• 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives)

    July 8, Asia Time Part ??

    Asia Time goes like this: I spend 6 months in the dark about my next job, abode, visa status. Plan after plan falls through or gets canceled. And then with seven weeks before my visa expires, in a single day, I get accepted into a language program, I reserve a bedroom in a sharehouse with a Korean woman who has two corgis, and my international permit arrives in the mail which means I have a way to move myself and belongings down to Busan. So yeah, in two months I'll have my own bedroom, actually separate from the kitchen and bathroom, a five minute walk to the beach, and hopefully…

  • 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives)

    July 7

    Jeongyeon, the former fifth grader who helped me make cup ramen in a convenience store once and later told me about a dead mouse, cashed in her checks today. You also know her as the one who asks for candy and last week she reminded me that during that fateful dead mouse encounter I owed her several pieces of chocolate. Today I was teaching the sixth graders and happened upon her outside of her homeroom classroom. I held a book in front of our faces and told her inconspicuously in Korean “come to English class after school is over and I will give you chocolate”. Bangs looked on in interest…

  • 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives)

    July 6

    The elementary school across the street had a student test positive so as a precaution our school also closed to students until the other school was confirmed to have no further cases. As a result C and I had no classes today and also no served lunch. She ended up accompanying me to the local kimbap shop where we each had a fish cake and tuna kimbap. These kinds of restaurants are classified as “snack shops” and always give their patrons free fish cake water. The idea of hot fish broth may put off western readers but I found it really hits the spot. We spent an hour there talking…

  • 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives)

    July 4

    Today was a busy day from start to finish that involved crossing off a bucket list item and squandering an opportunity to cross off a bucket list item. It was a wonderful 12 hours and 10 out of 10 would do again. I had plans to meet with a friend for lunch and made my way to the gym in the morning. But at the train station, someone tapped me on the shoulder and a young man appeared. We started chatting in Korean and I punched him playfully in the shoulder and told him to slow down. “How old are you?” “I’m almost 30. How old are you?” “I’m 23.”…

  • 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives)

    The Case of the Missing Milk

    Last week I was very excited to stumble upon another buy two get one three sale at 7-Eleven on coffee milk. However, when I went to reach for one in the community fridge this week, I found them to be all gone. My only thought was, well must have drunk all of them and didn’t even realize it. I didn’t think much about it since I had also gotten the two for one coffee milk sale the week prior and my brain just wasn’t catching up that something was off. But then, my co-teacher came into our classroom and said “did you buy coffee milk and put it in the…

  • 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives)

    July 3, Reflections

    One of the fourth graders who has a surprisingly deep and gravelly voice for an 10 year-old spotted me through the open class window, said hello in Korean, and bowed. It was really cute and I appreciate it too because many students greet me in English with a wave instead of a bow which is okay… but also leaves me in a weird gray area of wondering if they respect me as a teacher. C laughed at my side and exclaimed, he didn’t even greet me! I told her it’s because I’m tall and easy to spot. He has always been a slow writer but his attitude has improved a…

  • 1.4 Spring 2020 (COVID Archives),  Favorites

    July 1, The Ugly Truth

    I attended my scheduled weekly tea time where I helped S get a Priceline refund and caught up on life. Life is full of surprises, though. I asked S about an anti-discrimination bill that is being deliberated by Korean lawmakers right now. A similar Equality Act was passed in the US last year (to my surprise, I learned: it was first proposed in 1974) but I don’t remember there being the mountain of opposition that exists against this bill in South Korea. In regards to America’s Equality Act, Wikipedia states: A poll conducted by Quinnipiac University in April 2019 found that 92% of American voters believed that employers should not…