15 floors closer to the clouds

Perhaps it is human nature for the events surrounding a big change to seem surreal.
For a cloud of numb apathy to settle around your brain, in hopes of preventing sensory over load.
This continues for awhile and then shiz gets real.
It's inevitable.


This Saturday I moved into a new apartment. On the 15th floor, no less.

The place is spacious and has heated floors, yesssssss. Poor circulation be damned, my feet will not freeze this winter!
Shortly after moving in, I bought my first plant (a darling yellow kalanchoe)
and had my first pizza in the new hood. At a joint aptly named,  Pizza school.
side note: there is an unending supply of korean businesses with english names.
usually a conglomeration of somewhat random nouns.
examples:
skin food (cosmetics store)
noodle tree house ( mostly the first one)
mr. pizza love for women ( a pizza joint con salad bar complete with raw crab and no lettuce)
sexy cookie (there is no baking there)
salad bar and party (still not sure)
sand and food (sandwich cafe)
thinking is real (interior design company)
1% premium space (upscale clothing store)
dear baby (possibly infant stationery)
crocodile lady (circus sideshow outfitters)
Back to pizza school : had your standard cheese pizza with sweet potato, corn, onions, and a marinara sauce that quite possibly contained both honey mustard and barbeque sauce. surprisingly delicious.
During the meal, two separate rounds of teenage korean girls sat next to us and struck up conversation.
The second group was extremely complimentary. Apparently Korean tweenagers are BIG fans of blue eyes.

Sunday was spent cooking and wandering.
We happened upon fall colors, an impromptu market, and a group of rowdy boys.




Tomorrow the training wheels come off and I will be left to educate, herd, and prevent general disarray of approximately 50 eager young Korean minds for six hours. Alone. Wish me more than luck.

traffic lights and rice cakes

almost a fortnight into the Republic of Korea adventure....

a brief synopsis on some of the subtle differences I've noticed thus far.
every appliance sings, beeps, hums and whirls after the completion of a task.
a few examples:

-cell phones play a four minute promotional trailer every time you turn them on or off.
- most apartments have punch codes for the building entrance and each apartment. They produce a delightful jingle every time they're touched.
-the washing machine sounds like an ice cream truck after the load is finished.
side note: dryers are uncommon, every house has a drying rack either affixed to the ceiling, hanging from a wall or folded in the porch corner. the first load I washed took three days to dry, albeit the clothes were hanging in a room with no sunlight and no cross breeze. Three days. So much for the warm fuzzy feeling of accomplishment the washing machine's jingle gave me.
Grandma, my appreciation for your clothesline in the full Florida sun is wholly renewed.

eggs are sold in groups of ten not twelve.

red traffic lights are a suggestion. you only have to stop for a little while then feel free to proceed as you fit. no need to worry about the police, they cruise with their lights on. all the time.

taxi rides are generally inexpensive. 5,000 won (roughly 5 USD) tops.

a rice cake is not a light crispy snack. it is a chewy cylindrical food item that is spicy.

everything is spicy.

things that are the same in Korea and the States and quite possibly the all over the world.

little children love to sing.

taxis drivers are fearless.

overseas

overseas.  to traverse seas, by air or water,
migrating like geese or whales to new shores.
i remain amazed that in just a few hours (that sometimes stretch into days) time 
we, too, can reach new shores. 
overseas
what a strangely literal word that holds so much possibility.

in approximately thirty hours (driving + flying) i went from familiar woods and words 
to an unfamiliar land full of words that fall on ignorant ears.
Point Washington, Florida, United States of America
to
Gunsan, Jeollabuk-do, South Korea

the transition
thus far
has been
exciting
intimidating
and most of all
spicy




peppers, bok choy, and onions growing at one of the MANY urban farms in Gunsan.
Koreans are serious guerilla gardeners.
This farm is on the edge of Eunpa Lake Park.
a snapshot of Eunpa Lake.
approx. 6 blocks from my apartment
aforementioned apartment
Happy
   

the land surrounding Eunpa lake is a medley of forest, tea houses, farms and cemeteries.
yesss
 much like their approach to gardening, Koreans seem to part with the deceased in whatever spot is available
with a nice view
and ample sunlight.
In the states, our graves tend to be level with the earth, almost as if nothing ever happened.
No earth was touched to lay bones beneath.
Here, there are mounds of earth, in which I imagine the bones to be cocooned in a cave.
or maybe the dust of their bodies is in a small box underneath a mass of dirt.
I wonder what a Korean funeral is like.......



more soon.
much love.