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Weddings: What's Not to Like?

I hadn't been sick in well over a year. When 2010 rolled in, bringing with it my first bout of the flu since first moving to Korea, I was due. Cold or flu? Whichever, it was my turn. I have no qualms about starting off the year on my ass. Again. It happens.

I've been very accepting of the fact that sometimes, even I get sick, since I woke up with this last Saturday. I've been very patient. I slept away the entire weekend, took vitamins, ate soup, and even enjoyed the down time a little bit. Not that this did me any good. My cold, flu, or whatever has stretched its way through another weekend. This time, I'm not enjoying the down time quite so much. As I took in episode after episode of The Sopranos today (Season1 - I'm new to the series. Apparently I wasn't around last decade), a friend of mine was getting married in Daegu.

I absolutely love weddings. Good food. People looking slightly better than they usually do. Happiness. Hope. Me, drunk. What's not to love? I will never understand how anybody could hate weddings. I'll pass on lengthy ceremonies and picking up the tab, but the rest? Yes, please.

As much as it bothers me that I had to miss it, I'll take this moment to be less self centred than usual and realize that the wedding surely went on gloriously, even without me hiding in the back corner; I can be happy knowing that some folks I know just had one of the best days of their lives.

Congratulations to Diana and Min Gi!

2009 KSPP Fall Meeting, 1st Japan-Korea Joint Symposium

The highlight of grad student life, apart from graduation, is when you get to go to a conference. The idea of a conference is to present your work and see what others have been up to. Although the tangible benefits of conferences are difficult to measure, to even question whether they are worthwhile or not is taboo. The reasons are threefold, (1) It's an excuse to travel (2) It's paid for by your academic institution and (3) There's drinking involved.

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The first conference I ever went to was to Ballarat in Australia, which was pretty good. Recently I went to my second conference here in Korea, for the 2009 Korean Society of Plant Pathologists fall meeting, and the 1st symposium between Japan and Korea. We went to Kimpo airport in the morning and teamed up with our lab colleagues from Daejeon and Sejong University.

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One of the things Se-Kyung likes to do, constantly, is take photos of herself on her camera phone. It's quite common in Korea, for girls especially. I do find the behaviour somewhat curious, but it seems to keep them happy.

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And this is Se-Kyung's reaction when she realises I've been documenting her unusual behaviour.

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This is me, wandering around the poster displays with my complimentary symposium paraphenalia. The conference was held on Jeju Island, which is Korea's version of Australia's Tasmania.
Or America's Hawaii.
Scientists will create posters for displaying their unpublished work at meetings. Usually they're crammed with details and a lot of effort is put into their creation. And then when they're on display, people just wander past them, and you might be lucky to have one or two people who are remotely interested.

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I made an effort to network, but it's pretty difficult when most people are working on things that you don't know much about. The sciences in general become very specific to the point where only people in a very narrow field will be able to understand your particular project in any detail. I met a virologist from Tokyo University and we struck up a conversation. But it's hard to keep the ball rolling when you get a sentence like "Yeah, I've been studying post-transcriptional gene silencing in TBSV for 7 years now."

The correct response to that sentence, which I appropriately gave, was "Really?"

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Here's our professor eating with Professor Moon from Daejeon. The predominating topics of conversation between two such quirky intellectuals range from future project funding to the work of colleagues who I've never heard of.

Not that I would think of eavesdropping on two academics in the midst of feeding.

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And this is my plate. The problem with buffets is that because they have everything to choose from, you never know what to choose.

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We regularly woke up at 6am, which professors seem to be fond of. It had been a while since I saw the sun come up.

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Here are the combined lab groups of SNU, Daejeon and Sejong University at the base of Mount Halla. We all get along pretty well, although our work is only loosely related.

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We climbed Mt Halla, the tallest mountain in South Korea, which ended up taking us around 7 hours for the round trip. In the photo above is Jae-Eun on the left and Professor Jwa on the right. They're from Sejong University and I go to their lab every once in a while to use their microscopy equipment. Their lab group is one of my favourites because they're friendly and helpful.

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This is Eun-Hye. She exercises in the gym regularly during the week, so when we go hiking she's usually walking up in front somewhere.
Back when I was in the Scouts, we used to designate a 'Tail-End Charlie', whose job it was to walk slowest and make sure no one gets left behind. So as long as you could see the Tail-End Charlie, you knew that everyone was still close by.

