Monday, July 19, 2010

A Hard Road...

Ah. The blog. The blog that was to document everything we experienced so we wouldn't forget where we went, who we saw, and how we felt - as it was all happening.

Unfortunately, this time around, the blog was precisely the wrong place to post our musings and experiences, which is why we've been MIA for some time now. This is due to a paranoid state, with a bullying boss, and one of the worst experiences Jake and I have had to date. It was a nightmarish state that we were in while we worked there, and when we thought it was all over, it wasn't. The persistent, evil and selfish bosses of ours continued to make our lives an uphill struggle in a country where we don't speak the language, and the immigration officers (conveniently) don't speak English.

Trying to balance already exhausted finances (most stolen by said bosses), visa issuance problems, flights in and out of the country, bogus criminal charges with fraud and conspiracy claims, and trying to fit into a new job, impress a new boss, and explain our situation without seeming like head cases was a task we were not prepared for, but also did not want to fail at.

So, we pushed though, and are happier than ever that the physical and mental abuse we took from that school pushed us to try harder than we ever have, to achieve what we felt we deserved - a great school, with an honest and respectful boss, and engaged students (not to mention great vacation time as well).

Posting anything on this blog while we were employed by the awful husband and wife boss duo could have resulted in them finding out information about our feelings and motivations, and could have given them a leg-up on what our plans might have been. Therefore anything we would have posted, would have had to have been sugar coated or just blatant lies.
They frequently broke into our apartment, listened in on phone conversations, and opened our computer to check the most recent documents. Any paper/electronic trail would have been found and exploited, so here we are, 9 months later, and I finally feel somewhat comfortable writing in this public venue without extreme fear of repercussions. (Note that I am still fearful).
These guys are crazy. Actually out-of-their-mind, bat-shit insane. And they have a grudge against the two of us and seem prepared to go to any lengths to quench their ill-conceived thirst for foreign blood.


However, I figure it's time to stop living in the fearful paranoid state they created, and get back to documenting the good and interesting experiences that we are having and have had since our arrival back in Korea.

Stay posted for more - I promise it will be sooner than in 9 months time.

Cheers,


Sunday, November 8, 2009

Arrived Alive


Hey everyone!

So Jake and I have arrived in Busan alive and well! We finished our first week of work and are becoming more familiar with the neighbourhood, our coworkers and the Korean lifestyle in general again.
We got in on All Hallows Eve (or October 31st for you non-heathens), and what an entrance it was! We flew out of Pearson at five to midnight on the 29th, and spent 14 hours next to an old Korean harmonee (grandmother) who was constantly staring at Jake (her seat neighbour) either to see what he was watching on his tv, or to gesture at him for some help. What a gentleman, Jake opened water bottles, rice packages and more for the cute old woman with the bad knee.
What an adventurous 70 something woman, flying from Canada to Korea on her own, knowing not a lick of English!! I would assume that she was visiting her son or daughter that now lives in Toronto, but she was wearing a group tour lanyard tag thing, so maybe she was just in Canada for kicking vacation??!! What an adventurer! I want to be just like her.

Anyhow, after a few games of Yahtzee, Tetris, minesweeper, chess, several Korean and Western meals and watching the movie "The Hangover" we landed in Incheon International Airport in Seoul at 3am local time. We had a few hours to kill until our 8:50 am flight to Busan. So, we surveyed our food options, and the only things open were a KFC, a McDonalds, and a Japanese restaurant with a seafood ridden menu. After flying halfway around the world, we were definitely jonesing for some kimchi bokumbap or bibimbap or mandu or anything Korean! Foiled! We ate some Egg McMuffins and hashbrowns instead.

We caught our morning flight along with all the Korean business men whose only luggage are their suitcases, on the 45 minute domestic flight. We were overweight by at least 10 kg each on the domestic flight, and probably 3 or so for the international flight, but they never seem to care about that on Korean air. What a nice friendly bunch! Service at it's best! (Our coworker said he flew here from Turkey, and he paid 25 euro per extra kilogram with Turkish Air!)

Touch down in Busan, and a silent man with our names on a sign grabs our bags after we make eye contact with him, and we walk in the 27 degree heat to our new academy's student van. He drives us, in pure awkward silence to our new house in Suan Dong, Dongnae Gu. Yes, that's right. It's a house. Rare for Korea, and very rare for the 2nd largest city in Korea!

We walk down a twisting alley with our bags, sweating and with no idea where we were, or where we were going (were we going to the school? Were we going to meet our boss? Were we going to go pick strawberries? Could've fooled us!) Avoiding rolling our luggage through a mini mine field of fallen and squashed tangerines on the concrete walkway from the trees hovering above, we arrive at a gate, and the silent man places our bags into the doorway of a house that has an old woman cleaning the floors on her hands and knees with a rag. Exit silent man. Where are we? Is this our house? We smile at the old lady who is cleaning and not interested in our presence. We sit on the bed and exchange confused whispers. Enter Delia, our new coworker who is on her way to buy some eggs at the store. She fills us in. This is indeed our place. She lives around the corner (literally), and our boss, Eddie, lives above us all. Exit Delia for eggs. Eddie, our new boss comes down and asks us how we like the apartment. A little worse for wear, we ask if it's finished and "ready" for us to move in. He says yes, we briefly strain to understand what he's trying to tell us in broken English. Then he leaves.

