Before the snow came and hit the city, I used to like making trips out to far places, like in Gyeonggi-do (the province around Seoul) or in Incheon. I had no idea why, until the other day.
There is such a large contrast between Seoul and the areas outside of Seoul. I was on my way to Anyang the other day, and once I was outside of Seoul, there was a large atmospheric change. Suddenly, I really started to feel conscious of the fact that there is a lot less English. Even ordering a burger proved to be a mountainous task. Even though the area looks like a much better neighborhood to be in, it doesn't seem to be a place where a newly-arrived frightened foreigner (ie. me) would want to be to start out in South Korea; the areas outside the big cities don't seem to be well-equipped for non-Koreans. Why should they be? It's not like non-Koreans find these areas to be large tourist hotspots.
On the bus ride back, it was getting dark. As the bus crossed from Gyeonggi-do to Seoul, there was again the huge shift in atmosphere. There was suddenly a lot of English (some of it incorrectly used). There were signs that it was an international city, even though some of them weren't entirely successful, like the cellphone store that had a banner outside advertising some deal to foreigners -- but the banner was written in Korean. But at least the effort was there, which is more than I can say for the areas outside Seoul.
Back in Vancouver, I remember how many times I would go somewhere far from the city, just to re-energize myself. I would get away from Vancouver and go somewhere far like White Rock or Langley, where it's so quiet and so far from everything that you feel like you can scream and there's a chance that nobody would hear you, before coming back to the city, where things are convenient and faster-paced.
I guess here in Seoul, I need to find that release once in a while too. I need to go somewhere drastically different from the norm once in a while, only to come back and appreciate the fact that I live in Seoul. In comparison to its surroundings, Seoul is actually quite worldly, despite the large number of improvements that can be made. Is Seoul the best place for foreigners? I don't think so. Is it heading in the right direction in terms of internationalization? Probably. Would I be happier working in Seoul than elsewhere? Definitely.
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In other news:
- The temperatures are finally back above freezing today. It's amazing how 2 degrees Celsius (36 degrees Fahrenheit) suddenly feels warm after a week of terrible weather.
- It's also amazing how much snow can melt in 6 degrees C (43 degrees F). The streets are wet out there and it looks like it rained, but it didn't.
- Yesterday was an awful work day. The students were almost scared of the material, and actually bailed on me after their scheduled classroom cleaning. But ironically, today was brilliant. They cooperated and didn't need me to force them to work on the stuff I assigned to them. It was amazing how one day was awful and one day was brilliant.
- I really want to make sushi, but can't find out how to prepare the rice.
- My laptop battery is doing weird things. Windows Vista said the battery is "plugged in, not charging." Jay suggested that it's an adapter problem. I hope so, because replacing an adapter is certainly a lot cheaper than replacing an entire battery.
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