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Mount Halla is a massive shield volcano that erupted thousands of years ago. The hike up to the top is worthwhile, but it will take you a day to complete and probably 2 days to recover from the ordeal. The mountain is a cultural icon and a popular tourist destination so the local council have been constructing walkways that make the climb a little easier.

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I carried up four litres of water, due in no small part to my hiking experiences in Australia. But the weather was freezing cold and I ended up bringing 3 litres back down with me.

Better safe than sorry, as my old man used to say.

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What do you do when you get to the top of a mountain? Look around for 2 minutes and then take a group photo.

The foremost reason being so that you can have fun in the lab later, tagging everyone on Facebook.

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Here's Eun-Hye, Se-Kyung and me. In the lab they often talk to me in Korean, a little too fast. I'm lazy with languages, so often I can't keep up with what they're saying. When I don't concentrate properly, they sound to me like clucking chickens.

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We all brought up a dosirak (Korean lunchbox). It had a whole fish in it, and some dried squid and other unidentifiable things. When you've been walking for so long, you lose the motivation to question otherwise questionable food.

Which reminds me of an old Indian proverb "To the man who hasn't eaten in three days, the only god is bread."

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My friend Hong is getting into photography these days, which reminded me of the times when I used to be a bit of an amateur photographer as well. To get some nice photos, you just have to be in the right place at the right time. Tree branches against the sky always work pretty well. I like the way they appear as some kind of distorted organic fractal pattern.

Fractals occur when you have simple repeating patterns, which can actually be expressed as a maths formula. The reason we see them in nature is because crystal lattices, snowflakes and even DNA are bound at a very fundamental level by simple mathematical rules. At the heart of all applied sciences is the most purest form of logic, which is mathematics.

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Sang-Min from Daejeon was also keen to be involved in photography. He wanted to pose on this rock, so I told him to point at the sky to add a dramatic atmosphere.

Didn't really turn out the way I expected though.

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And this is a bear next to a slippery dip. Nothing unusual here.

Moving along.

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That night we went fishing. Fishing is one of my official hobbies, although I've only been about three times in my life. One day, when I have time, I think I'll buy a nice little boat and go fishing on Sundays. In the photo above is Yun-Seong, from Sejong University. He's a nice guy and we once ate barbecued intestines together.

Anyway, Part II of our conference in Jeju coming soon!

Question from a reader: layover in Seoul

A reader named J.B. writes in
A friend and I will have a 10 hour layover at the airport in South Korea. Do you know of anyone who could pick us up at the airport, guide us to some of the sites, and return us to the airport?

We are in our 60s and want to see the area. We are retired teachers from Tennessee.
I'm afraid I don't know of anyone with a car - I wish I did at times! - but here are a couple ideas.

Step one: an International Taxi. A new service offered by the Seoul City Government, you can reserve a taxi and English-speaking driver in advance for the day at http://www.internationaltaxi.co.kr/ (click on English, hover over 'Service' at the top, then click on 'Seoul Tour'). The rate for 8 hours worth of taxi driving / sightseeing is 125,000 Korean won (about $107 US dollars), which doesn't include the minimal admission fees to the respective places (usually no more than a couple dollars per person).

Step two: public transportation around Korea is excellent. Given 10 hours (save one or so for getting checked in and through security before your flight out), one could easily take the AREX (a train connecting Incheon to Seoul) and see a number of sights. I wrote not too long ago about what to see if you only had 24 hours in Seoul - feel free to pick and choose from there.

While seeing more than the largest highlights of Seoul requires more than 10 hours, I suspect you'll get a nice taste of the area - and discover enough things to make a second, longer trip. Have fun!

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2009

This post was originally published on my blog, Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.

 

Open Thread #3


I may be wrong in assuming that public service announcements in Western countries still don’t feature stylized breasts and vaginas(?),  but regardless I love Korea’s no-nonsense attitudes to the body and bodily functions, in this case at least easily trumping any qualms that the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs (보건복지가족부) may have had about featuring them in its campaign for people to get regularly checked for cancer.

What I really love though, is that it has been turned into the song and dance below:

Easily to laugh at perhaps, but are more serious but otherwise rather dull campaigns in Western countries really more effective?

Meanwhile, apologies to all those readers who were looking forward to my promised restarting of the Korean Gender Reader series in the new year,  but after much soul-searching this week – prompted by my catching a cold after writing the last two posts until the small hours – I’ve been forced to admit that I still don’t have the time. I may have next month if some anticipated changes are made to my job, but until then, please feel free to pass on and discuss any Korean gender, media and sexuality-related stories yourselves here!

