Caveat: Countdown

Dateline: Ilsan


In about 30 hours I’m leaving Korea to return to the US for the first time since 2009 (although I took a trip to Japan in 2010 and to Australia and New Zealand in 2011).I’m looking forward to seeing friends and family, but overall I’m still feeling much less interested in “travel,” conceptually, than I used to feel – I seem to have become a bit of a stick-in-the-mud.

I’m also feeling really stressed right now with the remaining work items – grades to be determined and posted in an as yet incomprehensible computer system, and some kind of outline of the classes that my substitute teachers will have to teach. Etcetera.

I woke up scrunched into the corner – a sign of restless sleep with preoccupations.

A random picture – because otherwise when my blog cross-posts to facebook some default picture shows up the selection of which I have no control over.

picture

Mad River Beach, Arcata, 2007. Caveat: this is not to imply that my upcoming travel will include Humboldt.

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Caveat: Invective!

My TP2 class was in high spirits. Two of them were arguing. They slipped between Korean and English.

One student said of another, "He said invective to me!"

"Invective!" the other said.

"See? Abuse. Abuse. Oh, he is not kind."

What was funny was that what he was saying was literally just "invective" (and I think words in the vein of "욕설" [yokseol] which mean "abuse, invective"). This is "meta" language – he wasn't actually uttering abusive language, he was just uttering pointers to abusive language. This was weirdly clever and strange to see played out.

[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

 

Caveat: Universal Truths

pictureWe were doing something in a textbook in an Eldorado class today. The question was “what is the hobby of a family member?”

One girl provided, with utter aplomb: “My dad’s hobby is sleeping and drinking beer.”

[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

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Caveat: Woful Ere

Youth and Age

Verse, a breeze ‘mid blossoms straying,
Where Hope clung feeding, like a bee—
Both were mine! Life went a-maying
With Nature, Hope, and Poesy,
When I was young!
When I was young?—Ah, woful When!
Ah! for the change ‘twixt Now and Then!
This breathing house not built with hands,
This body that does me grievous wrong,
O’er aery cliffs and glittering sands,
How lightly then it flash’d along—
Like those trim skiffs, unknown of yore,
On winding lakes and rivers wide,
That ask no aid of sail or oar,
That fear no spite of wind or tide!
Naught cared this body for wind or weather
When Youth and I lived in ‘t together.

Flowers are lovely! Love is flower-like;
Friendship is a sheltering tree;
O the joys, that came down shower-like,
Of Friendship, Love, and Liberty,
Ere I was old!
Ere I was old? Ah, woful Ere,
Which tells me, Youth ‘s no longer here!
O Youth! for years so many and sweet,
‘Tis known that thou and I were one;
I’ll think it but a fond conceit—
It cannot be that thou art gone!
Thy vesper-bell hath not yet toll’d—
And thou wert aye a masker bold!
What strange disguise hast now put on,
To make believe that thou art gone?
I see these locks in silvery slips,
This drooping gait, this alter’d size:
But springtide blossoms on thy lips,
And tears take sunshine from thine eyes!
Life is but thought: so think I will
That Youth and I are housemates still.

Dewdrops are the gems of morning,
But the tears of mournful eve!
Where no hope is, life ‘s a warning
That only serves to make us grieve,
When we are old!
That only serves to make us grieve
With oft and tedious taking-leave,
Like some poor nigh-related guest
That may not rudely be dismist.
Yet hath outstay’d his welcome while,
And tells the jest without the smile.

– Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1823

He wrote this when he was about my age (a few years older). It struck a chord in me, I guess, just now. Loudly.

The best part: “Life is but thought: so think I will / That Youth and I are housemates still.” I just wish my housemate would do his share of the chores, sometimes.

Sigh.

Caveat: Dreaming Anthropology

I had a very strange dream in the pre-dawn, this morning. I haven't been having memorable dreams, much, lately, but this one lingered for a long time after I woke up, and so I jotted a few lines about it.

I was living, like a field-linguist or field-anthropologist, among some very low-tech people in some kind of alternate universe where Korea was an isolated and utterly undevoloped country. I was with two old women sitting on the stoop of a pre-Western-contact thatch-roofed hut, and they were "teaching" me to eat manioc – that's what it was specifically called in the dream (in my mind, in the dream, if that makes sense – the women were speaking a Korean that I couldn't actually understand, and manioc is not a part of the Korean traditional diet, being from South America). Manioc is also called cassava, and yuca, and I remember eating it quite a bit when traveling in Central America, where it most definitely is part of the traditional diet. The women on the stoop of the house resembled Central Americans in other ways, too, perhaps.

It was a very slow-moving dream-time. The women chewed bits of manioc, and then would insist that I eat the pre-chewed bits of it. Then they taught me to chew a bit and pass it to them. This had some ritualistic purpose, but I kept trying to figure out how such a ritual could have developed. I wasn't really repulsed by it, but I was thinking "now I'm really integrated to their community – sharing spit like this." Yes, that was my thought, in the dream.

And I had this notepad where I was trying to write down in hangeul the various vocabulary items they used that I could understand. That's maybe more verisimilitudinous. One of the old women was clearly irritated with my note-taking. She kept gentlly pushing the pad away, and insisting that I chew more manioc. I wasn't really enjoying the taste of it, though. And they had these pickled radishes. These are more typical Korean cuisine. They tasted better, too. I reached for one with some chopsticks and the other woman got angry. She spit out the manioc on the ground told me to eat it. Pointing at it.

I woke up.

Dreams are weird.

