Monday, August 23, 2010

The 15-Hour Flight

I am way behind on writing on my blog! I think it's because my computer won't read the new memory card I got for my camera and until I buy a new card reader I won't be able to share my pictures and I just assumed no one would read what I wrote if there weren't pictures. I didn't take any pictures during my flight so I have just taken them from various places online.

So, this is how my journey began! I got up at 4:30 in the morning and my family, including my sister, who was able to take off work, drove down to Philly together because my first flight left from there. After saying goodbye to everyone and waiting at my gate for a long time and eating a pretzel, I got on my first flight, which was to Washington Dulles. It was the tiniest airplane I have ever seen! There were only three seats in a row! I didn't like it because I could really feel every time the plane turned or wobbled. That flight was only about half an hour long. That was also the last time I slept that day.

After we landed in Dulles I had my second lunch, which was pretty horrible sushi. My layover was only about an hour and a half. I hung out near my gate and was reading. Another girl who is doing EPIK, Sonya, had messaged me on Facebook earlier when we realized we were on the same flight, and I met her at the airport. She said she recognized me because I was the only white person there. That was definitely not true! There were like 4 other white people on our flight! We talked for about 10 minutes and then our plane started boarding.

If you are ever flying to Asia you MUST fly KOREAN AIR. My flight was pretty much horrible since I couldn't sleep during any of it and I was horribly uncomfortable after the first 5 hours, but everything else was great. For example, the flight attendants:

That picture is actually misleading, because Korean Air flight attendants are not that ugly. All of my flight attendants looked like super models and were the prettiest people I have ever seen. Plus, they all spoke English and Korean and Tagalog and who knows what else and were really nice. They also have really pretty uniforms. They have really pretty hairpins, too:


This is exactly what my plane looked like:

You could watch movies and TV shows and documentaries, play video games, and shop online with the little consoles. Since I failed to sleep for even one minute on my flight, I spent a lot of time utilizing the console. I watched Date Night, which was a really horrible movie, and American Beauty, which I think made the older Korean couple next to me uncomfortable, and Wedding Dress, a horribly sad Korean movie about a mother dying of cancer whose only wish is to make a wedding dress for her little daughter. I also set the in-flight records in both Space Invaders and Tetris. I spent more time playing Tetris than I had slept the night before. By the end of my flight my eyes and head were throbbing.

I met up with Sonya and we decided to navigate Inhceon International Airport together. It was actually very easy as everything was in English in addition to Korean and Chinese and Japanese. Look how cool the airport is!!!! (Don't think we were actually in this part, oh well.)

We got our visas and passports checked and then claimed our baggage. I was worried some of my suitcases had gotten lost during my layover but they were like the first ones out! Then we went through customs, which was easy because we didn't have any firearms or illegal drugs to claim, and exchanged our money for won. EPIK recommended that we bring over $1000 USD in cash because we wouldn't be getting paid until the end of our first month so I spent my entire flight with $1200 stuck to my body in a little fanny pack thing that went under my clothes. It was not very comfortable. Korean won is really cute and the 50,000 bill has a woman on it!

We found the EPIK check-in desk which was very close by and they told us to get some food at the airport since we were late and dinner was no longer being served at Kyung Hee. We were pretty excited to buy some stuff with our pretty new money. We got sandwiches as Paris Baguette . There are Paris Baguette shops everywhere here. The sandwich was okay. I also bought a couple of things at a drugstore but I don't remember what. Water, probably, and soap, which they ended up providing us with anyway.

We signed in and waited for the next EPIK bus that was taking EPIK people to the University. There were a lot of people from California and New Zealand and Australia who were way less disgusting-looking than we were but people still talked to us anyway. I got a free cell phone because I applied through Korvia Consulting. Having a phone is nice but it's a used phone and probably from like 2002 and only came with an extra battery and not a charger so I have turned it on once since I've been here. I'll get a cool phone once my alien registration card has been approved.

Our bus came in at 7:50 and EPIK staff kindly loaded all our luggage into it. An EPIK photographer kept taking pictures and videos of us. I really hope those pictures do not end up in the final slideshow because I looked like a walking corpse. The drive to Kyung Hee University Global Campus took about an hour. We were all glued to our windows. The topogaphy of Korea is so much different than in Pennsylvania: lots of mountains and water everywhere. Plus, there are neon lights EVERYWHERE! Everything was so beautiful, and we were just driving on a highway! Plus, our driver got lost and we ended up driving along a side road that had a cell phone store with a big poster of Big Bang in the window! I took a picture for Maria. OK, I took a picture for myself.