Update - Seeing as we’re talking about Korean oddities, consider the following advertisement for a cosmetic surgery clinic here in Busan:

From page 18 of the 4th of January Busan edition of Focus newspaper – the entertainment section no less. And don’t get me wrong: with the proviso that Noblesse has a vested interest in fostering insecurities about one’s body image, I’d image that female-like breasts are no laughing matter for the high-school boys with the misfortune of having them.

It is also common for Korean cosmetic surgery clinics to use comics in their advertisements, one that readily comes to mind consisting of a group of people gaping in either awe, lust, or jealousy at a woman who has just received breast implants. You may have seen it on the Seoul subway:

Thanks to reader Marilyn for passing on the photo. And again it is unsophisticated perhaps, but regardless of one’s opinion of cosmetic surgery in general, it was probably effective: it got both Marilyn’s and my own attentions at least!

Granted that the Noblesse advertisement remains just plain bizarre though, albeit a little less so when you realize that the woman featured was either the school nurse or a visiting government health inspector, not simply a new teacher.

Finally, while we’re on the subject of cartoons, here’s one I couldn’t help smiling at a couple of days later (from Focus newspaper again):

In case you don’t get it, the young man is living with his older sister but has to find his own place. At first, he thinks the place the real estate agent shows him is too old for the rent being asked, but he changes his mind when he sees the view from his window. In the final panel, the real estate agent crumbles about how difficult his job is these days…

More problematic in Japan than in Korea perhaps, where I hear that voyeurism is so taken for granted that women can expect their underwear to be stolen if it is hung from the first or even the second floor, or is that just an exaggeration? Alternatively, is it a problem in Korea too?

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Posted in Korean Advertisements, Korean Media, Korean Men's Body Images, Open Threads Tagged: Breast Enlargements, Breasts, Cosmetic Surgery, 만화, 가슴, 보건복지가족부, 성형수술, 여성형유방증, 유방, Manhwa, Ministry for Health Welfare and Family Affairs
  

 

Koreabridge Live - Discussion w/ Jeff Martinez

 

Koreabridge Live
 
January 6, 2010
A Discussion with Jeff Martinez of Becoming Adventure about video projects, helmet mic's, and pine beatles.  

Chat Log Below
 

<--break->


05:46sun jongcan i ask one question about guest~~

05:46sun jongwho is the guest.. kind of job... age

05:46sun jongkind of that?

05:46sun jong^^

05:49sun jongreally?

05:49sun jongyou look about 27..

05:50sun jongyou'r lucky~

05:50sun jongi also ride motocycle..

05:53jefferyi changed my name

05:53sun jongare you live in korea mr broadcaster..?

05:53jefferywhy wasn't I allowed to have 'way****' as a nickname

05:53jefferythe conga player

05:54jefferyoh

05:54jefferythats my handle

05:54jeffery:)

05:54kiteboarderyo

05:55jefferyhe's a minor

05:55kiteboarderban jeffery

05:55jefferyhaha

05:56jefferykiteboarder is John?

05:57kiteboarderlies

05:57jefferyi was just guessing....it was a long shot

05:57texaswhat are you chatting about today?

05:58texassounds cool, thanks :)

05:58texaswhos jeff? and what does he do?

05:58sun jongI want show my pic..to friunds...

05:58sun jonghttp://blogfiles14.naver.net/20091215_77/tjfxkd123_1260854113906_9JNYO0_jpg/DSCN1703.jpg

05:59sun jonghaha..

05:59jefferyPusan, New Hampshire! Wow

05:59_AEYA_hello...

06:00_AEYA_MAY I JOIN??

06:00jefferysure

06:01_AEYA_THANKZ

06:01kiteboarderI have a Go Pro hero cam.... its unreal for mounting to your motorcycle

06:02kiteboarderuse the GOPRO vibration is not a problem

06:02_AEYA_ARE YOU GUYS KOREAN??

06:03jefferymost of us are foreigners...except sun jong

06:03_AEYA_OIC

06:03_AEYA_SAME GOES TO ME

06:03jefferyand you AEYA?

06:03_AEYA_IM FOREINGNER

06:03_AEYA_FROM MALAYSIA

06:03_AEYA_HOW BOUT U??

06:03jefferycool...welcome

06:04jefferyCanadian

06:04_AEYA_THANKZ

06:04_AEYA_OIC

06:04kiteboarderGOPROhas helmet mounts too...

06:08kiteboarderI have footage of my GOPRO on my motorcycle... It also comes in HD...

