8.31.2010

Videos from Southeast Asia and Commentary on the States

First, some videos, memories and comments about Southeast Asia [Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam]:

This is from Escher Climbing Wall, Railay, Thailand:


This is from 1, 2, 3 Climbing Wall, Railay, Thailand. This climb was ~25-28 meters high. It was one of my favorites:


This is from Thaiwand Climbing Wall, Railay, Thailand. We went spelunking through a cave from Escher Wall, intentionally, to find the other side on Thaiwand Wall. When we got there, we had to abseil down about 15 meters. After I abseiled down, this was what the weather was like. When we entered the cave, it was sunny; when we left the cave, it was...:


This next video is from Ha Long Bay, Vietnam. There is a shop called Slopony on Cat Ba Island, Vietnam and they organize these amazing, awesome deep water soloing trips through Ha Long Bay. This is a view of the bay:


This next video is of our guide climbing. He is very, very good. Notice his bare feet. Unfortunately [or, fortunately considering my intermediate skill level], there are no videos of me climbing. I am no where near this good:


These last two videos are from Hanoi, Vietnam. This is from a cafe overlooking the main square in the Old Quarter. There was some kind of festival in the middle of the square and they had rotating performers. This caused a lot of motorbikes to stop and made the traffic pretty bad. Though, this kind of motorbike traffic is common. People kept telling me to, "Just walk through the traffic in Hanoi. Don't worry, they will stop or miss you." It really is true too, a bit unnerving as well:


This is me walking through traffic. Believe it or not, the traffic was actually sparse at this moment. Try to notice the motorbike taxis asking for business:


Those are all the videos worth posting from the trip.

Being that this is my blog and being that I use this to post my pictures, videos and general observations. I really want to post this one picture. It puts the deep water soloing into perspective:
That is about as high as I got on that climb. It is about 14 meters (46 feet) high.

Observations about Southeast Asia:
-Thailand was my favorite country, though it was probably the most expensive. A good meal cost about $5-7. But decent, survivable meals were anywhere from $3-5. Railay beach in Thailand was simply phenomenal. It was not as party-centric as some of the islands and offered you a lot of outdoorsy activities...or just a beach to lay on.
-Cambodia was really beautiful and I spent far too little time there. People who explored other areas than Angkor Wat said that the other areas were amazing.
-Laos was true to what people told me. After Cambodians begging you in Siam Reap, it felt like Laos people did not know I existed. You walk into a bungalow complex and no one comes to greet you. You stand aimlessly for 5, 10 minutes until the owner comes and negotiates a price with you. There was a curfew on Don Det at 11pm, everything turns off. Vang Vieng was nice and offers tons of alternative activities besides drinking and tubing. At least 50% of the people I met had pink eye at one time from tubing. I actually never went tubing.
-Vietnam was a surprise. I think I liked it more than I expected to. Cat Ba Island is gorgeous and offers a lot. Hanoi is a city that is on the rise and was safe to explore, at least during the day. Just ignore the motorbike taxis.


Second, being back in the United States of America:
Overall, it is weird being back. The welcome home sign was a pleasant and nice surprise.

I understand everything said and read.

I forgot to tip, though truthfully, the service did not warrant a tip. Unintended benefit.

Driving is like riding a bike; remembering how to use your lights, change the radio and move your car seat is not.

We eat a lot.

I had been accustomed to being of average weight in Korea. But, wow, I already feel small again.

There are a lot of things I have missed...family, friends, Dr. Pepper.....and a lot of things I have missed that I have not had yet...Chipotle, Dave's Cosmic Subs, some legit Mexican food.

Overall, it is a complete change in lifestyle. I have to remind myself to keep busy and find things to do.

6.13.2010

Korea vs. Greece from Downtown Seoul

If you watch one video on this site ever, watch this one [especially if you are a soccer/football fan]:

6.08.2010

Spring Was In The Air

As the title alludes to, it has been getting hot in Seoul recently. Also, I have been slightly [majorly] neglecting this during the Spring. My reason is that my camera broke back in April, thus there were no videos and thus there was nothing to write about!