We got to Kyung Hee around 9 PM and the first thing anyone entering the campus sees is a humongous glowing French neoclassical arch that is really big and really awesome. We drove through it and stopped outside the Multimedia Education Building, which is where the EPIK Office is. We located our luggage and picked up our name tags and orientation bags. There were some fun goodies inside like orange juice and a croissant and an EPIK alarm clock and EPIK Post-Its and EPIK towels and maps of Seoul. And, most importantly, our orientation handbooks. Sonya and I decided to room together which ended up being a good decision after we saw some of the other people that ended up here :). I took pictures of our room and will put them up once I have a card reader, along with all the other amazing pictures I have taken! We basically passed out as soon as we had showered (Best. Shower. Ever.) and woke up well rested for our first day of orientation!

Questions/comments?

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Bon Voyage to Me

This is my last night at home! Luckily I will still be able to spend some time with my family tomorrow because my father, mother, brother, and sister all elected to help drive me and my morbidly obese pack of suitcases from Harrisburg to the Philadelphia Airport. And this was even before Lauren and Timothy knew that there would be a trip to KOP and the Cheesecake Factory afterward! When I heard that my family was galavanting to the Cheesecake Factory immediately after my departure from the country to celebrate my year-long absence from their lives I considered canceling my flight and contract and joining them because I love the Cheesecake Factory so much but GUESS WHAT! THERE ARE CHEESECAKE FACTORIES IN KOREA. I AM REALLY HAPPY RIGHT NOW!

My flight from Philly to Dulles leaves at 10:16 in the morning and my flight from Dulles to Incheon leaves at 1:25 PM and arrives about 15 hours later at 4:35 KST in Korea! Actually I guess that would be 16:35. I have a window seat on my first flight and an aisle seat on my flight to Korea which is pretty good because yeah I would like to be able to look out the window and see foreign soil as we land but seriously how many times am I going to have to get up to go to the bathroom during a 15-hour flight? At least 4.

Thanks to everyone who was able to come to my going away party today and a billion thanks to my parents for supporting me and loaning me money to buy my plane ticket, and especially my mom for helping me buy all the things I needed for my trip and being very helpful. I know you think that you annoy me when you remind me 100 times to pack my retainers, but I'm really just glad that you care! I love you all, and next time you hear from me I will be on the other side of the world!


HOT DOG PIZZA??!?!


Friday, August 13, 2010

Top Four Places I Want to Go to in South Korea

1. Jeju Island



"The Hawaii of Korea." It is a popular destination for newlyweds. I really want to go here for my Spring or Summer vacation when the weather will be nice. Plus, this is where Jae Kyung and Jun Pyo almost got married on Boys Over Flowers. It was filmed ON LOCATION and is really beautiful. I know this because I saw it on TV. Since I'm probably not gonna make it to New Caledonia, Jeju Island can be my cheaper tropical vacation spot.

2. Lotte World



Lotte World is a humongous indoor/outdoor amusement park in Seoul that has a fake Eiffel tower, a fake Cinderella's Castle, and a fake Trevi Fountain. Plus weird/crazy parades. I really want to go here in December and see the Christmas parade and go ice-skating! Even though I hate ice-skating.

3. Everland


Everland is the biggest amusement park in South Korea and is conveniently located in Yongin, the city where I will be having my 10-day EPIK orientation (at Kyung Hee University Global Campus). This is why I want to go to Everland: the park has five zones, including the Global Fair, European Adventure, American Adventure, Magic Land, and Zoo-topia, which has a PETTING ZOO, PONY RIDES, AND ANIMAL SHOWS. Everyone at EPIK is hoping that our day-long field trip will be to Everland but we are pretty sure it's going to be Korean Folk Village.

4. Seoul/Nam San Tower


Another place I want to go to because I saw it in a Korean drama. I am terrified of heights but I could temporarily forget about that because the view will be so amazing. You can see almost all of Seoul! Plus this is like the Liberty Bell in Philly: you can't go to Seoul without going to Seoul Tower.

Don't all these places look really cool and really fun?! YES! Plus I am definitely going to do the BOYS OVER FLOWERS OFFICIAL KOREAN LOCATION TOUR and go to all the places that were featured in the show and take lots of pictures and make Maria so jealous she immediately books a flight to Incheon to live with me!

Three Days!