06:08JLgot a link

06:08JL?

06:09kiteboarderi dont have it loaded on line yet

06:22sun jonganyway it's too cold to rede moto

06:22JLhttp://brandjeff.com/

06:25nice.star80hi

06:26nice.star80hello

06:26JLhello

06:26nice.star80any person here from busan?

06:26kiteboarderWhat video editing software do you use

06:26jefferybusan rules

06:28kiteboarderI use to use premier back in the day when I had a pc... its pretty good

06:29kiteboardergopro has HD.. and its dirt cheap

06:29JLskype koreabridge----------7361

06:30kiteboarderright now im trying to get into making kiteboarding videos... ive made one amateur one at dadaepo beach but im collecting more footage to make a better one

06:35tharp42arirang TV?

06:36tharp42they hold this big ass kite/parachute thing while strapped onto a small surf board

06:36tharp42I saw it in Vietnam, it was crazy

06:37JLhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dd6I3AR0R5Y

06:39tharp42old man strength!

06:42JLskype 'koreabridge' or call----------7361 to join in

06:55kiteboarderhttp://www.goprocamera.com/

No plans this weekend? 2S2 features a great duo

This Saturday's 2S2 will feature the tag-team of Dan from Seoul Eats and Rob from Roboseyo: (copied and pasted from Roboseyo's post on this month's 2S2):
The Seoul Eats Meetup will be at noon in Insadong. There's a dumpling restaurant there with nice ddeok soup, a traditional new year's meal. Then, at 2, we'll head to twosome place to gather anybody who's there, and depending on the group size, we'll either head for a nifty tea room somewhere nearby to have some nice Korean teas, or (if the group is smaller) boot up the road to a little place with amazing warm, spiced wine. Once there, we'll have a book exchange. Bring the books you're done with, and trade them in for ones you haven't read yet. We're not fussy about genres... but I know I plan on bringing three or four books, to give my friends a little more choice. I'm also planning on bringing my set of Gostop cards, so that we can have another session of either learning, or playing the game.
If you find yourself in the Wonju area (that's Gangwon-do to you Seoul / Busan / Daegu / Incheon folk), then check this weekend's 2S2 meeting, led by Danielle from Tuesdays Borrower (AKA Wonju Wife). They're planning to go ice skating and get some coffee afterwards.

Think of 2S2 as a great way to meet some fellow expats once a month - especially some of the more experienced expats that have called Korea home for years. It's a great chance to meet many of the expats interested in forming a community - the sort of community that forms when people genuinely want to meet and help each other out.

Questions? Feel free to e-mail myself (chrisinsouthkorea AT gmail DOT com) or Rob (roboseyo AT gmail DOT com).

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010

This post was originally published on my blog, Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.

Life in Korea: getting around rural Korea by bus

Author's note: 'Life in Korea' posts are aimed at the newer expats among us. If you have a more experienced perspective, comments are open!

Whoever had "half the fun is getting there" hasn't yet had the pleasure of getting around the smaller towns and cities of Korea. The good news is that all but the tiniest areas around Korea will have a bus terminal (and quite a few have train stations as well), it's up to you to make sense of the bus schedules. It doesn't help that the schedules - and prices - are written almost entirely in Korean, and sometimes updated by hand. You can get from point A to point B - just expect it to take a bit longer than it might if you were going to one of Korea's larger cities. The reward is getting to see the off-the-beaten-path places that few other foreigners get to see.

In the ideal world, bus systems would deliver you to the precise place you're going without worrying about where else the bus stops along the way. You wouldn't need fear about getting off a bus in a strange city with no clear indication that you're in the wrong place because your bus driver would look at your ticket and tell you. In reality, you're likely to be one of the only schmucks on the bus that doesn't get it. Unless you speak conversational Korean or better, any announcements are likely to fly right over your head.

Step one: know your destination. Most smaller cities will have one bus terminal, usually named after the city (si) or county / area (gun). Some smaller cities will have their express (시위) and intercity (시내) buses leaving from the same terminal, while others will have two seperate terminals in the same area. Larger cities will often have multiple bus terminals, so pay attention to the name as well as the city. In Seoul, you have the Express Bus Terminal (sometimes called 'Gangnam'), the Nambu Bus Terminal, the Dong Seoul Bus Terminal (sometimes called 'East Seoul' or 'Gangbyeon'). Don't assume that there is a bus that connects point A to point B - in most cases there will be, but your journey may need more than one leg to make it work.

