Since they don't celebrate Halloween in Korea, I've taken the opportunity to teach my kids about it, candy and all. The kids really like it. The swamp me for candy all the time. Some of them forget about saying trick or treat and just say "give me candy." Then I get to talk about being polite. I've been teaching it all week. Yesterday was actual Halloween though, so I put zombie makeup on my hand and on Niall's. The kids were loved it. They all wanted to touch it. At lunch, two boys came in and noticed it. Then, they wanted me to put some on them. I started, and soon after, 3 girls came in and wanted it too. I applied zombie makeup on 5 kids hands in 15 minutes! It was nuts! Some of them weren't that good, but oh well. One of the girls kept saying hurry. I was like I'M TRYING! Anyway, it was really cute, and they liked it.
On Wednesday, we talked about Halloween at teacher class then two of the teachers at my school went to coffee with Gianni and I. One of the English teachers really wanted to meet him, so we went. It was a realy nice evening. First, we went to coffee for a few hours then we went downtown and ate at Traveler's during special Halloween Quiz night. Hyun Joo came with us, and as far as I know, she's the first teacher from our school to see Niall do trivia. We came in 4th place and only 2 points off of 1st! Hyun Joo even got one of the answers for us! We may not have won in the end, but we won both of the beer challenges! First was a costume contest. No one really dressed up, but Hyun Joo had a cute horn headband, so Niall gave us the beer. The second challenge was a monster music mash up, and we named the most songs in the mashup. It was awesome! It was a really fun night.
For Halloween, Gianni and I were going to go to Costco, but I had to get my nails done for our engagement photo shoot tomorrow and didn't get back until later. Instead, we ate at Lotteria (like McDonalds) at Home Plus and bought candy and snacks. We watched The Poltergeist and Hocus Pocus. It was a relaxing and fun Halloween evening :)
*On an unHalloween related not, today I saw the cell phone portfolio that the students put their phones in at the beginning of the day. They explained that they don't get to keep their phones during the day; they have to put them in the portfolio slots. There's a special, big portfolio-like case for each class! They were shocked to hear that they don't take the students' phones in the US. They said Korea is bad for doing it, and I explained what happens in class when students have phones. They disagreed, but it was a cut conversation with me and the girls in class. I'm amazed and glad that they do this!
Halloween
Let there be heat!
As it's starting to get colder in Daegu--moving into fall--my apartment has been getting colder. When I moved in, I never learned to use the heating system, and my landlord told me to call back when it got colder, so they could show me. Last night, my coteacher came over and talked to the landlord for me to help me work out how to use it. My thermostat is located behind a patched section of the wall, so that's a little weird. I have to pull it back to get at the thermostat and controls. When we first switched it on, the thermostat didn't seem to work for some reason. The landlord then told us that it only comes on at 11pm. I think that was just the first night though because it was still on this morning. I'm at least hoping it was just tonight because I'm going to need it when I get home from work as it gets colder. It was soooooo nice waking up to heat and not freezing cold for once! I have had no desire to get up recently, so this was helpful. Also, heating in Korea is a system called "ondol," which is under the floor heating, so I kept walking across the floor hitting warm spots. Lovely morning already, and I only have 3 classes today--all before lunch!
Halloween Weekend
We had another fantastic weekend! A lot of it was spent doing Halloween related things with the foreign community in Daegu. They don't celebrate Halloween in South Korea, so the waygooks have to do it for them.
Lish came to visit from Jinju this weekend. She arrived Friday night, and we headed downtown to get some food. I looked it up online, and apparently Daegu is famous for some sort of flat mandu (dumpling). We tried to go to a famous restaurant for that outside of downtown, but it was too late, and the restaurant was closed. So we walked downtown to try to get some food there. Banwoldang was like a ghost town! It was insane. We were walking around and all the shops and restaurants were closed, and there were hardly any people walking around. I know it was late, but it was a Friday night! So weird. We ended up at this food stall that Gianni and I have been meaning to try. It's always really busy. They sell fried things and duk boki mostly.
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Hotteok |
Yes, we know how cheesy this is. |
wooden tiger statue. You're supposed to buy a lock with a key and put the key in the tiger's mouth to test your love. If the tiger doesn't bite you, it's a good sign. Gianni and I ended up buying a lock without a key, so we couldn't do that one. Along the trail were places you can lock your lock. There were different stations for different kinds of love-- healthy love, beautiful love, eternal love, happy love. Gianni and I went for Happy Love :) . Healing Trail was more of a steep incline with rock stairs built in. We didn't go down too far because no one was really up for a good hike. Still, all the foliage was gorgeous. The weather has been much nicer in Daegu recently--cool and crisp like fall should be. We had lunch at the restaurant on top of the mountain. The hot soup was really nice to have on such a chilly day, and the view during lunch was amazing. After lunch, we headed back down the mountain on the cable cars. Matthew wanted to stop at Donghwa Temple. There are a series of temples on the mountain, but this one is supposed to be the main one. It's pretty close to the bottom, so the walk wasn't too long. There were two gates, and both gates had 4 huge, painted statues inside. I'm guessing they are supposed to be the temple guards or maybe they are Buddhist Gods? Not too sure, but they were really cool. The temple was decked out with lanterns all over, and there was even a lantern tunnel. After we got some good pictures, we headed back down the mountain to catch the bus and head home.
Although I really liked Palgongsan and thought it was extremely beautiful, I thought that the buildup of tourist related building and the huge number of people who were visiting the mountain kind of took away from the natural beauty of the mountain. It reminded me of the Chinese poetry I read in my Asian Humanities class last year, all these people trying to get away and experience the beauty and serenity of nature and yet they were kind of making it impossible to truly get that feeling. I still had a very good time though and definitely want to go back in the winter to see the mountains covered in snow.
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people wanted to take pics with us |


