Friday, December 7, 2012

November December

Greetings, everyone!

I write to you from my heated classroom on this cold, snowy day. Today was our third real day of it snowing. Time to travel is increased, and the snow hurts when it gets in your eyes, but hey- that's what umbrellas are for.

It's also quite beautiful outside... I always admire the pre-Christmas snow. After that I would prefer it to go away, but Mother Nature has yet to listen to my requests.

Since the last blog I penned, my birthday, Thanksgiving, and the entrance into a new month have all passed. My birthday was really nice! My friends came over and we drank wine, ate cake, pizza, chicken, apple cobbler, and ice cream... I'm so thankful for the people I've met here!

Speaking of being thankful, a group of us went out to an Indian restaurant for American Thanksgiving. We cooked for the Canadian one, and we'd like to cook for Christmas, so November became break time. PLUS, everyone loves Indian food. (From the country, India.)

With November rolling up nicely, I began my first winter in Korea. It's cold. But it's not too bad... Thankfully I'm used to cold weather! If it keeps getting colder, though, I'm going to look like that poor little brother in A Christmas Story...


..Except that only the classrooms at school are heated. Not the school itself.


Another thing that has begun this month is my Korean class! I'm finally in one... It's at the same school as before, Sogang University in Seoul. Currently, we're learning future tense, how to ask/say if we're able to do something, and describe things and places. It's nice! Some words and sentences still feel like tongue-twisters, but it'll be such a great help if I study!

Ah! I know that elections back in the States just ended, but the date is approaching here in Korea. Walking the streets you will come upon banners with candidate names, or see people singing for or promoting their preferred candidate. It's interesting. I haven't looked into their policies regarding English education through native speakers or other policies that would affect foreigners living in Korea, but it is something I'd like to do.

One of my third graders already knows who he's going to vote for ;)


Aaaaaaannd, I will indeed be staying for another year. Because my contract ends the day before my next contract begins, I will be visiting the States in January. An awful time, really, as far as the weather goes... But what can ya do? It'll be so great to see my family and friends in the US again. Although, I don't know how I'll feel about being back. I'm quite curious to see. Like I'll be studying myself in an experiment where I am the constant, and my location is the changing variable. How will it feel to understand every conversation I hear? Noisy? Loud? Comforting? ..I don't really think it'll be the last one. I'd be shocked if that were true, honestly. I have a certain idea of how it will feel, but I know that it could turn out to be very different. All I can do is wait and experience it, I guess!

But, man, am I looking forward to sales racks and thrift stores! And cheap fruit. And places that are heated everywhere I go. But, ohhh, the time difference... humbug


I'll write about Christmas later. It's sad not being able to spend it with family... I'll miss the trip to and the time in New York, the tree we put up every year, seeing how many bows I can stick to my head, eating way too much food, and just talking with all of my family. I'll have a good one here, I'm sure, though. So I'll make it through :)


XOXOX

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