Step two: pay attention to the schedule. While not always accurate down to the minute, it'll tell you how many buses run between point A and point B. If there's only X buses a day, it makes more sense to be at the terminal for the bus of your choice. If buses leave for your destination every X minutes, you can relax a bit more - if you miss this bus there will be another one along before too long.

It's worth noting that bus schedules don't always precisely line up. In other words, getting from A to C means you may have a layover at B - sometimes for an hour or more. Pass the time with some cards or a book - at the smaller terminals, there isn't much to see or do.

Step three: pay attention to the RETURN schedule. On more than one occasion this traveler has gotten stranded by not paying attention to the RETURN schedule. In other words, the last bus leaving XYZ bus terminal for ZYX destination is, say, 6pm; if it's not posted, ask about the last bus coming back to said terminal from said destination. Failure to do this means either hitchhiking with a kind-hearted Korean or an expensive taxi ride, if there's even one around to hail.

Step four: note any stops the bus makes along the way. Unless it explicitly says 'non-stop', assume the bus will have more than one stop - and know which one you're getting off at. Few things in life are as much fun as staying on the bus too long (and paying the difference in ticket prices) or getting off too early (and having to wait for another bus). If it's a non-stop, peek at the front bus window before getting on. The buses usually have the destinations in the order they stop (only in Korean, of course). You can also ask the person you bought the tickets from, but few I've met have spoken more than a tiny bit of English.

Step five: know your kinds of buses. While comfort may not always be a high priority, the first-class buses (우등, or u-deung) are mixed in with the standard-class buses (일반, or il-ban) on the schedule board. The former can cost about 25%-30% more, but typically come with a wider throne and more legroom. You won't be offered any drinks or snacks, however and the route is precisely the same. If traveling at night, the midnight buses are typically priced at a premium above first-class.

Finally, I've yet to ride a bus that had restrooms on board, so take care of that business before you leave. Most longer bus rides (e.g. 4 hours or longer) will have a rest stop along the highway - great places to stock up on snacks or drinks, get an actual meal, or just use the restroom before moving on. Whether stated or not, most bus drivers give about 10 minutes - don't be the last one on.


Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2009

This post was originally published on my blog, Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.

What's Cookin'?

When I was asked if I wanted to attend a 'non-verbal' performance vaguely themed around the idea of cooking for a Korean wedding, it didn't exactly sell me on the idea although I agreed to go. As I gathered it might involve - amongst other activities - drumming with kitchen equipment, my interest was piqued; I'd been to a taiko performance in England and really enjoyed it.

What I didn't appreciate at the time was that the performance, called 'Nanta', is practically a Korean institution - having premiered in 1997 the show is still running twelve years later, and was apparently at some point designated as one of the top ten tourist attractions in Seoul. More than that, it's expanded - there are currently four Nanta troupes, one of which has been on Broadway since 2004. There are regular tours outside Korea - where it's often called Cookin' rather than Nanta. Clearly, it's run so long that individual performers come and go, and the show is its own mini-industry. Described as a combination of samul nori drumming and music mixed with comedy, pantomime and audience participation. But it isn't without controversy - with at least one Korean samul nori artist considered a national treasure in this country denouncing it as something of an affront to tradition.

Not particularly wishing to end up on the stage at some point, we'd carefully chosen seats a little further back from the front in the middle which proved to be a wise move. I'd counted three other foreigners in the audience near the front, and two of them ended up in front of everyone before the end. I've noticed that Koreans really like audience participation - and it features in a lot of these types of event. I couldn't help but wonder if the jokes were the same every time though.

In spite of the supposedly 'non-verbal' nature of the show, it actually did have some speaking - a mix of English, Korean and nonsense. It didn't greatly impact on the enjoyment, but a little of the meaning at certain points was lost due on me to the language difference. In the end, I'm not sure anyone's really there for the story though, it's all about the spectacle, and there's none greater than when the performers frantically drum on a variety of surfaces with a variety of implements - at times it really is a sight to behold as the noise thunders around the auditorium.

Photos are not allowed, but below is the promotional video on Youtube. While it tends to concentrate on the drumming parts of the show, this probably only represents about half of the performance, the remainder being a mix of non-verbal comedy and audience participation.

Busanmike.blogspot.com
 
Twitter:  @BusanMike
YouTube: /BusanMikeVideo
Flickr:  /busanmike
 

Cultural Annoyances

7 Jan 2010, The cultural differences between Korea and America can be very frustrating and annoying at times...

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