Caveat: Monsters Exist

During the past two weeks, in my TP반 debate classes, we’ve been debating the topic of monsters, or more specifically, cryptids – e.g. the Loch Ness Monster, Bigfoot, the Chupacabra, etc. The debate proposition was several variations on the sentence: “Monsters exist.” The kids seemed to really enjoy the topic. They like these off-beat things, they seem less intimidating and serious than the standard debate-class fare of public policy issues.

At the end of last week, before our actual speech tests, I took a class period and did a kind of free-writing activity – the kids had to invent their own monsters (including drawing pictures if they wanted to) and then present them to the class, defending why their particular monster was “real.” It was fun. Here is a portrait of all their interesting monsters.

picture

From top left: The Refrigerator Monster, which is harmless but eats all your food (it may be related to a teenager, the clever student explained); Daniel, which no one realizes is a monster, but just don’t make him angry (in fact, Daniel is the creating student’s younger brother, whom I have in a different class); The Hupig (half human, half pig, a mutation as a result of too much pollution); The Bling-Bling Skinny Bigface, which doesn’t seem that attractive to me, but which some students alleged was beautiful (it’s a human mutation that results, if I understood, from excessive vanity, including too much make-up, too much dieting, too much plastic surgery, etc. – interesting); The Lake Park Lake Monster, that lives in the lake at Lake Park, and is invisible and eats small dogs; An un-named but aggressive monster that results from the mutation of students suffering from excessive study – it hunts and brutally kills hagwon teachers (I’m not sure this was a positive message, from this student); A sort of half-fish half-dinosaur, with detailed anatomical drawings, that’s “not really very scary, it just lives in the water and eats fish.”

Speaking of monsters…

What I’m listening to right now.

The Knife, “We Share Our Mother’s Health.” Check out that great, freaky video.

[Daily log: ah, no]

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Caveat: North American Tour (Update)

pictureI bought some more tickets.

I’m arriving in LAX at around noon on Saturday, 28 July. I immediately fly to Minneapolis. I’ll have a rental car there – I will probably drive to Madison and back to MSP at some point that following week. I’ll be in Minneapolis until August 3, when I fly back to L.A. I’ll be in L.A. until August 10. I may try to squeeze in a trip (either a flight or drive) to Phoenix during that L.A. week.

Let me know if you want to see me during these times in these places.

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Caveat: 무소식이 희소식

무소식이       희소식
mu.so.sik.i  hoe.so.sik
no-news-SUBJ good-news

No news [is] good news.

This is really easy. But… there’s no verb. A lot of Korean proverbs seem to be like that.

It’s true, too. No news is good news, right? I do get annoyed, sometimes. I have some people who will email me and say, “how come I never hear how you’re doing?” I really want to say, “Hey, I post twice a day to my blog for you. I’m not doing it for the internet.” There is, I concede, a certain impersonalness to the blog. Still… it should be sufficient to show that I’m doing OK, shouldn’t it?

[Daily log: walking, 2 km]

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Caveat: Mormonism, Community, Belief

Mormonism is in the news a lot, lately – because of Mitt Romney. I have a strange fascination or attraction to Mormonism, for a constellation of reasons, not just one.

Foremost, my parents had no idea when they picked an obscure Old Testament patriarch's name for me at my birth, that they would be setting me up for decades of being mistakenly taken for a Mormon. You see, although "Jared" is only an obscure Old Testament Patriarch, it's also a book in the Book of Mormon, and there are Jaredites in the book of Mormon, and Jared is a very, very common and typical Mormon name.

Starting in the fifth or sixth grade, I remember constantly being assumed to be Mormon – by neighbors, peers, teachers. Partly, it was because there was a relatively high proportion of Mormons in my home town – I suspect the percentage may have been as high as 10% of the local population. Further, I grew up in a house basically across the street from the Arcata Ward meetinghouse, with its brick facade (uncommon in rural northern California) and crossless spire and immense parking lots (because Mormons seem prosperous and they all have cars). I played at the Mormon church throughout my childhood.

Even the Mormons seemed to think I was Mormon. They probably suspected I was somehow lapsed, or rather that my parents were lapsed. And thus I always was in for special evangelical attention. So by the time I graduated high school, I'd received maybe a half-dozen copies of the Book of Mormon, and, what's more, I'd actually read it – because I'm a curious person and it struck me as the fair thing to do. I read the Book of Mormon before I read the Old or New Testaments, given my parents were not practicing Christians and never exposed me to the Bible except that it sat there on the shelf in our living room. I was a senior in high school when I found out my mother wasn't an atheist – I'd just assumed she was. And my father… I still don't know what he believes. He maybe doesn't, himself. He seems to be a Unitarian mostly out of habit, at this point.

My impression of the Book of Mormon was that it was patently absurd. I remember long conversations with one of my best friends in high school, Wade, about Mormonism, faith, the existence of God. He was Mormon, but an odd one – he was rather abandoned by his natural parents, but somehow some Mormons had taken him in and he was therefore kind of an adoptive Mormon. Mormons do this a lot, actually.

And that's the flipside of my finding the Book absurd – I found most Mormons I met to be profoundly kind, decent, caring people. I was very impressed by that.

Recently, I found online an interesting little memoir by Walter Kirn at The New Republic. It was one of the most rivetting religiously-themed memoirs I've read recently. Because what he's doing is – from a position as a lapsed Mormon – he's pointing out that Mormons aren't that "weird." They're really quite remarkable, and not just in cultish ways, but in the most positive way immaginable. He writes: "Mormonism is more than a ceremonial endeavor; it constitutes our country's longest experiment with communitarian idealism, promoting an ethic of frontier-era burden-sharing that has been lost in contemporary America, with increasingly dire social consequences."

