Friday, October 30, 2009

legal alien

noun: alien eyleeun

1. 1 1) a person who comes from a foreign country; someone who does not owe allegiance to your country

22 2) anyone who does not belong in the environment in which they are found

if nothing else the timing is ironic. one day shy of the date that marks my 1-year anniversary of coming 2 seoul full-time & i finally receive my alien registration card. (oh oh, i’m an alien,i’m a legal alien). every westerner issued with a 1-year visa is supposed 2 register their visa within 90 days of arrival in the country. doing so means you're doing what you're supposed 2 do & of course keeps you on the right side of the authorities. doing so also gets you a nice alien registration card. easy, right? well seemingly no, not for me @ least.

i arrived 364 days ago with a fresh visa in my passport, my first yearlong visa. i knew i had 90 days 2 register it. i even took the medical test that is part of the registration process. but then i forgot; forgot 2 do anything else. forgot 2 do anything else within what was left of the the 90 days i had 2 do everything (you with me?). as a result they – the nice ‘just-doing-our-job’ koreans in the immigration office – cancelled my visa. it caused problems. big problems. they - the same 'we're-just-doing-our-job' koreans - were even going 2 audit the ck office (for what i've no idea). hell, i was almost deported (honest). of course questions were asked. in korean. serious questions i was led 2 believe. the boss had 2 go bat for me @ the immigration office. he had 2 call some “friends” in high places & get some strings pulled. it worked. i wasn’t deported, which was good. what was even better was that they agreed 2 give me a second yearlong visa. … but only if i 1) went 2 japan first 2 get a temporary ‘filler’ visa (done), & 2) registered my second e2 visa within the required 90 days of receiving it (done). so now i’m officially an alien, & a legal one @ that. about time 2.

‘livin’ with seoul’ fridays

friday is easily the best day 2 be here in the ck office. there's an altogether different mood in the office compared 2 other days of the week not called friday (as i’ve noted previously here & here). on fridays the koreans here seem 2 make less of an effort 2 hide the fact that they are actually doing nothing. yes they still sit @ their desks frantically typing, staring intently @ their computer screens, & generally giving off an air of busyness. but they aren’t foolin’ anyone, least of all me (i know a idler when i see one). but other things, not just the idleness, make friday the best day of the week. yes, come 5pm (or 8pm if you’re korean) it’s the weekend but that’s not it. its the friday freebies we seem 2 get 2 ‘ease’ us through the day, 2 entice one last big effort - of concealment - out of us as we approach the weekend. a few minutes ago someone i’ve never seen before walked into the office with a big bag of ice-cream, with one for everyone in the audience (of course as a westerner i get/got first dibs). so right now we’re all sitting around on our desks, eating ice-cream & blatantly doing nothing. it’s a reprieve from having 2 pretend 2 be doing nothing.

‘livin’ with seoul’ teaser

moon daddy is trying 2 get me 2 go drinking tonight. i'm resisting... so far (although i don't know why... work tomorrow maybe?).


he's referring 2 this night.

‘livin’ with seoul’ world series watch

the yankees lost yesterday but won today. so now it’s 1-1 (first 2 4 wins).

‘livin’ with seoul’ this & that

big changes are afoot for the internet & the decision 2 implement them was made here in seoul. another, slightly less popular decision was also recently made here.

‘livin’ with seoul’ texting & driving video

hard hitting. one of those video that leaves an impression on you… just like it’s designed 2 do

‘livin’ with seoul’ legend watch

ladies & gentlemen, paul burrows.

what i’m listening 2 right now

u2, dancing barefoot


Thursday, October 29, 2009

irish potato

last night mel took me 2 experience a little bit of home in a fancy seoul shopping centre. she said nothing other than the fact that we were going 2 “irish potato,” her frugalness with the details leaving me free 2 dream up a vision of utopia; a sit-down restaurant with a menu dedicated 2 everything potato: boiled potato, diced potato, mashed potato, steamed potato, roasted potato, scalloped potato, chipped potato, sliced potato, fried potato, grated potato, potato skins, potato wedges, sweet potato, seasoned potatoes, baby potatoes, potato salad, hash-brown potatoes, sour-crème & chive potato, potato latkes, potato pancakes. oh boy, it was going 2 be good & certainly a night 2 remember. so good in fact that even before i’d laid my eyes on the nirvana of starchy goodness that i, being the optimist i am, assumed we were approaching, was cursing myself for never having graced its door previously (& i was anticipating 'irish potato' surpassing nuri (dirty) bar as my new favourite place in seoul).