Here is the very exciting finale to my Diploma Dilemma story. The registrar's office never returned my calls so it looks like I will be dragging my really big and really precious diploma to Korea in a cardboard tube in my carry-on. Hope it doesn't get bent or torn. LOLJK it's just going to vaporize when my plane crashes anyway! I think I'm going to Fed-Ex it back home after I'm settled into my apartment in Seoul. That will definitely cost at least $60.

I have already packed 99% of my stuff. Packing all the things you will need for an entire year is REALLY DIFFICULT. Plus I'm only bringing two suitcases (because I am too cheap to pay for extra baggage) and a large carry-on bag and my backpack. One of my suitcases is all clothing, and one of them is medicine, shoes, sweaters, and my winter coat. I still can't find my black leather winter gloves or my black turtleneck which is my favorite shirt of all time, and I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to locate them in the disgusting mess that is currently my bedroom because I picked up a cold from someone (thanks, Derek) and I can barely breathe, much less poke through the various piles of stuff all over my floor and in my closet. Wow, I am going to end this installation of my Great Trans-Continental Journey with another thrilling cliffhanger... will I be able to find my gloves and shirt in time for my flight?! I sure hope so.

!!!UPDATE!!! I found my favorite black turtleneck all the way at the bottom of the most difficult-to-get-to container in the basement. Score. And I found my gloves in the top drawer of my dresser where I now remember purposefully placing them when I moved back from college so I would remember where they were.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Five Days!

I can't believe I will be leaving in five days! I guess I should be really nervous, but I'm just really tired. I got back from New York/Philly a few hours ago. I got my visa in New York and got to see Hadley and Derek before I left, and then met up with Liz while I waited for my train at 30th Street. I am going to miss everyone so much! But I guess now we are all grown up and need to do our own thing. It was really weird seeing the Bryn Mawr R5 station as the train went by it. For the first time in four years I won't be going back at the end of August. Instead, I'll be in Seoul! Crazy. I thought about this for like 2 seconds on the train and then decided I should fall asleep while listening to my Swedish Pop iTunes playlist instead of having some Really Deep Thoughts.

I almost didn't get my visa because I hadn't brought the right type of extra "passport-sized photo." I guess I just assumed it could be any photo that was the size of a passport photo, so I just cropped my face out of a picture of me on Facebook where I looked OK. I think I was supposed to get some taken at Rite-Aid or something. But it worked out OK and I didn't even have to go in for an interview because EPIK teachers get special treatment. Plus, I met a guy who will be teaching outside of Busan while we were waiting to pick up our visas today and we got lunch and made plans to hang out so now I have four American connections in Korea!

Now the only thing I am worried about is providing my diploma or proof of graduation when I get to orientation. I requested a confirmation of graduation from Bryn Mawr but they sent me to the National Student Clearinghouse website and I ordered a confirmation but just realized tonight that the confirmation was just online and not a paper copy. And I am pretty sure you can't notarize and apostille a page that you printed from the internet. Tomorrow I am going to call the Bryn Mawr registrar and plead for them to send me a letter overnight, and then hopefully have enough time Friday to get the letter notarized and apostilled (good thing I live in Harrisburg.) If that doesn't work then I will just have to take my humongous diploma which didn't come with a case or holder to Korea in my suitcase and it will probably be destroyed. Oh wow this is a really dramatic story. HOW IS IT GOING TO END??!! Look out for the exciting conclusion.

Monday, August 2, 2010

안녕하세요!

That means hello in Korean! While I had a rare moment of down-time at CTY I put together this blog. I think that this will be the best way for me to stay in touch with family and friends back in the States while I am in Seoul and to share stories, experiences, and photographs with everyone.

Does the world really need yet another blog about cross-cultural experiences from a sheltered, privileged American kid? Maybe. Hopefully I won't come off as too much of a jerk on here and my genuine enthusiasm for life, traveling, and teaching adorable Korean children how to say their ABCs will shine through this page.

I received a copy of my contract and my notice of appointment from EPIK (English Program in Korea) a few days ago. My orientation starts August 17 at Kyung Hee University in Yongin. I bought my flight ticket last night. I will fly from Philadelphia to Dulles at 10 AM on August 16 and then from Dulles to Incheon on Korean Air, arriving in Korea at about 4:30 PM on August 17. From there a driver will transport me from Incheon to Yongin for orientation. For the time being, since I'm still stuck at CTY, I will be focusing on rounding up all the documents I need to get my E-2 teaching visa and planning my train/bus trip to the Korean Consulate and Embassy in Manhattan, which will probably be on August 9.

I am very excited/scared. What am I thinking, just running off to another country for a year to perform a job that I am not fully convinced I am qualified to do?

AZNROBOTTEACHERZ