Jake and I go for a walk, knowing we will find a Gimbap heaven (these places are everywhere.... think Tim Hortons in the Maritimes) and have some dumplings and gimbap. Nap time.


Then we get our Halloween costumes on and head in a cab to Kyungsung University area where we meet up with Kendra and her boyfriend and get some drinks at a forigner bar. The bar parties all ended up combining and it just
became a large street party. Never have I seen so many foreigners all together in the same place in Korea. It was wild! There were brave Koreans scattered everywhere to catch a glimpse of this strange bizarre and boisterous event taking photos on their cell phones, and looking genuinely confused, afraid, and just generally gob-smacked.

We ran into people, and used Kendra's cell phone to contact several old friends that live in Busan, and met up with most of them throughout the night! Good times!

Our first day of work was on Tuesday, after we spent Monday "observing" classes. The school has it's own building, and is in a quiet backstreet next to a "river" near Dongnae subway station. The students are at least a million times smarter than at our last academy, and they are adorable, and wear uniforms with bowties and blazers and white leggings! There are 6 of us foreigner teachers, and a handful of Korean teachers and Korean helpers that make sure that the kinder-gardener's eat lunch, wash their hands, etc. There is a teachers room equipt with a few computers, and there is a specific curriculum set out for each class for each day and many textbooks and tapes and cds to choose from!

Anyhow, that's my long-winded update for now. Maybe I'll make Jake do the next post because he's a lot more brief than I!
Lots of hugs and kisses. We miss you all back home, and will hopefully get to chat via skype soon!

xoxo
Colleen




Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The Return of the MacTurlo to the ROK


Hello all!

Who'd of thunk it?! After a year and several months we
are going to return to the Land of the Morning Calm.

We are more educated and perhaps even more excited this time around, and we will be calling Busan our home.

After getting another degree each, both Jake and I had that same "Holy sh*t. We're done school, have some more student debt, and STILL don't know exactly how to start our REAL careers" feeling that we felt after graduating from our undergrad degrees. Granted, we do know what we want to do, but the tough economic times usually meant that for Jake, journalism jobs were volunteer or temp contract work only, and that for me, short term internships would be the only way to pass a long unemployment period while I gained enough experience to apply for any jobs in my marine management field. Therefore, while we tested out the Canadian employment options we would probably be working as dishwashers or servers at a restaurant somewhere. Looking for a good job is a like full time job in itself, especially if you are overeducated and underexperienced.... but isn't that the way the cookie crumbles??

Anyways, so, fearing student loan repayments, Canadian apartment rental costs, and a likely long period of under- or un-employment, we decided it best to return to Korea where our good looks and panache for the English language is more appreciated in the job market than it is here.

So, as Jake was tutoring English part time over the summer and I was completing my thesis and internship, we hooked up with a Korean recruiter in Halifax and he helped us find what so far seems to be a really amazing school in Dong Nae, Busan.
We will write more about the school once we get there and can separate the facts from the folklore from what we've been told by our boss and recruiter.

With a pretty firm grasp on the culture, language and city already, as well as a good dozen or so friends living in Ulsan and Busan, we are more than excited to extend our "real" job hunt to a year, while being gainfully employed and entertained in Korea.

Hence the resurrection of the BLOG! Hopefully we will be just as (or more) adamant about updating the blog with text and photos of our adventure in South Korea: Round Two!

If all goes as currently planned (which hasn't often been the case over the past month or so) we leave Toronto on October 29th, and arrive in Busan the morning of the 31st - Halloween!

We're still trying to think of a great couple costume that we could pull off for the night we arrive! John and Yoko? Austin Powers and Heather Graham? A pilot and a stewardess? Two Canadian hosers? All suggestions are welcome, and hopefully we will see you in Korea for All Hallows Eve!

Cheers,

Colleen


Monday, March 16, 2009

The Emerald Isle

Ireland Pictures from July and August



**Dublin Pictures**
**Dublin - Galway Pictures**
**Galway - Sligo Pictures**
**Sligo Pictures**
**Sligo - Dublin Pictures**

Monday, January 26, 2009

London Fog

Pictures from London
July 21st-27th



**London 1**
**London 2**
**London 3**


.

Koh Phi Phi, Thailand

Koh Phi Phi
July 14th - 21st, 2008



Pictures from Thailand. Paradise.

**Phuket to Phi Phi**
**Phi Phi 2**
**Phi Phi 3**

Monday, November 24, 2008

Cambodia

Pictures of Cambodia from July 9th to July 14th.



*Phenom Penh - The Killing Fields and Genocide Museum.

* Please note that these pictures may be very difficult and disturbing to look at, especially if you've visited the sites before. Please do not look at the photos if you are not interested in seeing the aftermath of a mass genocide.*

I think it is vital to educate ourselves on the atrocities that have happened in our life time. This album hopefully will open some eyes.

Pol Pot lead the Khemer Rouge in a genocide that lasted from 1975-1979 throughout Cambodia to exterminate educated civilians. The genocide took the lives of approximately 2 million Cambodian and foreigners (or 21% of the population).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambodia_under_Pol_Pot_(1975-1979)


*Phenom Penh to Siem Reap.


*Angkor Wat and Wat Thom.


* Last Day in Cambodia.