This concept of religion as being about not doctrine but community made a profound impression on me. And it was utterly lacking in my own upbringing and life. I was fishing around for something. In college, I began to solve this problem by groping around for my own religous roots – my father was a non-practicing Quaker and my mother's mother had converted from Quakerism to a rather Calvinistic Episcopalianism primarily out of deference to her husband. So, I argued to myself, I was three-quarters Quaker. My increasing political radicalism also drew me to Quakerism, of course, and I occasionally attended meeting for worship.

And then, a series of coincidences put me in the center of an essentially religious community in Mexico City – the Casa de los Amigos, which was the Quaker mission  there, where my own uncle (my father's brother) had worked several decades before. I became a practicing Quaker.

Nevertheless, I struggled. Because the fact was that I found the more conventional Christian narrative that most Quakers hold to to be just as absurd as the more esoteric Book of Mormon. I was then as I remain, today, an uncompromising materialist, philosophically, and an atheist and skeptic, though it would be another decade before I "made peace" with my atheism.

I still tried. I told myself I would overlook the mythological or cosmological absurdities, and focus on the community. And here, I find Kirn's memoir reflecting a very similar process. Speaking of his own youthful enthusiasm for his Mormon faith, he says, "My time in the ward had shown me at close range that God doesn’t work in mysterious ways at all, but by enlisting assistants on the ground." This is nigh identical to how I viewed my time among the Quakers in Mexico City. I thought it mildly ridiculous, talking about the light of Christ speaking through me, as I sat in meeting. It wasn't what I believed. But I thought just like Kirn:

The “sacred underwear”? It was underwear. Everyone wears it, so why not make it sacred? Why not make everything sacred? It is, in some ways. And most sacred of all are people, not wondrous stories, whose job is to help people feel their sacredness. Sometimes the stories don’t work, or they stop working. Forget about them; find others. Revise. Refocus. A church is the people in it, and their errors. The errors they make while striving to get things right.

OK. Where am I going with this, now?

Two points, the first about politics, and the second about myself and my faith.

I dislike Romney intensely. But not because he's a Mormon. On the contrary, if Romney were a "good" Mormon I'd be deeply impressed by him. In fact, I despise him mostly because he seems to be a pretty crappy Mormon: he's a hypocrite. He changes and adjusts his "faith" to match his political and business ambitions. The evidence is incontrovertible. Hypocrisy is a thousand times more reprehensible, in my book, than sincere belief in absurdities leading to genuine kindness and peace of mind. Ultimately, as Obama is revealed to be a similar sort of hypocrite, I am forced to say I will not be able to vote for either of them.

On a personal note: at some point, I began telling people I was a Buddhist. Not because I believe the particular Buddhist absurdities over and above those Christian or Mormon or Muslim absurdities, but rather because Buddhists have a tendency to react differently to my skepticism: when I tell a Buddhist that I'm an atheist, they say, "that's ok," and not, "Oh no, you're going to hell!" as a typical Christian tends to do. Which is to say, Buddhists don't make a big deal over compliance with doctrine, and they do this explicitly – rather than the sort of behind-the-curtain winking of Quakers for the materialists among them, or the hippy-dippy believe-what-you-want-it's-all-true of the Unitarians (which frankly always turned me off). Buddhists don't say "it's all true" but instead that "truth is impossible to determine." That's something I can get on board with. But I retain a deep respect for committed, non-hypocritical members of all faiths, including the "strange" ones, such as Mormonism or Scientology or whatever.

And that… is perhaps as close as you're going to ever get from me, as a statement of faith.

Caveat: obscenity

Some middle-school students were giving speeches in one class, this evening. One boy, call him Eeyore, was trying to get another boy, call him Pooh, to laugh as the latter gave his speech. So Eeyore made a sign that said something obscene in Korean and attached it to his forehead. How was I, the teacher, not supposed to notice?

I swooped in and confiscated the sign. I folded it up and placed it in my pocket. One of the girls asked, "do you know what that means?"

I said I had some idea, but that I could go ask Curt (the principal) to find out the actual meaning. This panicked the kids. Soon they were begging me to return or destroy the note.

Then I said I was going to attach the note to my own forehead and go sit in the staff room. They found this both hilarious and scandalous.

After class was over, the two boys, Eeyore and Pooh, followed me down the hall, begging and pleading for me not to show the note to Curt. They didn't want to get in trouble. I had no intention of showing the note to Curt – or, at worst, if I did, I would anonymize it – I don't actually get my students in trouble with the higher-ups very often. It's not my style.

What was funnier was when, having failed to get me return or visibly destroy the note, the boys went and recruited two of the "smart" girls from the class to come beg on their behalf. This was machiavellian – they hoped, perhaps, that I'd be more likely to accede to pleas from the girls. I didn't. Eventually, I said only, "I'm not going to show it to Curt. I'm going to put it on my blog."

"Really?" Eeyore asked, stunned.

"Yes. But I can't put your name on my blog."

He cracked a smile. He realized I wasn't, in fact, intending to get him in trouble.

So, for the record, here's what the note said: "븅신 색히" [byung-sin saek-hi]. I actually can't really figure out what this means, literally. It seems to be an alternate pronunciation/spelling of "병신 새끼" [byeong-sin sae-kki = son-of-a-bitch]. But typing the phrase into google translate gives "freaks motherfuckers" – this latter fact causes me to suspect the alternate pronunciation/spelling represents pretty strong obscenity. Korean obscenity is really hard to translate, but I think this yields some insight into the pramatics.