well, rarely before have i experienced the magnitude of let-down that i experienced upon seeing/experiencing ‘irish potato,’ somewhere only irish in name. if 'irish' is chips/french-fries served in a tub, doused with overly sweet chilli sauce (my choice; there were other topping options, none of them overly irish) & consumed on a bench, albeit a nice bench, in a shopping centre hallway (the door i was so looking forward 2 gracing didn't actually exist), with a stellar view of an indoor car park then... then... then i’m mr. tayto himself. was i expecting 2 much? obviously. will i be back gracing irish potato’s counter any time soon? not likely. but i do know where 2 go if i ever need cheap beer; cafri sells for 1,020 (€0.57) in the same shopping centre. so the night wasn’t a total loss after all.

‘livin' with seoul’ anniversary

this saturday, the 31st, marks my 1-year anniversary of arriving 2 work full-time in seoul. 1 whole year. the fact that it - the anniversary - falls on a saturday is convenient. the fact that i’m working on the same day isn’t. oh well.

‘livin' with seoul’ photo album

check out the latest pics, including those taken on the ck team-building/drinking ‘workshop’ last weekend & that of an irish proverb i’d never before heard of.

speaking of photo albums. mel has her own on-line photo album (she actually has 2 albums... the 2nd one, a picture from which is shown above, is mel's "mucking around with photoshop album" to use her words). both albums showcase her growing photographic skills. she’s keen -very keen - & even has plans 2 buy a dslr. all this coming from someone who doesn't, yet (as i said she's keen) know iso from f-stops from depth of field. hell, she didn’t even own a digital camera of any kind until earlier in the year. on-line photo albums & a dslr. & they say imitation is the highest form of flattery.

what I’m listening 2 right now

i'm actually watching, & thus listening 2 commentary, of an on-line feed of the 1st game of the world series. you gotta love the internet. go yankees!

Friday, October 23, 2009

time 2 bond

it's 1pm on friday. i'm just about 2 leave the ck office with the rest of the crew 2 embark on an overnight 'team-building workshop.' yep, that's what they - the korean's - are calling it. everyone here seems pumped for what lays ahead, going so far as 2 break with the norm by wearing casual attire for the day (i do every day) & even, get this, consuming some bijo with our lunch @ the chinese restaurant earlier (a definite 1st). but then they probably know what lays ahead. me? well, i haven't been briefed fully - stress fully - but i can probably guess based on a few things: i was told we'll be overnighting (that mean we'll be drinking late tonight), i was told 2 bring 'sports' clothing, & i was told we'll been broken up into teams 2 do 'events.' so i can decipher from that that there will be 1) plenty of competition (typically korean), 2) plenty of alcohol consumed (also typically korean), & 3) little sleep garnered. i've been told i've been assigned 2 team 1 &, apart from being, obviously, the lone westerner in the team i'm also, i might joyously add, the lone male. so bring it on. we'll all be piling into a few cars for a 2 hour drive 2 some location where we'll do... do... do 'events,' in teams, wearing sports clothes after which we'll drink. all of this will bring us closer as a unit, or so it's thought. i can't wait. not that i need 2. cos we're off. now.

Monday, October 19, 2009

welfare

i got 2 talkin’ 2 a few of the guys in the office over lunch today about state welfare. don’t ask me how, it just happened (we normally talk man stuff like beer, baseball & girls). i didn’t learn anything by virtue of the fact that i already knew that korean society has, financially @ least, little tolerance for the unemployed or the old; there is no such thing as dole & once retired it’s the responsibility of the oldest son 2 fend for & financially support his parents for their remaining days, one of the main reasons male births are still favoured over female births (that is slowly changing however… slowly). the conversation got exciting when i dropped the bombshell that one can sit on their arse @ home in ireland & the government will give them the €200 a week 2 do so, the equivalent of 350,000, quite a tidy sum over here (that little is the symbol for the korean unit of currency won, pronounced ‘one’). there followed a lot of korean banter, a bit of number crunching, counting on fingers, exasperated sighs, & glances at yours truly 2 confirm that what i was telling them was accurate/true.

