It's amazing how fast time flies by here, and how comfortable I feel in Seoul when I compare it to when I was in Adelaide. I remember when I was back from Hong Kong I wrote a post on how strange it felt to be 'home', because it didn't even feel like home. When I'm walking around in Seoul, even though I'm not fluent in the language and I've never been here in my life, it feels like home. I know that you might think Oh, it's because you idolise the dramas and kpop singers, but that's not the reason why I like it here. There's just a feeling of familiarity (no doubt due to the dramas) and ease when I look around here.
On Sunday I went to Seoul International Baptist Church all by myself (no, I did not get lost). The journey there was incredibly wet due to the persistent rain, which also made it extremely freezing. I arrived there in the end though, with the help of three Filipino men who answered my questions in English. The church was a mixture of foreign and local people. I overheard a few conversations (yes, my speciality is pretending I'm absorbed in something else while actually listening intently) and a lot of the foreign people are English teachers. It didn't really surprise me, because the only real jobs which foreign people who can't speak Korean can take part in are teaching jobs. The pastor wasn't there that morning, so instead they had invited one of the church members to give his testimony which turned out to be really powerful. If you ask me about it in person later on I'll tell you, but it's really too long to be written here. I went back to the dormitory after church, but not before being trapped inside the subway station for half an hour....but that's a long story too.
Sunday night was when all the exchange students at CAU met up. We went to a chicken place near the university and introduced ourselves to each other. It was fun meeting all the new students. It ended up being so loud in the restaurant that we were kind of yelling at each other across, even though we were sitting opposite each other on the table. There was a lot of fried chicken, beer, and soju going on during the meet-up, which is pretty much the standard Korean meet-up I guess. I left at around 10:30 because I was tired and wanted to sleep, but I think the others didn't leave until about 12:30 am.
Monday was a pretty long day. I met up with my buddy an hour before our orientation to try and open a bank account, except it turns out that we can't open a bank account until we've been in the country for more than five days. Or until the immigration office sends the word that we have officially entered the country. Because I came on a Saturday, and public offices don't open on weekends (wow, I thought that was only Australia being lazy), my details hadn't gone through yet. It was pretty disappointing, but what could I do? Absolutely nothing, so I went to buy food to eat before the orientation. Orientation was informative but also long. I did take a Korean-language test though, and now I'm going to register for the Intermediate Korean class. Yay, watching dramas paid off!
At night time, a group of us went out to 동대문 dongdaemun to eat dinner and have a look around. We first went to a shopping complex called Doota, which is similar to the Mongkok shopping centres. There are little stores of clothes, bags and shoes everywhere on each floor, each selling pretty similar stuff for similar (and high) prices. We had only gone our separate ways in the mall - girls and boys group - for about ten minutes when the boys called us and said that they had seen all they needed. I guess frills and laces aren't really their thing.
We decided to walk to the older markets for the culture and food. It was a twenty-minute walk, but I think because it was so cold that no one really noticed. When we got there, all we could see were stalls and stalls of 순대 soondae (black sausages) and 족발 jokbal (pork hock) along with various other items which I don't know the names of. We came upon this ahjumma selling pupa (yes, pupa. Like larvae. yes, larvae.), and bought a cup because some people were interested in tasting it. It tasted like beans, but the texture was so .....ugh. Not nice.
Although we had eaten some street food beforehand, we were still hungry so we went into a little place where their speciality was 전 jeon. It's kind of like a savoury pancake, and they make it with different ingredients like seafood or kimchi. Apparently, the jeon and 막걸리 makgeolli (rice wine) are like peanut butter and jam (celery and cream cheese, cheese and crackers, yin and yang...) so five bottles of makgeolli were ordered and shared among the ten of us. It was a fun night, but the dormitory curfew is 1 am so we came back by around 12.
And finally, yesterday! Yesterday I spent the morning with three of the exchange students (one girl - Heidi and two guys - Gauthier and Pontus) looking at the fitness room behind our dorms and then introducing Modern Family to the two boys, who had never heard of the show before (because they're from Belgium and Sweden) and had thought that the show would be 'girly'. I don't think so. The fitness room has a few machines inn it, some weights and yoga mats. Heidi started teaching the two boys some moves in yoga, which then led to Pontus telling us that he was a former gymnast in Sweden! It's not longer just one new thing a day anymore here. It's ten new things a minute.
His university campus looked like something out of a fairytale. The buildings were really historic-looking and looked even prettier because of the autumn-like surroundings. He took me around the campus and showed me his dormitory. It was nice, but my dormitories are nicer. We met up with his sister and his friend for dinner, where we ate a buffet Korean barbeque. It's very different to the buffet barbeque in Adelaide, where the meat they give you isn't really....nice. Here the meat was the authentic fatty pork, beef, and pig skin. We ate a lot tonight, but I haven't had meat in almost five days so it was nice to eat some again.
I really need to start updating more often. This Lazy Update thing isn't really working because I write too much for each event - maybe I should change it to Congested Update? I also need to start writing my personal devotions up again. This isn't just supposed to be a diary of my physical life but also my spiritual life as well.
P.S. Oh! While we were walking around the streets outside Ewha, I saw 나르샤 Narsha, 서인영 Seo In Young and 선화 Sunhwa (from Secret) filming their variety show 'Heroes'. They seemed to be doing some kind of cooking activity, but they were finishing up by the time I saw them.
oh wow, i see what you mean by ten things a minute - it seems like an incredible thing though! it all seems so interesting and exciting (yes, i'm a tiny bit jealous! i really hope i can go this summer!)
ReplyDeletethat's interesting that you friend got into ewha o_______o
how can you say you're jealous though - i'm so jealous that you get to be an actual international student in japan as opposed to just being an exchange student!!! haha
ReplyDeletei really hope you can come this summer too!! if you come in june/july, maybe we can meet up and i'll show you around :)
oh, i would love to meet up! if things go as planned, i'd be in seoul from mid-june to mid-august ^^
ReplyDeletehaha, i know i'm lucky - i'm just itching to explore as much as possible! i'm so far away from europe, i want to see everything all at once since it's so different (though at the same time, so similar..!)