[Daily log: walking, 4 km]

Caveat: 태풍

pictureIt’s the first typhoon of the monsoon season. I love stormy weather, but walking home from work can get a little bit wet, as last night. I need to invest in a better umbrella.
I had some students in a class, yesterday, and we were talking about “I want to be a … ” – i.e., career choices. The boys, being 5th grade boys, came up with things like soldier and even “weapons designer.” I tried to take their increasingly violent suggestions seriously, but when it got to “terrorist” and “karma destroyer” (I was visualizing Shiva, but the boy meant our hagwon, named “karma”), I had to cut it off. And then one boy suggested that he wanted to become an “umbrella designer,” and I thought, ‘damn, he’s onto something – why are umbrellas so crappy?’
picture

Caveat: Olvido

RUMBO AL OLVIDO

¡Oh pobres almas nuestras
que perdieron el nido
y que van arrastradas
en la falsa corriente del olvido!

Y pensar que extraviamos
la senda milagrosa
en que se hubiera abierto
nuestra ilusión, como perenne rosa.

Pudieron deslizarse,
sin sentir, nuestras vidas
con el compás romántico
que hay en las músicas desfallecidas.

Y pensar que pudimos
enlazar nuestras manos
y apurar en un beso
la comunión de fértiles veranos.

Y pensar que pudimos,
al acercarse el fin de la jornada,
alumbrar la vejez en una dulce
conjunción de existencias,
contemplando, en la noche ilusionada,
el cintilar perenne del Zodíaco
sobre la sombra de nuestras conciencias…

Mas en vano deliro y te recuerdo,
oh virgen esperanza,
oh ilusión que te quedas
en no sé qué lejanas arboledas
y en no sé qué remota venturanza.

Sigamos sumergiéndonos… Mas, antes
que la sorda corriente
nos precipite a lo desconocido,
hagamos un esfuerzo de agonía
para salir a flote
y ver, la última vez, nuestras cabezas
sobre las aguas turbias del olvido.

– Ramón López Velarde (poeta mexicano)

No he estado escribiendo lo usual, ni para este blog ni para los varios proyectos novelísticos. Me siento sumergido en un verano de cansancio y melancólico. Espero recuperar esfuerzos.

[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

Caveat: let the gray in

I love those gray, overcast, almost-gonna-rain mornings. I’m weird, I know. Perhaps it was because of those formative years in Humboldt? Certainly, those types of mornings were common enough. But here in suburban Seoul, they tend to be about 20 degrees F warmer than Humboldt mornings of similar feel. So actually they remind me more of Minneapolis summer weather than Humboldt weather.

I enjoy the weather. I fling my windows wide and let the gray in.

Meanwhile… a completely random picture from the archive: Santa Monica, 1994. Jeffrey (my stepson), Andrew (my younger brother) and I built this very immense sand castle. Here is a picture of that castle. Not-so-gray weather, but the beach wasn’t hot that day, as I recall.

picture

What I’m listening to right now.

Olivia Newton-John with ELO, “Magic.” From the soundtrack for the movie Xanadu. Who ever actually saw that movie? I don’t think I did.

Lyrics.

Come take my hand
You should know me
I’ve always been in your mind
You know I will be kind
I’ll be guiding you

Building your dream has to start now
There’s no other road to take
You won’t make a mistake
I’ll be guiding you

You have to believe we are magic
Nothin’ can stand in our way
You have to believe we are magic
Don’t let your aim ever stray
And if all your hopes survive, destiny will arrive
I’ll bring all your dreams alive for you
I’ll bring all your dreams alive for you

From where I stand, you are home free
The planets align, so rare
There’s promise in the air
And I’m guiding you

Through every turn, I’ll be near you
I’ll come anytime you call
I’ll catch you when you fall
I’ll be guiding you

You have to believe we are magic
Nothin’ can stand in our way
You have to believe we are magic
Don’t let your aim ever stray
And if all your hopes survive, destiny will arrive
I’ll bring all your dreams alive for you
I’ll bring all your dreams alive for you

You have to believe we are magic
Nothin’ can stand in our way
You have to believe we are magic
Don’t let your aim ever stray
And if all your hopes survive, destiny will arrive
I’ll bring all your dreams alive for you
I’ll bring all your dreams alive for you

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Caveat: Pointlessness

I keep track of points for students with hatchmarks on the whiteboard by students’ names. When they misbehave in some disruptive fashion, I’ll delete points, too, by quickly erasing a point from beside a student’s name without further comment.

Today, a student did a surprising thing: he jumped up, did a little dance, then immediately moved to the whiteboard and deducted his own misbehavior point. I stared at him, dumbfounded for a moment. “Why did you do that?” I asked.

He just grinned. “Welll.. that was pointless,” I muttered under my breath.

Oh well. Kids are interesting.


What I’m listening to right now.

Psychedelic Furs, “Heaven.” Yes, I came of age in the 80s. How’d you guess?

Lyrics.

heaven
is the whole of the heart
and heaven don’t tear you apart
yeah heaven
is the whole of the heart
and heaven don’t tear you apart
there’s too many kings
wanna hold you down
and a world at the window
gone underground
there’s a hole in the sky
where the sun don’t shine
and a clock on the wall
and it counts my time
and heaven
is the whole of the heart
and heaven don’t tear you apart
yeah heaven is the whole of the heart
and heaven don’t tear you apart
there’s a song on the air
with a love-you line
and a face in a glass
and it looks like mine
and i’m standing on ice when i say
that i don’t hear planes
and i scream at the fools
wanna jump my train
and heaven is the whole of the heart
and heaven don’t tear you apart
yeah heaven is the whole of the heart
and heaven don’t tear you apart
yeah heaven
ah heaven
yeah heaven

[Daily log: walking, 5 km]

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Caveat: Antipoeta Test

Test

Qué es un antipoeta:
un comerciante en urnas y ataúdes?
un sacerdote que no cree en nada?
un general que duda de sí mismo?
un vagabundo que se ríe de todo
hasta de la vejez y de la muerte?
un interlocutor de mal carácter?
un bailarín al borde del abismo?
un narciso que ama a todo el mundo?
un bromista sangriento
deliberadamente miserable?
un poeta que duerme en una silla?
un alquimista de los tiempos modernos?
un revolucionario de bolsillo?
un pequeño burgués?
un charlatán?

un dios?

un inocente?

un aldeano de Santiago de Chile?
Subraye la frase que considere correcta.