Half out of curiosity to see how my new camera would work and half to show people back home a few random tidbits about Korea, I took two videos today after work: (((**The videos are a little wobbly, I apologize**)))

I.) The first is a typical subway experience:


II.) The second is me walking down the sidewalk, heading towards and through the special rock-climbing gear district in the Dongdaemun Market. Korea is amazing for their departmentalized areas; I have walked by different streets/areas where all the stores were focused on one thing....lights, porcelain bathroom items, rock-climbing gear, etc etc:



Off topic.

I arrived in Korea on Saturday, July 18th 2009...it is now June 8th, 2010. I only have about 6 more weeks of teaching left. I can't believe it....but what this all means is that I will have an opportunity to do some traveling around Asia before coming home. As of now, there are definite plans to be in Southeast Asia for a few weeks (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand) and there is a chance I may even catch a flight to Bali for a few days. We will see...when I have a set itinerary, I will make sure to write it here.

That is about all for now. I hope you are having a good day, wherever you are.

Alan

2.27.2010

Kindergarten Graduation

I do not know what you will think of the following video, however, I can assure you that this is in fact normal in Korea:

Kindergarten Graduation was sad. Luckily, I will still be teaching a majority of my students next week, only in the afternoon. I will see them for about 3 hours a week compared with the 20 hours that I had spent with them. This is probably for the best in the long term.

I was more sad because our head teacher was leaving and she had connected greatly with the students and their parents. She was/IS a great teacher and will be missed.

The drama performance went as well as we could have expected. Of course, it could have been better, but we are talking about kindergarten-ers here...

I have a new class on Wednesday. Monday is a holiday and Tuesday is a weird work day for me which will mostly be spent arranging my classroom and preparing to teach the next class. My next class will be new English speakers. I will be teaching them basic phonics (ABCs...sounds, basic words). They are 7-year olds. I will also be teaching phonics to the 6-year old class, or the 'babies.' Korean age is different, too...long story short, essentially subtract one year from what they say and you have their American age. If you want to read more about it...go here.

That is it for now. Work is about to get a little more stressful with a lot of change next week, so I am spending some of my weekend mentally preparing for it. Do a little work early in effort to save your sanity at a later time.

Alan =)

2.16.2010

Beijing, China for The Chinese New Year

Preface: If you read this in Google's Buzz, I do not think the videos show up properly. Check out the actual link (because I think the videos are worth seeing).

Friday evening
: Try to get as much sleep as possible to hopefully limit the effects of what you feel is an oncoming sickness. Fail at it because you are anxiously excited about your trip to Beijing and catching a bus early Saturday morning. You will end up sick.

Saturday morning: Wake up at 6, eat a quick breakfast, shower and say goodbye to your room. Know that the next time you set foot in it, you will have traversed The Great Wall, The Forbidden City and The Bird's Nest...among other Beijing sites. Catch the bus on time...no problems at the airport...take your first flight since you landed in Korea almost seven months ago.

Land in Beijing an hour and a half later...wonder through immigration...and then customs...but you do not see your friend Siri, whom arrived a half hour earlier. You had arranged to meet him immediately outside of customs. Fuck. You remember that you (and Siri) are supposed to meet your couchsurfing host, Mattia, at 5pm at Andingmen subway stop, Exit A. You feel better. You wait at customs for ten minutes and then decide to ask the information desk for help. Mentioning that your friend is 'lost,' you want an announcement over the PA system. Quickly, you decide to ask the lady to see a list of the planes that arrived from Seoul. Forgetting which flight Siri was on, you realize that all flights around his arrival time are at Terminal 2. You are in Terminal 3 (which, an aside, is incredibly nice). Fuck. You ask how to get there ASAP...you run to the bus, but the bus has just arrived and you are the first one on. You wait. Wait. Wait. Finally, the bus leaves and you hope Siri is still there.

