5/31/2009

Tall Things

Leap of faith:


I can say that this week was dedicated to climbing, jumping, and always looking down. That's Eric in the middle of the sky.

Our mission was to bungee jump and after some amateur navigation through Seoul we got our chance to take the plunge. Literally. You can see Eric got a free dip in the pond.

I truly had no idea what to expect jumping 45m attached merely to a bundle of stretchy ropes. Sounds like a rush, right? I hoped so. In fact I was skeptical, perhaps a little apathetic, until I stood on the platform and the next move was jumping. There's no restraint. After an elevator ride with an obscure view, I must walk the plank on my own. Well, should I go? I asked.

The Korean who strapped me in most casually responded, "I count down from five."

"OK."
The first feeling falling is O MY GOD WHY WHY WHY AHHHHHHHHHHH

And then the rope reaches its tether and I was sent up just as fast. By then I knew I was safe and seized the moment to outstrech my arms and take in all the perks of flying.

Then before you hit your head on the jumping platform all forces at work cancel each other out and there's a moment's free fall. Ahhhh....

The rest is cake. It's a roller coaster without a track, a free open spatial holiday caught between going up and going down. I'm reminded of a Harry Nillson song:


You can swim the sea
You can cimb a mountain


You can jump into the fire
But you'll never be free!!!


So continuing our quest to be free we ventured to another tower. But first we had to climb a mountain to get there.

To get to the N Seoul Tower (the N stands for Namsan, which actually means "south mountain," aka Myongmyeok San) one has the option of trekking through Namsan park. Namsan park is a huge moound of trees protruding obviously from the mass metro.

I found a new bungee location.


You can see in the lower lefthand corner how unplanned a basic Seoul district is. The city grew faster than planners could plan. I feel this is also a reflection of Korean things in general--dismissive of normal order in favor of, well, something else. Many of these areas are loaded with shops, bars, karaoke rooms, and restaurants. If you're in the right area, expect a congestion of people, large neon signs, delicious street food, alleys in place of streets and drivers and bikers struggling to find a way out without knocking off their rear-view mirrors on someone's hip. You can also see off in the distance how the city stretches out into the mountains. This is only a fraction of the panorama that circles Namsan park.

Namsan park is a thickly vegetated break from dowtown. There were many couples and tourists mingling on the mountain comfortably minding their business. At the top is art, food, a museum, and of course the tower. Back to concrete.

The view from the tower is breathtaking. It's hard to take in how much man-made structures flood through these mountains. I can only imagine for how long the train lines snake and burrow into country side, bringing a whole stampede of glass and concrete right behind it.
(Just west of the Han River)
I guess I was still feeling grounded on Sunday, so I decided to climb another mountain. My climb started beside another hiker--an older Korean man who apparently had studied English literature and wrote his thesis on D.H. Lawrence's Sons and Lovers. We talked briefly about American Pragmatic philosophy (a big fan apparently) before in no time at all reaching the mountain's peak. I've had better hikes when I was in grade school (in fact, I just went on one with my kindergardeners four weeks ago). I was slightly disappointed so I continued to wander and found a long network of trails. There's some sort of inspiring explorational quality to hiking. Maybe navigating foreign terrain is like the Kantian aesthetic philosophy, a sort of free-play of the mind. Coming to a foreign country alone satisfies this. Many travelers I meet have similar hobbies: hiking, exploring Seoul, learning the metro lines, not to mention teaching which is sort of a mental exercise in the same way. Finding my way around this mountain reminded me of orienteering in the woods as a Boy Scout. But eventually reality popped back into existence.

It's really liberating being engulfed in nature, seeing for miles, and jumping into nothingness. Maybe I'm searching for something bigger. Maybe I'm looking for trouble. As it goes:
You can jump into the fire!
But you'll never be free!!!

5/25/2009

Sound and Vision

I saw some traditional Korean song and dance on Sunday. In general the performances lacked tone and rhythm. What was interesting about the group in the picture below is how there were about three groups doing three completely different things. Percussion at stage right, two similarly dressed vocalists (sisters?) in the middle and a miscellaneous crew at stage left. Altogether they made quite a ruckus.

Later on in the day the stage was highlighted by a guitarist and a killer solo a cappella vocal performance to end the festivities. I saw two of my second grade girls during the guitar performance. They brought me some bananas (one of everyone's favorite treats around here) and we got up on the docked Korean vessel and started showing off, shouting English words, jumping up and down and leaping off the boat. We caused such a stir that the photographers turned their attention to us instead of the stage.