Qué es la antipoesía:
un temporal en una taza de té?
una mancha de nieve en una roca?
un azafate lleno de excrementos humanos
como lo cree el padre Salvatierra?
unespejo que dice la verdad?
un bofetón al rostro
del Presidente de la Sociedad de Escritores?
(Dios lo tenga en su santo reino)
una advertencia a los poetas jóvenes?
un ataúd a chorro?
un ataúd a fuerza centrífuga?
un ataúd a gas de parafina?
una capilla ardiente sin difunto?

Marque con una cruz
la definición que considere correcta.

– Nicanor Parra

Para si quisiera saber…

ay ¡estoy cansado! y apenas comienza el día. Voy a estudiar el coreano y después a trabajar.

Caveat: Rampant Mercantilism

I have recently reintroduced a concept I’d used successfully when I was teaching at the public school down in Yeonggwang: I give out play money (that I make myself) as incentive prizes to students who are doing exceptionally well in class (based on keeping track of points during class); later, I’ll try to run as little “store” where they can buy some trinkets like pencils or pencil cases or the like.

pictureI have one student in a class, his name is Huitaek. He’s a little bit ADHD, maybe, and he doesn’t do really well at accumulating points. He’s actually really smart, but I can see he’s been despairing of ever earning any of my fake money. So, being innovative, he had an idea (which I reconstructed after the fact): he sold his book (his class textbook) to his neighbor. I didn’t realize at the time. But at some point I looked down, and noticed that Huitaek was sitting, bookless, happily gazing at one of my green alligator bucks that he held in his hand, while Junyeol was happily sitting with not one, but two textbooks open on his desk. Both were grinning. What had transpired was utterly transparent. (Note the image at right is out of date – it’s from the screenshot I made of the Hongnong version of my alligator bucks; I have new ones that are Karma-based.)

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Caveat: Edgemere

I had a rather strange flashback memory today.

Strange because of what triggered it. Strange because I don’t think about it much, but when I do, the memories strike me has having been quite important.

The trigger was odd. I was walking to work, on a muggy, sunny afternoon. I saw a boy, maybe 7 or 8 years old, walking the other way. He reached the corner where there was a traffic signal, and waited to cross the street. It was quite obvious the boy was having a problem – he needed to pee. He was hopping. He was pacing. He was clutching his pants. Everyone has had that feeling at some point or another. I hope he made it home.

But this business of walking home from school at such an age in the big city, alone, and desperately annoyed and embarrassed because of the need to go to the bathroom brought back a my own memories.

My fourth grade year was rather traumatic, for several reasons. First, my parents forgot (forgot!) my 9th birthday. We were traveling through Colorado, visiting relatives. We had a late birthday party at my Aunt Frances’ house, but I remained convinced that the party occurred only because I wasn’t sufficiently stoic to have resisted the urge to complain about it having been forgotten. And by the end of that month – September, 1974 – something very terrible had happened, the causes of which I don’t even now really understand. Rather than returning home to the small town in California that had always been my home, my mother, sister and I ended up in Oklahoma City, at my grandparents’ house, and I started 4th grade not at a typical low-slung, semi-rural California hippie school but instead at a big-city, multi-storey brick structure called Edgemere Elementary School. It was the most profound culture shock imaginable.

I remember standing on the asphalted school playground, behind the building, and being infatuated by some brash, loud, confident African-American girl with too-long legs, that held court by the basketball hoops there – we didn’t really have African-Americans in Humboldt, and she seemed like a goddess descended from fiction. I remember walking across Edgemere Park from the school to my grandparents’ house for lunch, because the school lunch was unacceptable somehow, or there was some problem – perhaps I’d simply complained, too socially traumatized to stand for the school cafeteria. And I remember one time on that walk across the park, in the cruel, unfamiliar sun of the great plains, when I was like that little boy I saw today – with an almost unbearable impending bathroom disaster, and returning home to my grandmother’s incomprehension, in tears. Childhood is made up of so many small, sequential traumas.

By the end of that school year, we’d returned to California, and I’d finished my 4th grade year at familiar if rather unpleasant Sunnybrae, in Arcata. And my parents were getting divorced. So bigger traumas, too. But the name Edgemere is etched on my brain as a sort of symbol of the bigger world, my first immersion encounter with the wider world beyond the Redwood Curtain where my parents had kept me so safely sheltered. It was the first bursting of the bubble of childhood, maybe, and the creeping awareness that the world included strangers and dangers and exotica.

I can visualize the school vividly if I think about it. And lo and behold, I found the exact remembered view of the school, still there and materially unchanged, using Google street view. Here’s a screenshot – Edgemere Elementary, Oklahoma City, OK.

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Weird, indeed.

Work was horrible today – except for the students. I love my students. They put me in a better mood by the end of the day.

I haven’t been doing the jogging thing – I hurt my foot somehow, 2 weeks ago, and haven’t had the nerve to go jogging on it, as it seems to turn in a lame kind of limp after about 5 minutes. I’m trying  to walk more to make up for it, but I’m not doing very well with that.

