Showing posts with label oldmailman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oldmailman. Show all posts

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Seoul Train! (email sent home on Jun. 12, 2008)


Each day here is the Seoul train... busy, rushing from "station to station", and with each of us westerners expected to be doing our signature "lineup dance" at each stop. Mark and Betty are the best at this! I personally tend to fumble along, not knowing what (or how) to say it, how to eat, or what is expected at any given moment of the frenetic day. Meanwhile, Mark is enunciating clearly to a group of clearly captivated Korean men (changing their ideas of tax law forever), whilst Betty is being featured on the national news, singing along with a Korean folk song she just learned, or else scattering ashes of Korean war dead from a podium and thanking the Korean audience for "welcoming us to your beautiful country".

Meanwhile, "Santa Claus" is asking directions to the bathroom, and walking in barefoot! ; NOT wearing the little special bathroom sandals that are the universal size 3, and forgetting to take the toilet paper into the stall, which is conveniently located near the front door of the toilet. While Mark hands out professional "name cards", carefull presenting them with both hands and bowing as expertly as the Buddah himself, the NOT-Bertrang, as I feel I am referred to as, drops his chop stick in the octopus au gratin, and is repeatedly given forks by concerned adults.

Actually, the Folk Song troupe that gave the presentation last night in front of the Art museum (I think that was what it was- it could have been Parliament, actually) was a high mark of this trip. First Mark was singled out by the announcer, then, Mark was singled out by the first performer. Then, audience members handed Betty and Mark bowls of rice wine, or something fermented, and vegetables to munch on. Later, the lady to the left of me handed me some rice cakes, so that I could hand them to Betty and Mark.

At the end of the show, the lead singer of the medley of Korea folk songs RAN to Betty, and had her sing the last folk song into the microphone!

It went like this: (exactly) "Nonny nonny ho! Heeny Hiney Ho! Honny Hey ron, jinny ro!"
(repeat)

Betty got it perfectly, and so they pulled her into the group, where all the traditionally dressed performers and Betty (who had luckily worn a recently purchased Korean traditional outfit that matched her eyes) danced around in a circle, singing the above song in unison, whilst the musicians beat out the rhythmn on drums and citherns. Betty added a few twists that I feel sure will be incorporated into the dance... then, they asked Mark to do the same thing, and he was even better! I tried to sidle away into the crowd, but Mark, miraculously spying my white, bearded head two feet above that of the others, grabbed me by the hand and pulled me into the circle!

It went on and on, and flashes from cameras were on us throughout. Mark & Betty seemed to have an unspoked agreement as to which way to jig, and which way to jog. They swayed, they spun, they Korean flash-danced. I resorted to walking as if I was in marching band, but tripped on the speaker wire every time I got near the front. I think the crowd liked it.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Korean drum club movie, and other photos

Sue Weber & Santa teach their first class in Korea

Ward and June Bertrang eat out in Korea
The OUMC Korean group looks for a death worm...

I am sample, here me roar!

Most photogenic Americans contest winner!
Here is the grade school drum club- wish I had the whole performance! (About 5 minutes long, at LEAST).

Thursday, July 3, 2008

At Teacher Chong's home

I believe we are in Daejeon City, on the 16th floor of Teacher Chong's apartment. I say "believe" because we have been moving so fast that it is hard to keep track!

No Wi-FI access for my laptop yet, so I'm using Teacher Chong's computer in his office, which was my bedroom last night! Finally figured out how to change from Korean Script on the screen, to English (via AOL!) Wow- I feel like an infant here; unable to do the simplest things, (like bring food to my mouth with steel chopsticks), or even run a computer. Even the toilets are high tech!

Taught English classes at the Hongdo elementary school yesterday in Incheon. Sue Weber and I did 3rd Grade, and went through the ABC's- fortunately, SHE had flash cards!

Very small class- small school; but we're told they'll build several tall apartments there this year that will hold thousands of people each. We saw cranes and construction everywhere!

Teacher Chong and his wife Pokee's (sp?) apartment is very nice- very large, spacious, and with a wonderful view of the city and the surrounding mountains. She spent all of last night making breakfast for us for today- I'm sure it will have:
meat
noodles
egg
vegetables
kim chee on the side, several variaties
fruit
and more vegetables and noodles

But maybe not...

I teach about 80 5th grade students today, with the help of Tess and Christina, Pastor Kim's daughters.

I hope they know what they're doing!

I'll try to add some photos now, but I'm not promising anything. And if this typing shows up as Korean woodcuts, well, go eat your kimchee!