I guess a live performance showcase can only last so long before a bunch of energetic hooligans start stealing the show. Will be searching for pics of the Yangsu fest soon--hopefully our fooling around made it to some sort of web publication. Here's one of the dancers:

One of the things they do is a water performance, which consists of one of the robed dancers eloquently splashing around in the river water. It reminded me of a mermaid folktale, but with a Korean twist. Water is pretty culturally important I gather--it is one of the elements symbolized on the national flag and the source of much of the food.

Most cultural symbols are imbibed visually and sonically (just think how big of a role movies and music play today). Some major cultural identifiers in the past are natural geography, performance rituals, and festive dinners. How much does eating a culture's food make you think, feel, and learn about that culture I wonder? This would be a great space to insert a video of some moving tentacles.
* * *
Back to school: these are my kindergardeners. They may not eat octopus but they looovvveee birthday parties!
Back home again: This is where the rivers meet before diverting at Yangsu. The perk: cool breeze and natural beauty. The disadvantage: many mosquitoes!

5/23/2009

Pictures Please??? OK OK OK !!!

I teach in Korea. A lot of people don't understand what this entails. The best way to get it is if I tell a story. Here's a day's narrative:
Friday morning I missed my bus so I grabbed a taxi. I pass a narrow bridge over a large river and then I'm at my school. Here's a mountain in the distance. That's my bank to the right.

This is a garden at my school. It's very beautiful! Jo-an Elementary has a lot of property, and they don't let any of it go to waste. Our soccer field is huge, our playgrounds are frequent, and we have a driving range as well as a garden for each grade to practice their farming. We're actually a very small school with only one homeroom teacher for each grade level. We are also an associate school of another school in Guri. Like General Nash Elem, we get the problem kids. A common kinship has been established.
This must be what I look like to my students. This picture was taken by CH.

CH is an awesome student but he's a few levels above the other third grade boys. Being a sort of ringleader, can often be a deciding factor in how the class goes. However, there is never just ONE deciding factor. Teaching a class of 10 year-olds who don't understand most of my vocabulary demands a wide range of control.

For instance: how can I find a balance between ten girls--sensitive but eager to learn, and ten boys--full of energy but unwilling to sit down--without losing someone in between? The trouble is if I lose someone then they might bring someone else along with them, and then one by one the whole class is gone.

I find that a very active game will get the boys going but the girls crying (since they usually can't keep up with the physical energy of the boys). Yet a well planned arts & crafts project can entertain the girls but fail to grab the interest of any of the boys. What's the best way to utilize an English classroom?

I'm still trying to figure this out. I can never have too many lesson plans but I can never follow through with one all the way through. Teaching a class of developing minds is like navigating the sea: you need a compass and a direction, an intention and a destination, but if the current ever shifts direction you can't ever fight it, you've just got to change course for a little while. Fortunately I can always catch a nice breather if I'm ever feeling a little taxed.
A front view of Jo-an elementary from the side. Right before lunch my kindergardeners invited me to a birthday party!

I got dragged around the playground. . .

. . . until we found a rabbit.

We lost it somewhere in the bushes. After this I eat lunch and teach three afternoon classes. I find myself emulating my middle and high school Latin and math teachers to teach my sixth graders grammar.

It's funny how useless it is to try to apply anything I've learned in college.

Not only that, but I find that my English is reverting the more I speak to Koreans. Evolving, actually. The desire to get my point across is so strong that meaning takes priority over convention.

As I was talking to a girl this weekend I couldn't figure out where her accent was from. She said she was Canadian. She said that she's been traveling and speaking to people so much and with her personality and development as a theatre major that she can't help but pick up the variations of dialect from the people she meets.

I guess this is how dialects form. Pigdin, Ebonics, and my new recent favorite, Afrikaans. I wonder if there will ever develop a sort of dialect amongst foreigners in Korea. It would be like a global tongue with the incorporation of many "Koreanisms" (this is what I call the English tokens and phrases used by so many Koreans which I already notice many foreingers in Korea unconsciously using--such as the frequent use of the word "delicious," and the threefold "OK").

My friend Brad pointed out how the Korean sense of humor reflects their language as the English affinity for wit reflects our own. Because of the lesser variety of descriptive words, rhyming words and similar sounds are an extension of their humor. It seems juvenile, but in English these things are so common that it is more humorous to hear the more contextual or creative use of words and phrases. Perhaps it has to do as well with the western high regard for the individual. Our sarcasm is not appreciated here.

But anyway I enjoy living here as much as I like observing the place. But I'm less of a tourist stomping around snapping pics. I live in a village. I've got to befriend the community, not exoticize them. Though some of their ways are mysterious, I can have fun without violating taboos.
Here's one more provacative picture from my school:
And no, I don't have a Korean girlfriend and I can't speak fluently.