then there is another code to enter our apartment. It's nice not to have to carry a key and it will be really nice not to have to go running with one.
      So we got up to the apartment and had a look around. It's quite simple really. Just a large room with an adjoining bathroom and another small space where the washing machine is. There is no balcony and no other rooms. But it's not bad for now. Ami and I (and Stella) will live in relative coziness here.
     The good thing--the BEST thing--about the place is the location. We are close to so many things that we basically just have to step out the door and we are there, wherever there is. On Monday when I was at work, Ami left the apartment to go to her bank (she already had an account in Korea) and to get a cell phone and didn't have to walk more than 300 meters, I'd wager. The subway and bus stops are probably a two-minute walk. The large COEX shopping mall is a three-minute walk. My job is a bit further as it takes thirty minutes to walk to, but it's certainly walking distance. I haven't stepped on a subway or bus yet and I probably won't until this weekend. Tonight I went to the local 7-11 to get a beer, a 150 meter jaunt, and passed three restaurants and a bar. Gonna have to check out the bar soon and see if it's a place I can duck into from time to time.
     Anyway, after we dropped off our luggage (and Stella), Andrew and Alice took Ami and I to an E-Mart, something akin to a Target crossed with a supermarket, and we got a few things and then went over to their place for a beer and fried chicken. Andrew and I talked about the job while Ami and Alice talked about where to shop.  Was a nice comfortable first evening in Korea.
    Have more but think I'll end this here. More tomorrow.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

You are cleared for takeoff

     Quick rundown of the last few days....Tuesday, as I mentioned before, I went to SF armed with a visa number and a number of other documents and applied for the visa. Wednesday, I worked hard to get the car cleaned up and ready to sell, got boxes packed up to ship, and bought my friend in Korea a few things he requested as well as a few things I'll be needing. Thursday, I drove back to SF to get the visa, mailed the boxes, and packed suitcases. Friday (today), I drove to Modesto to sell the car, drove a rental car back to San Jose, canceled insurance and cell phone, ran to the bank to get my finances in order, and met Ray and Judy for a last hurrah dinner. Tonight I sleep at Ami's place with her and her mother (not in the same room, of course) And in the morning we go to SFO and then at 12:15, the Korean Air Boeing 777 should be rolling into position for takeoff. I will write again in a few days from Korea.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Don't Eat My Visa!

     Last night I was sitting here with Ray flipping back and forth between the Bears/Lions Monday night game and game 2 of the NLCS (Cardinals/Brewers) when I checked my email and found a note from Korea which contained my visa number. I contained my joy for a few minutes thinking of all the stuff I'd now have to get done. Then I told Ray and we toasted to the beginning of the end in this marathon visa process.
     A few minutes later I was filling out the visa application I printed a week ago and then got all the stuff together that I needed to take to the San Francisco Korean consulate: the number, the application, a consulate checklist, a heath check form, a copy of my degree, a sealed copy of my transcripts, my passport, a passport photo, a copy of my driver's license, and forty-five bucks. 
     Ami and I drove up to the consulate today where we had an interesting experience in that it was completely uninteresting. I thought I'd probably have an interview with questions like "Why do you want to move to Korea?" and "Do you enjoy teaching English?" and "How long to you think you'll be there?" and perhaps "How do you feel about Kim Jong Il?" But there was no interview and no such questions. Instead, I walked up to the window that said "Visas" and upon my request for a visa was met with "It's three minutes until lunch so give me your forms quickly." 
     As I didn't want to make the woman hungry (and therefore angry--what is it about hunger that makes the female also experience anger?), I handed over my forms and paid the money and was told to come back on Thursday after one to get my passport and visa. And that was that. I'm pretty sure I could have had a gun and she would have told me that I was cutting in to her lunchtime. 
     Anyway, I will go back Thursday and get the visa. In the meantime, Ami and I have booked a flight for Saturday. Lots of stuff to do in the next three days, but if all goes well, I will be arriving in Korea on Sunday evening (Korea time) and heading off to the new job on Monday. 

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Location Location Location

This is Seoul. I've circled the area I will live and work in. This area is called Gangnam.
(You can click the pics for larger images)
Zoomed in a bit here. In the upper northwest corner of the circle is where I will be working. In the lower southeast corner is where I'll be living.
Workplace in yellow. Residence in red. And baseball in green!
This is my school/workplace, GNUCR (Gangnam University of California).
I'm not exactly sure, at this point, which one of these is my building, but I'm pretty sure one of them is where I'll be living.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The Home Stretch

     Had my last day at Golden Gate Language School yesterday. Been there almost six years. Goodbyes have been a big part of my life, I guess.
   
     So the fun continues. Last Monday, Greg sent me an email informing me that he had taken my papers to the proper authorities and that they had informed him that it could take up to two weeks to get me the visa number. Greg said he hadn't thought it would take so long and apologized that my arrival to Korea might have to be put back a few days or even a week. Although this was a little disappointing to me, my real concern was Ami.
Ami has been in the US on a student visa and for the last year she's been going to a local junior college. Because we were both planning on leaving next week, she went into the college just after the new quarter got underway and withdrew. As she wanted to get the full refund she needed to withdraw by Sept 30th. So she did and they informed her that because she withdrew, her visa status was no longer valid and...more importantly...that she'd have to leave the country by Oct 15th. At the time this seemed about perfect. But when Greg informed me of the above, I did the math and found that I might get a visa until about Oct 18th-19th. No big deal, I thought, if Ami is a few days late in leaving....right?
     Well, I did a little research and it looks that if she stays longer, she could jeopardize any future visas she might need to apply for. So...better to let her go by the 15th and I'll just get there a few days later. But wait. There's more.
     As the job is my job and as the contract for the job was signed by me, I wondered if Ami could live somewhere until I got there. So I called her and she, quite firmly, reminded me that she would be with her cat and that it would be much more difficult and stay with a friend or her brother because of this. Really I think it could be done, but I understand. I wouldn't want to burden a friend or family member with a pet either after they've already opened their doors to me. So I emailed Greg and told him that while the whole situation was no one's fault and that while it was a little disappointing to potentially be delaying my arrival, my true concern was that Ami and her cat would be homeless for a few days. He got back to me very quickly to put my fears at ease and told me that she could stay in the apartment without me until I got there. Situation resolved.

     Other than that things are moving forward. I moved out of my apartment three weeks ago and have been living with my Uncle Ray and Aunt Judy down near Santa Cruz. It's been great and they've been spoiling me with food and drink and accommodation. As I mentioned before I got the apostilled FBI CBC a few weeks ago and took that, the apostilled bachelor's degree, my resume, a copy of my passport, two pics of me, and three copies of a signed contract and sent them all off to Greg. That's what he took to the Korean authorities and what I am waiting on now. As soon as I get the visa number, I will then have to take it, a visa application, my degree, college transcripts, my passport, and a photo of me up to the Korean consulate in San Francisco and get the real visa put into my passport. I believe this takes about a day. I will then book a flight and head out. Couple other loose ends to tie up here too while all that is going on, but no need to bore you with more details.

     Almost there, I guess.