It was really fun scaring Koreans downtown. That sounds weird, but rest assured they were also having a good time. I must be on a million different Korean facebook pages I took so many photos with people. I think the best part was watching some of the other zombies go into the shops and freak people out. A lot of people wanted to touch the wound I had on my hand and were asking us how we made it. The zombie walk was definitely some of the most fun I've had in Korea so far. There were so many awesome costumes and the reactions were just priceless. I wish there was a another one this week.
Gym Hae Dong represent! |

Seoul was really fun. I feel like most of the trip was spent in the car, but it was still nice. We got to know some of the crew from Taekwondo a little better and ate lots of great food. Master Hwang is a really fun and nice guy so any trip with him is a good trip. He took us to lunch in Insaedong which was just so fun. Simple bibimbap and noodle soup, but there was so much bonchon and Korean scallion pancakes. Abbi accidentally introduced herself the way a king would and Master Hwang and the rest of the group laughed for a good ten minutes.
It was another great weekend here in Korea. This week and next week, I'm teaching my students about Halloween, giving them candy and wearing zombie makeup. I'm very excited!!!
Talent Show at Gianni's School
On Thursday, we had a talent show at school, and Friday was sports day. The talent show was very fun. Students sang and danced up on a stage that was constructed in front of the school. Some girls reenacted the video for that song my lip-gloss is "poppin," which was pretty impressive, and some boys did AMAZING break dancing.
Sports day was awesome too. I didn't know when stuff was starting, so my co-teacher and I were a little late to the beginning of the events, but I still got to see a lot of cool stuff. First off, all the classes had their own team uniforms: team batman shirt, team mario onesie, team kill bill, team pajamas, etc. Each class did a coordinated dance together in front of a team of judges and then went on to do a relay race, jump rope contests, and lots of other cool stuff.
NOTE: I have videos to go with this
My sports day is during the spring semester, so I didn't get to see any of this yet. I think it's really cool that they do talent shows and sports days to give the students a little bit of a break in such a high-stress environment. A bunch of our friends' schools did sports day/talent shows around the same time as Gianni's school did.
School Festival and Mail!
Today was also really cool because the home economics class made hamburgers and all the teachers got one! They were actually really good. Kudos kids! Keep that food coming. Also, I was asked to edit the students' articles for the English school newspaper. They are interesting to say the least. Some part aren't that bad, but other parts you can tell that a student tried to use Google Translate. Oh well. Nothing too good to mention on that front yet. I'll keep you posted. I wrote an article about myself for the newspaper, so I'm excited to see the final product when it comes out.
Happy 23rd Birthday to Me!!!
Yesterday was my birthday! :)
I only had one class yesterday because I had to go observe someone's open class in the afternoon. It was nice to get a little break on my birthday. I spent some time during the day planning activities for the summer and winter camps that I will be teaching later on. Right after lunch, I headed out to the school I was observing at, and it turns out that it was Grace's new school. It was nice to see her again after we got coffee the other week. Sun Mee gave me very clear directions about how to get there, and it was no problem. It did take like 50 minutes on the bus though. Quite a hike! Chris, the teacher we were watching, uses the same book we use at my school, except he has a bit more freedom to teach the kids than I do. He has to teach the vocabulary from the chapter, but from there he can do activities that he wants to do. I have to stick with the boring activities in the textbook that my students and I all hate. Ugh! I'm trying to bend the rules a bit, but I've only been a teacher for a month, and I'm still getting adjusted. Hopefully, I can be more creative in lessons in the future. His was great though. The powerpoint was very clear and nice looking, and he played games that really helped the kids practice the language. They had to direct a blind-folded student from their group through a minefield. The activities in the book are okay for listening, but there are no real production activities to get the kids practicing on their own. It's all teacher-led stuff, which can get boring. Chris did a really good job giving the kids time to speak to reinforce the vocabulary, and I hope I can inject some of that into my classes--bending the rules, not breaking. After the class, we met with Chris and the DMOE representative and talked about how things went. Then I took the bus back with the Australian guy who was watching the class with me. He also lives near Sangin, and Chris and I will be going to his school next week. Both Chris and the other guy were supposed to be at my class last week, but Chris was on an overnight school trip and the other guy's school forgot to print the right paper to make sure he came to mine. Woops!
I got home only about 10 minutes before Gianni did, but he came home and surprised me with a Baskin Robbin's Ice Cream cake! It was yummy!!! It came in a Styrofoam box, and they give you dry ice with it to keep it cold. Honestly, I had more fun playing with the dry ice than eating the cake! They also gave us candles, some matches with pink tips, some pink spoons, and a pink party hat because Gianni told them it was a girl's birthday. Korea has such amazing service. The US really needs to get on board.