It’s raining. I like that.

[Daily log: walking, 4 km]

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Caveat: Way’sTop

In my neighborhood, like any neighborhood in South Korea, there is a plethora of convenience stores. Possibly, there is an average of one convenience store per building. I’m not sure, but that’s probably close. The most common are the Seven-Elevens and the Buy-the-Ways. The latter chain has as its name a rather clever, English-based pun – higher in quality than most Korean efforts at English-based puns.

Today, I ran across a store with a stunningly bizarre and ugly piece of modern art in front of it, that had something that may or may not have been intended to evoke some level of punnitry, and also included the word “Way.”

I found it particularly interesting, in part, for a very personal reason: my own family name: this could be my convenience store, much like my father’s failed effort at an auto-wrecking business in the 1970’s was named Way’s Old Car Works.

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Here’s the strange modern sculpture – I hope that’s what it is. This picture might make a nice “cover” for my facebook page. Maybe I’ll try that.

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[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

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Caveat: Bloody Sunday

What I’m listening to right now.

pictureU2, “Bloody Sunday.”

I was listening to my MP3 files on shuffle yesterday to this song, and I had the most vivid flashbacks of my first visit to New York City, in 1983.  I was with some friends from college – we’d somehow convinced ourselves that driving from Minnesota to NYC for a 4 day weekend was a good idea. So after 24 hours of driving straight through, we crossed the George Washington Bridge into Manhattan. I didn’t take any pictures on that trip, but here’s some random internet-found photos that capture the feeling of seeing NYC for the first time from that perspective.

The song’s theme (Irish politics) doesn’t match my vivid mental images at all, but they’re indelibly linked in my brain.

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Caveat: Try walking in my shoes

Feeling tired and burnt out at the moment. Not much to say.

I saw a description of some tornados in Oklahoma that said: "pants-dampening tornados." This was funny.

What I'm listening to right now.

Depeche Mode, "Walking in My Shoes." It was the continuous soundtrack of much darker times – still near the top of my complicated list of loved music.

Lyrics:

I would tell you about the things
They put me through
The pain I've been subjected to
But the Lord himself would blush
The countless feasts laid at my feet
Forbidden fruits for me to eat
But I think your pulse would start to rush

Now I'm not looking for absolution
Forgiveness for the things I do
But before you come to any conclusions
Try walking in my shoes
Try walking in my shoes

You'll stumble in my footsteps
Keep the same appointments I kept
If you try walking in my shoes
If you try walking in my shoes

Morality would frown upon
Decency look down upon
The scapegoat fate's made of me
But I promise now, my judge and jurors
My intentions couldn't have been purer
My case is easy to see

I'm not looking for a clearer conscience
Peace of mind after what I've been through
And before we talk of any repentance
Try walking in my shoes
Try walking in my shoes

You'll stumble in my footsteps
Keep the same appointments I kept
If you try walking in my shoes
If you try walking in my shoes
Try walking in my shoes

Now I'm not looking for absolution
Forgiveness for the things I do
But before you come to any conclusions
Try walking in my shoes
Try walking in my shoes

You'll stumble in my footsteps
Keep the same appointments I kept
If you try walking in my shoes

You'll stumble in my footsteps
Keep the same appointments I kept
If you try walking in my shoes
Try walking in my shoes
If you try walking in my shoes
Try walking in my shoes

[Daily log: walking, 4 km]

Caveat: LBridge’s Karma

There is a schadenfreude in what’s been happening. When I left LBridge in 2009, it was with mixed emotions. One thing I felt was certain was that that company was in something of a downward spiral due to mismanagement.

And so… to be working for Karma, 3 years later, and have Karma take over the dregs of that LBridge business, now re-named as Woongjin but barely 6 months ago… well, one wants to mutter “I told you so.”

There is some familiarity, too. Some things aren’t that different from LBridge – including several staff members that I knew from back then, still around, and a PC on a colleague’s desk that is exactly the PC I had on my desk at LBridge – I know because there are stickers there that are too distinctive to have been coincidentally placed by someone else. Although LBridge had rebranded as Woongjin recently, a lot of the internals still bear the familiar LBridge logo.

I don’t feel a lot of confidence, right now, that this will go exceptionally smoothly. There are so many uncertainties, and I suspect (although I don’t know for certain) that there are some major financial risks involved, too, that are utterly beyond my control. Such is the churn of the Korean hagwon market, though. I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad thing. When Curt asked me how I was doing, yesterday, as if worried about the classes, I said I liked inheriting Woongjin’s (LBridge’s) rigid curriculum, and looked forward to making it work for the Karma kids.

Here’s a picture of the Woongjin building, with new “Karma Plus” signage attached (hard to see well because of the trees, the Karma sign is yellow, at the top of the building on the left: 카르마). This is LBridge’s former Hugok Middle-school campus, which is across the street from the former elementary campus where I worked in 2008-2009 (long ago closed down). So I took the photo this morning standing at the entry of my former work place.

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Welcome to yesterday. Life repeats, recycles, with renewal. Karma.

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Caveat: 노브레인

We had 회식 after work this evening, then I walked home in the damp, humid night.
There is a lot of tension between the Woongjin staff and Karma staff. It wasn’t terrible – I managed to avoid alcohol which always makes these experiences more positive, although resisting alcohol always makes me an incomprehensible alien among the Koreans. But I’m one those, regardless.
What I’m listening to right now.

노브레인 [no-beu-re-in = NO BRAIN], “그것이 젊음” [geu-geos-i jeolm-eum = that’s youth (?)].
[UPDATE 2020-03-22: link rot repair]
가사.