"seriously guys… yep,” with an accompanying affirmative nod of the head.

taxes?” they then asked.

yep, pretty high… higher than here.”

still though, that didn’t take the gloss off the revelation. the impression i took from the conversation was that they now think i’m mad 2 be in seoul, 8 time zones from home & spending my days in an office with them, which is strange considering i’m employed here & we were talking dole payment amounts. i’m sure it would have been lost in translation had i attempted 2 explain 2 them that, a free 350,000 per week aside, ireland is crippled, hasn’t a penny 2 rub together, & anyone who can is getting out. i wonder what they’d have thought of that revelation.

‘livin with seoul’ photo album

spent a bit of the work day today updating the blog album covering the events of the last 3 weeks. oh the fun i’ve had with culture & nature.

from the 'living with seoul' photo album, october 2nd 2009

‘livin with seoul’ video

I like this.

what I’m listening 2 right now

david gray, everytime


Friday, October 9, 2009

another celebration

it almost, just almost, seems like we’re in celebration day season here in korea. following hot on the heels of armed forces day & the chuseok holiday last weekend, today – friday - is hangul day, the day that celebrates the creation by some king way back of the korean hangul script. i have been told more time than i care 2 remember/admit since 1st coming 2 korea in 2003 that it’s quite an easy script 2 decipher; all you need 2 do is put a bit of effort into it. which is why it’s kind of shameful that, 2 me, the script still just looks like an ordered grouping of lines, circles & curves…which i guess is exactly what it is, except 2 koreans it actually means something. anyway, 2 celebrate this day the koreans are unveiling some statue of the aforementioned king – sejong was his name, sejong the great no less – later this evening in the middle of a big-ass road here in central seoul (& about time 2; the poor chap has been dead for some 560 years). me? well i’m heading south for the weekend 2 take in the green tea fields of somewhere called boseong. yep, i have an 8:10pm reservation on the ktx, koreas version of the french tgv & the newest feather in the korean public transport cap. the weekend should be fun. it always is.

‘living’ with seoul’ week of firsts

some firsts that occurred this week (& keep in mind that I’ve been living here fulltime now for almost a year

  • signed up for & went 2 the gym.
  • bought & cooked (2 firsts) potatoes in my apartment.
  • actually did a full, honest day’s work for the 1st time since my latest return a few weeks ago (3 actually). it’s not my fault; it’s the nature of the business that things are slack around here @ this time of year. if i recall last tuesday was the day in question, a day when i was reminded once again that it’s actually less work 2 actually work as apposed 2 pretending 2 work… if you know what I mean?
not 2 belittle armed forced day, the chuseok holiday, or even hangul day, but maybe the koreans will dedicate a day 2 any one of the above.

‘livin’ with seoul’ video

check out this video. i like it. you might 2. the korean connection? samsung of course.

what I’m listen 2 right now

the murmer of office work, korean style.


Thursday, October 1, 2009

happy chuseok

there’s a lot happening over the next few days. today, thursday, is korean armed forces day, tomorrow, friday, is lisbon treaty day, & saturday is chuseok. chu-wha? chuseok, korea’s version of thanksgiving & one of the year’s biggest holidays. it’s a 3-day event that sees major cities empty as koreans clog roads & hog every available bus & train seat 2 head home 2 the country or 2 visit rural relations. it’s a big deal for koreans (& an excuse 2 distribute gifts) but basically all it means for us westerners is time off, meaning work wise today is actually tomorrow, if you know what i mean? no. well, it means we’ve tomorrow off, something that has everyone here in the ck office in a festive mood, even the boss who has just announced that we’re good 2 go today @ 3pm (that even got a round of applause). more time off, less time 2 plan the weekend. best get back 2 it.

special army soldiers flip simultaneously as they demonstrate their martial arts skills during a rehearsal for the 61st anniversary of armed forces day @ the gyeryong military headquarters, south sorea. south korea will celebrate the 61st armed forces day on october 1st.

from the bbc's 'the big picture,' september 29th 2009


‘livin’ with seoul’ music appreciation video

prepare 2 cringe. a visit 2 a noribang (karaoke room) with this guy would be fun.

what I’m listening 2 right now

'the last word' podcast for september 30th