It was a really nice birthday dinner. I hope everyone else enjoyed it too. I tried to make sure I was talking to everyone, especially Da Eun because she can speak English, but definitely not when a bunch of native speakers are talking together. I served as a bit of a translator. Still, it was awesome to have her there, and she was really great to help with translating the waiters and ordering food.
When we got home, I had one more piece of cake before bed. It was a lovely 23rd birthday! Thanks everyone for your birthday wishes :)
Birthday Weekend
This past weekend was the weekend before my birthday, and we did all kinds of fun things!
On Saturday, we did some shopping downtown during the day. We went to a craft store someone had recommended to me called Esdot. There, we got some face paint for the Zombie Walk we are going to do in Daegu next weekend. Should be fantastic. We also went to my new favorite store, Hot Tracks. They sell a whole range of random things from stationary and cards to toys to accessories. It's a wonderful place. At the underground mall, I got a few shirts. One of them is gray with embroidered faces in all different colors. The faces have handle-bar mustaches and top hats. I also got a pink sweater with cat faces all over it and a stripped sweater with a cute cat face sewn on the pocket. At a boutique shop downtown, I got a plaid skirt that flows and is different lengths on the side than it is in the back and front. To go with it, I got a knit, wool, off-white sweater with brown, suede patches on the shoulders. It's an adorable outfit, and I wore it Monday just to show off. I needed to satisfy my urge to shop. There are so many cute clothes in Korea. I know my mom thinks I'm crazy for some of my recent purchases, but this is Korean fashion--I'm telling you!





When you enter the exhibit, there is a huge open area with many different sized red blown-up plastic balls with white polka dots. Some of them are huge. Some were hanging from the ceilings and others were on the ground. One ball, you could look into. I believe there were mirrors and lights in there. Another ball, you could walk into. We went inside and it was made to look bigger than it was. Mirrors made 3 walls, and there was another smaller ball hanging inside the room.








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Infinity Net |


The museum itself was really cool. I'm glad we got to see the exhibit. The DAM is located on a hill overlooking the city, so the views from the second and third floor of the building were stunning. You could see the mountains in the distance. It was a really nice way to end the weekend.