산다는~게 뭔지
고민만이 가득찬 그대
좌절은 변기에 버려
텅텅 빈~ 지갑에
절망감은 두둑한 그대
나도 그 마음 알아
하지만 너의
가슴은 타오르고 있잖아
때론 부딪쳐봐
때론 울어도봐
그것이 젊음
거침없이 재껴봐
때론 부딪쳐봐
때론 울어도봐
그것이 젊음이~기에
이별의~ 아픔에
슬픔에 둘러싸인 그대
휴지에 코풀면 나아져
낮은 성~적표에
압박을 받고있는 그대
나도 그땐 그랬어
하지만 너의
가슴은 타오르고 있잖아
때론 부딪쳐봐
때론 울어도봐
그것이 젊음
거침없이 재껴봐
때론 부딪쳐봐
때론 울어도봐
그것이 젊음이~기에@
흐린날이 있다면
맑은날도 있겠지~
yeah 워우워~
때론 부딪쳐봐
때론 울어도봐
그것이 젊음
거침없이 재껴봐
때론 부딪쳐봐
때론 울어도봐
그것이 젊음이~기에
(때론 부딪쳐봐)
(때론 울어도봐)
(때론 부딪쳐봐)
(때론 울어도봐)
(때론 부딪쳐봐)
(때론 울어도봐)
(때론 부딪쳐봐)
(때론 울어도봐)
그것이 젊음이~기에
그것이 젊음이~기에
그것이 젊음이~기에

picture[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

Caveat: Creative Nothing

I've been trying to read a book of philosophy by Henri Bergson, entitled Creative Evolution. It's not going well. I'm just not in a place to be reading philosophy, maybe.

Work isn't really that challenging, and I don't feel as if I'm personally doing badly. In fact, my classes, such as they are, are going quite well, I feel.

But The Merger currently in progress means that work is a giant, energy-sucking chaos machine. I feel utterly exhausted at the end ot the day. Which is how I feel. At the end of the day.

More later, then.

[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

Caveat: Scenes from Day 2 of The Merger

Scene 1 from day 2 of The Merger.

Under the new schedule, I've been required to give up my little-ones – the first and second graders in my Phonics classes. Those kids are so difficult to teach, but I truly love them, too. Today, after their class was finishing with their new teacher, I saw little Yedam in the hall. A tiny girl, very cute, charming personality, but amazingly difficult to teach, as she has so far utterly failed to wrap her mind around the concept of "chair." (She doesn't know how to sit down.)

"예담아," I motioned for her to come over to where I was coming out of another classroom. "Clark-셈, 어떼요?" She had been panicked earlier, at the idea of changing teachers. She is the girl who used to cry whenever we had a vocabulary quiz. I expected the worst.

But she surprised me. She smiled shyly and held up forefinger joined to thumb, in the "OK" sign. "응… 좋아. Bye teacher." She ran away down the stairs. I felt happy and relieved.

Scene 2 from day 2 of The Merger.

We were sitting around in the cramped, over-crowded, not yet properly configured staff room. The middle schooler teachers mostly off doing the test-prep stuff, we mostly elementary teachers not having much to do, but Curt had had a tantrum yesterday about teachers leaving earlier than 10 pm when things still weren't settled (10 pm is the official end time).

It's weird, for me, because all of a sudden I have a bunch of colleagues who are fluent English speakers – Karma only had me and Grace, and Grace was part-time, but now there's a group of 4 of us. Frank was reading something online about a zombie attack (a la the recent weird news from Miami), but now in China. Differentiated, apparently, by the fact that this zombie attack in China didn't involve drugs, as the Miami event had. Some guy had tried to eat the face of some other guy. Ken said something about oh, how strange, there's maybe a real zombie virus out there. But then Frank said, very funny, "Yeah, but those Chinese, they will eat anything."

Um. Get it? I thought it was funny at the time.

Scene 3 from day 2 of The Merger.

Actually, a scene unrelated to The Merger. I was walking home. I saw one of those motorcycles that looks like a prop from a Mad Max movie – beaten up and dirty, and saddlebags and boxes duct taped onto the back in a big pile, some guy who looks like he lives on his motorcycle, with a cool windshield-type-contraption on the front, made out of plastic and duct tape and cardboard (and how does he see through it?). The man wearing a bandana and no helmet. He looked like post-apocalyptic Korean pirate. But his motorcyle had a GPS taped onto the handlebars. And he was talking on an iPhone. And running a red light. This is Korea.

[Daily log: walking, 4 km]

Caveat: Staying Positive

“A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.” – Herm Albright.

And that's a good enough reason for me. I think I annoyed some people, today. But I rather lost my own positivity by the end of the day – it was so chaotic and unnecessarily difficult. Sigh. It was the first day of the merged hagwon.

But we all survived to face another day. So it's not that bad, right?

[Daily log: walking, 4 km]

 

Caveat: 이사하기

I worked today, even though it was Sunday – Karma is moving into the Woongjin (formerly LBridge’s middle-school campus in Hugok) building next door, as part of the merger.

I worked hard – moving desks, moving boxes, unpacking boxes, rearranging and cleaning desks. I feel very tired. Tomorrow, the elementary kids start the Woongjin curriculum, but I only have one elementary class on my new schedule for Monday, so it will be a fairly easy day to adjust to the new situation and surroundings. The middle-schoolers are finishing their test-prep for their first semester finals, and so they’re getting special classes, but once the middle-school schedule kicks back to normal, I’ll be pretty busy – Curt’s actually weighted me even more toward the middle-schoolers than so far. I’m not sure what that’s about – I suspect he’s hoping to continue Karma’s good reputation for middle-schoolers (i.e. the TP program is pretty “premium” in the local market) while letting the Woongjin curriculum improve the elementary side. We’ll see how it works out.