You arrive sprinting through Terminal 2...you find the Arrivals section...but it is for domestic flights. Of course it is. You turn around and sprint to the International section and see the lone red head standing there, bumping to some K-Pop. You punch him in the arm and tell him the story.




Saturday afternoon: You walk out onto Tiananmen Square and are speechlessly awed, remembering the NYTimes article your read in June about the 20th anniversary of 'Tank Man' and how you are standing a few hundred meters from that spot.


After wondering around Tiananmen, you head towards where you are supposed to meet your couchsurfing host. It looks like a decent walk, you decide to walk it. A half hour later, you ask a hotel bellman to tell you where in the world you are. They give you another map and you realize you are maybe halfway and you have fifteen minutes to get there. Fuck. You begin to run through the hutongs. All the way, scaring Chinese people and being scared by their random fireworks (more to come on that). You ask two different Chinese people where you are on a map, they tell you two different things. Trusting your own instincts is the only answer. You run and run and run and eventually, you find the subway stop...and Mattia is there waiting. Only ten minutes late. He takes you back to his place, which is also a hutong.

Big sighs of relief after relaxing and getting to know Mattia for a while. He gives you a key to his room and you are off to meet other CSers for dinner just one subway stop away. You arrive on time. Success, for once something has gone smoothly. Conversations ensue, you meet people from all over. Dinner is delicious but greasy. The feeling comes back. The feeling you get when you realize how you know one language and only one language by heart. A typical feeling for an American. People fluent in at least two languages, perhaps more, amaze you.

The next place is a neat little bar with places to sit that are quiet, that are loud and that have a view (roof). Feeling exhausted, you just cruise through the night...looking forward to sleeping that night. Midnight comes and you find yourself on the roof with everyone else, trying to take in the incredible amount of fireworks.

While this is all happening, you and Siri start conversing with a couple of German girls, Katrin and Lisa, who are also part of the CS group. Katrin is visiting Lisa from Taiwan. They are both studying Chinese. They become your fleeting friends for the weekend; without the Internet, you would probably never hear from them again. The night progresses and you find yourself leaving for the night. After saying goodbyes, Siri and you are running home, literally. The cold is bitter.

Sunday morning: After a cold night, you wake up at 8a.m. with entirely too little sleep. Surprisingly, you feel great. You remember you are a morning person. Siri is not. You wake him not for the next ten minutes. Big plans for today...hiking The Great Wall, but first you must get there. How? Good question. You take the subway and try to meet other foreigners who supposedly are leaving from that subway stop in a pseudo-taxi. You take Exit C from the station as instructed. No one there, of course there is not, why were you expecting it to work. You wonder around into a bus station, realizing the futility of taking a bus to The Great Wall. But an elderly Chinese lady asks where you are going (or so you think that is what she said). You charade The Great Wall and she directs you to the bus. Realizing that this is the most trustworthy information you have, you get on the bus and take it an hour and a half to the end. You get off. Taxi drivers are fighting for your attention, they were pointing at you while you were sitting on the bus. You (mostly Siri) negotiate a price with the driver. After ten minutes of hilarious negotiation, you agree to pay 210yuan. The price includes 85km to The Great Wall--Jianshinling--and 85km back to the bus station from a different section of The Great Wall--Simatai. You pay him at the end. After conversion, this is ~$15 per person for a 170km ride. You learn the driving laws of China on the way to the wall.

The Great Wall is what you expected. Where you are is not exactly the touristy part and you enjoy this. It is truly a hike up and down and down and up a ridge. It is quite peaceful. You maybe see eight people on the whole ~10km hike.

You meet the taxi driver at Simatai...he is happy...you are happy. You pass out on the ride back in both the taxi and the bus.

Sunday evening: Only ~24 hours left in Beijing. You realize you are having a blast.

