Sunday 29 December 2013

Things To Get At Home



Things To Get:
Tomorrow I will be embarking on a 24 hour trek to get to my lovely Welsh homeland. I cannot wait. I want to jump on the plane now but I still have two days left of work. As you may remember from the last few days of school you mostly watched movies and played games. At the time I thought it was because my teachers were kind and fun loving people, now I realise it’s because they were hung-over, stressed out teachers who wanted to sit the kids in front of something silly for an hour.
When I’m not being a fantastic teacher and sharing the joys of Mr Bean (How I love you Rowan for the hours of silence you have granted me) I am at my desk ‘desk- warming’. This is the name given to the Korean school process in which foreign teachers have to stay in school for certain amount of hours whether the school is open or not.
My desk warming for the next two days will consist of old Hollywood movies (currently it is The Seven Year Itch and The Big Sleep) and dreaming of the lovely things I will be buying when I get off the plane. So here is my shopping list:
  1. Eggnog Latte….this one will be the most upsetting one if it’s not available since this is the taste of Christmas to me and not something you can find in Korea so my plan is, get off the plane and run to Starbucks.
  1. CHEESE – cheese is available in Korea but its expensive and rare so I am going to get a shopping cart and fill it to the top with lots of English treats including blue cheese, cheddar, Halumi, brie, camembert and anything else I can lay my hands on.

  1. Underwear – The weirdest experience while shopping for clothes here in Korea was being laughed out of a shop when I told them my bra size. In the uk I am not only average but a bit below average. Some would go as far to say small but here in Korea I am like a Russian Hooker. The only bras I can buy come in a special hidden section and are covered in dust. The other weird edition to the problem is all bras in Korea are padded so when I finally do find one to fit it’s padded up to my ears. I shall be happily wandering into every underwear shop I can find in the UK. What Katie Did on Portobello road will definitely be getting a visit.

  1. Shoes – This one will be essential to survive next year in Korea. My feet suffer from the same problem as my brassieres. 'Very very big-uh' iin Korea. I luckily have a supply of shoes waiting for me at home. My luggage when I moved here was too heavy So my shoes were stupidly sacraficed. I will be like a kid in a candy store (but with the added advantage of knowing they all fit perfectly as I’ve worn them all before)
  1. Herbs and Spices – I’ve recently discovered a few places that sell the basic herbs and spices in Korea but since I am hoping to ‘Get my Cook on’ next year I really want to bring a big collection. Ginger, Nutmeg, Chicken stock and Rosemary to name a few. I might also get lazy and just bring ‘Chinese 5 spice’.
  1. Chinese food – the most ironic item on the list is definitely Chinese and Thai food. The irony of having to leave Asia to get good Chinese food isn’t wasted on me but it’s very true. Koreans have their own version of Chinese food that is probably more authentic but doesn’t represent the type I’m use to at all. It is easily my favourite food so when I get home I shall be feasting on Pad Thai, Black Bean and Chow Mein’s as much s possible. Mmmm
  1. Dresses – for no reason other than I want to go to London and buy pretty vintage dresses

  1. Tights – While I love a good stocking as much as the next girl I need some tights to get me through the cold winters and the average day while teaching. In Korea tights are a mysterious item that doesn’t exist. It’s actually extremely hard to find stocking too. They only have circulation destroying- blood cutting off -stockings that sit on your thigh . I have seen my leg turn blue more than a few times.  

  1. Christmas Party food – Smoked Salmon, Pate, French bread, mozzarella sticks, tomatoes salads, potato wedges, salt and vinegar crisps, chip shop chips, pasties’, scones, crumpets, butter…all of the above. I’m craving it all and can’t wait for my own little party when I get home.
  1. Good Coffee – although there are a million coffee shops (and I mean a million) none of them do a good coffee. It’s very rare and expensive to track down a place that is willing to make you a beautiful Dutch drip coffee. Starbucks can give you a good one as well as a restaurant called ‘Butterfinger Pancakes’ in Seoul but apart from that , I’m stumped.

Wednesday 25 December 2013

Doodlezilla gets a gift

I hope you all had a fantastic day. My gift to little doodlezilla was a new play mate so i'd like you all to meet
King Konglish.
Hopefully doodlezilla can put his learnzilla hat on and help him with his Konglish ways

Monday 23 December 2013

Thursday 12 December 2013

A Ton of Bricks

A road to no where. Travel will widen your eyes and your mind
Even after a few months in Korea I was still baffeled daily. By things i'd see, hear or situations I would find myself in, I suppose just life in general here in Korea. Writing blog spots wasn't something I had to think about too much (as i'm sure you could tell by reading them) as there was so much going on every day but slowly things became the norm. I saw one of my friends mentioning she had writers block and I realised I have been suffering from this too, not because i've been wraking my brain trying to think of what to type but because crazy situations aren't as commen to me now. I don't see something and think to myself 'I must write about this' as often as I use to. I was thinking about all of this while walking home today. I'd just come from a medical test in Sangin, an area about half hour by bus. I dealt with people that spoke no English, met some interesting characters, saw some beautiful scenery.

As I jumped off the bus I headed into my local CU (a seven eleven kind of connvieniece store) and got myself a 50p coffee and some kimbap. I filled the cup up in the shop and as I left I looked up to thank the man working in the store and we bowed to each other. It was at that moment that it hit me like a ton of bricks. 'I live in Korea'. This was a thought i'd have about 10 times a day when I first arrived and even a few months ago I'd be reciting this to myself at least once a week but now life just moves and things just happen. I speak broken Korean, enough to understand what people are talking about and asking me, I read hangul and I bow about 20 times a day. It was just a clean, crisp thought that revealled the abnormality that this is normal.

I have been in Korea for almost 10 months now and I am signing up for another year. I have lived past the honeymoon stage and even the hating everything stage until I have arrived at the point I am at now. Home.

Life here is still fantastic and i'm aware of that but it's nice to have that ton of bricks hit you from time to time to remind yourself that fantastic is now my normal. So I will leave you now to head out into the freezing Korean air to go and watch 'The Hobbit' with Korean subtitles while people around me eat onion popcorn and fried squid. I'll be watching the movie with people from all corners of the world and the weirdest element of all of this is, it won't be weird at all.

Have a good week everyone

Tuesday 10 December 2013

Pinterest Boards

I've finally got around to sticking my pictures on the beautiful Pinterest. Have a look and see what you think.


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