Here’s a random picture of some goofy boys in my EP4 cohort (RIP, along with all Karma elementary cohorts, as they join  the Woongjin ones). We were reading something that referenced The Lion King movie and so they spontaneously decided they needed to have a lion-drawing competition on the blackboard.

picture

picture[Daily log: walking, 3 km; moving desks, boxes, etc., 6 hours]

Caveat: Summer Rain

It has been a very dry Spring, here, to my perception. But summer – true Korean summer – finally arrived today, in the form of heavy rain.

I walked home and got utterly soaking wet. I'm going to work on Sunday this weekend, because of the move to our location (next door building, but still). So it doesn't feel like a weekend, coming.

I love the rain. But it's not easy to motivate to go on my after-work jog when it's pouring. I think I'll just go to bed.

[Daily log: walking, 4 km]

Caveat: 에헤라디야!

Kids know more than we sometimes give them credit for. Exhibit A:
My student presented me with a spontaneously created drawing today. She said it was her 원어민 (won-eo-min = native-speaking [English] teacher, i.e. a foreigner) at her public school – his name is George.
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Look at what he’s drinking. The green bottles say 소주 (soju, i.e. Korean vodka). He’s saying “에헤라디야” [e-he-ra-di-ya] which is a sort of interjection that means something like “Oh, yeah!” as in “I’m very happy.”
A fourth-grader either knows these things about her foreign teacher because they’re obvious, or because he’s told his students about them directly. I’m not sure that’s really very professional, either way. I think this revealing little moment points up some of the big issues with Korean EFL education – i.e. the lack of professionalism in so many of the teachers that come over here to work. I don’t blame the foreigners – it’s a lack of quality control.
Just don’t ever forget – kids know: they see through you.
picture[Daily log: walking, 3 km]

Caveat: North American Tour

pictureThis is a preliminary announcement.

I confirmed the dates of my vacation yesterday, and made my airline ticket purchase this morning. I’m coming to North America for about 11 days, July 28 to August 10. Minimally, I will be visiting Minneapolis and Los Angeles – other destinations to be determined.

It will have been more than two and a half years since being in the U.S. I anticipate major reverse-culture-shock.

In a side note – why are Korean websites so difficult to navigate – even the English versions (or especially the English versions?)

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Caveat: digestion

I ran across a quote from Dave Packard, one of the co-founders of Hewlitt-Packard fame, and thus one of the original “creators” of Silicon Valley. It seemed very relevant to the Karma-devouring-ex-LBridge scenario currently playing out at my place of work.

Here’s the quote:

“More companies die of indigestion than starvation.”

pictureKarma hagwon is definitely up against a major digestive challenge, in trying to absorb a bigger prey and maintain its identity. But in the current hagwon market, organic growth is almost impossible – so I understand the thinking: it’s growth-through-acquistion.

Well, anyway. I passed the quote on to my boss in a good-natured way. He could have taken it badly, but he didn’t. We had a good conversation about it. That’s why he’s the best boss I’ve had since coming to Korea.

What I’m listening to right now.

Molotov, “Hit Me.” The Mexican sexenio election is approaching. I predict the PRI candidate, Peña Nieto, will win.

La letra:

Molotov – Hit me

Cuando era chico quería ser como superman
pero ahora ya quiero ser un diputado del PAN
o del PRI o del PRD
o cualquier cosa que tenga un poco de poder
quiero convertirme en músico político
y construirle un piso al periferico
quiero acabar con el tráfico
tengo que entrar en la historia de México
y luego miro al pecero que va medio pedo
jugando carreras con los pasajeros
pero el tiene que pasar primero
sin luces sin frenos junto al patrullero
aunque no sepa leer
no sepa hablar
el es el que te brinda la seguridad
asi lo tienes que respetar
porque el representa nuestra autoridad

(Coro)
So you think you gonna hit me
but now We gonna hit you back

Te metera en el bolsillo una sustancia ilegal
y te va a consignar al poder judicial
y ahí seguro que te ira muy mal
porque te haran cocowash con agua mineral
porque en ti creiamos todos los mexicanos
te dimos trabajo pagado y honrado
te dimos un arma para cuidarnos
y el arma que usas la usas para robarnos
y aunque quieras quejarte con papa gobierno
les pides ayuda y te mandan al infierno
porque tendremos que tirar buen pedo
solo te van a dar atole con el dedo
y en la fila del departamento de quejas
toparas con un mar de secretarias pendejas
el siguiente en la fila y asi te la pelas
pero algunos al final nunca se traspapela

(Coro)

México solidario acabo alos tiranos
sin la necesidad de ensuciarnos las manos
no podemos pedir resultado inmediato
de un legado de 75 años
todos unidos pedimos un cambio
piedra sobre piedra y peldaño a peldaño
solo poder expresarnos es palaba de honor
de nuestro jefe de estado
te arrepentiras de todo lo que trabajas
se te ira la mitad de todo lo que tu ganas
manteniendo los puestos de copias piratas
que no pagan impuestos pero son más baratas
veo una fuerte campaña de tele y de radio
promoviendo la union entre los ciudadanos
mensaje de un pueblo libre y soberano
IGUAL QUE TU MOLOTOV TAMBIEN ES MEXICANO!!!!!

(Nos quieren pegar pegar)
So you think you gonna hit me
(y nos la van a pagar)
but now we gonna hit you back

[Daily log: walking, 4 km; running, 2 km]

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