You meet Katrin and Lisa at a subway stop near Tiananmen called Qianmen. Again you operate on your own schedule, ten minutes late. Maybe Beijing is ten minutes bigger than Seoul. You wonder around looking for a duck roast restaurant that a fellow CSer referred to Siri the night before. Futility ensues, to no one's fault. You hop in a cab and learn how much Chinese Katrin and Lisa know. Impressed. You arrive at a restaurant and eat...it is a bit citchy but delicious. Good conversation ensues and you enjoy the night, playing cards at the bar. You also show the Germans your card trick and Lisa clearly wants to figure it out.

Monday morning: You get up at 9a.m. not quite as refreshed as the previous morning. Your plans are to visit the Bird's Nest and the Forbidden City. You are ambitious. After waking Siri up for a few minutes, you are on your way.

After three transfers, you arrive at the station. Leaving the station, you see the Bird's Nest and the sport nerd inside of you is awoken. Excitement. You wonder to it, avoiding random marching communists and manage to wiggle your way into a student ticket for a 'snow festival' going on inside. You could not care less about the snow festival...you only want to run inside.

The inner sport's nerd spends way too much time at the Bird's Nest and for the third time, you will be late--this time on an epic scale--to a prearranged meeting. You have fifteen minutes to get from the Bird's Nest to the Forbidden City to meet Katrin and Lisa for the final time. You find yourself running again.

Forty-five minutes later, a half-hour late, you are exiting the station. Remembering you never set a meeting-point, you send the red-head to Exit A and leave to explore Exit B and C. No luck. Dissapointed you will not have a chance at a proper good-bye with your German friends, you return to Exit A depressed. As soon as you tell Siri, he sees Lisa meandering her way towards us. You cannot believe how everything has worked out this trip. Happily, you await Katrin's arrival.

Grabbing a quick bite to eat inside The Forbidden City, you plan the day's actions. You explore the city. The temples impress you, not because of their Buddhist influence but because of their genuineness. They have incredibly not been preserved to a near spotless appearance. This is appreciated. You explore the city way too quickly but enjoy it. Fun pictures and fun experiences. Afterwards, you wonder out of the city and up a hill behind it. It has a fantastic view of the city and you begin to feel the weekend closing.

Katrin and Lisa help you get a taxi to a subway station and you say your goodbyes. You reflect on the weekend and are incredibly happy.

The End.

Postscript: The 'you' in the story does not always refer to me, but to Siri and I, as it made the story easier to tell.

2.01.2010

It is Fabruary

The title is in reference to a schedule at my school...the typo has become a joke to me.

The winter blues are in full swing...eagerly looking forward to spring; it will be here soon enough.

My boss wants me to switch work schedules...from kindergarten to after school kids. Therefore, no kindergarten. This bums me out and I am fighting a good fight, but I am not optimistic. The video below shows why I am so bummed out...this is how I get to spend parts of each day, each week. And I truly enjoy it. It would not totally suck to move...but I like my lifestyle now.

Preface to the video: The kids in the 'front row' (i.e. most visible, the four of them) are my kids, The Hedgehog Class (they named themselves). The kids in the back row are my team teacher's kids, The Flamingo Class. You can see my team teacher at the end. Anywho, the girl in the front/middle who barely moves or dances is Kitty. She has been gone for a solid ~4 months from school, so she is a little rusty. I am sure she will be dancing in no time. Other than that, enjoy...:




P.S. They are doing this because they will *perform* this at the Kindergarten Graduation at the end of the month. Practice makes perfect.
P.S.^2 The girl in the front right, Odette, is absolutely adorable in this video.

1.12.2010

Monday, January 4th, 2010

A massive snow storm hits Seoul...one unseen in ~40 years. Seoulites have no idea what to do with all this snow; they respond by acting normal...driving normally...walking normally...trying to work normally. Alas, I believe the snow won.

A video on my walk to work, immediately after being told to go to work, but immediately before being told that work was cancelled. If you catch my drift, I was annoyed...: