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Do you ever feel like a loser here?
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Goku



Joined: 10 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 10:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Now,

What exactly is a loser?

Because I fling around the term as much as the next guy but I can't quite put my finger on what this giant pool of people actually is.

It could be a combination of a number of things from any sorts of different people not resembling each other. Is it a feeling? Is it lack of social awareness or skills? Is it social status?

I think the thing that tips the scales for me when I think someone is a loser has to be their professionalism/ seriousness. And I think it seems to be the common ground that a lot of us seem to use when we refer to the foreigners we see.

I mean, if I met someone who was fully decked out in a suit, lacked all social skills, but was still professional and overobessive with work... I wouldn't call that person a loser.

However, even if I knew someone socially adept, keen, and funny yet dressed like "The only thing missing was the seedy superbowl couch and week-old pizza box" and basically dicked around in school. I would consider him a loser.

I guess it has to do with work ethic for me. That and maybe the way they dess and act.
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bassexpander



Joined: 13 Sep 2007
Location: Someplace you'd rather be.

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 10:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I sure don't now that I'm doing my MA. Most ESL teachers taking the same course from the USA envy my overseas experience.
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Otherside



Joined: 06 Sep 2007

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 10:58 pm    Post subject: Re: Do you ever feel like a loser here? Reply with quote

Anybody who is in ESL/EFL for more than a year or two, who doesn't enjoy it (or the life it brings) or is in it for the money, or is in it because it is the best they can get is a loser.

Tobias wrote:
Zulethe wrote:
I do.....I left a great job in America to come here where I've come to realize that 99% of the English teachers here are total losers. I think that's an exaggeration but I'll say that a minority come here just for the experience and are truly talented but the vast majority are here because they are rejects from their home land.

......
I've been here 6 months and am starting to hate other foreign deachers.

.......
The .1% person gave one good suggestion....after school program integration? Thank you for that...

Bloody hell, I like my job but I truly feel like a flock together...i.e., loser Ville

Seriously mates�seriously


Understand that there are true losers and what I call 'designated' losers. We know what a true loser is. What about a designated loser? A designated loser is someone who may have a great education and may even be pretty smart, but he or she lacks the connections necessary to land the great-paying jobs that still exist in the American economy. He or she possesses lots of practical knowledge but is not allowed into the domain of the great jobs. He or she probably possess a fantastic work ethic but, again, is not invited to the party. His or her IQ may be 125 and his or her GPA may be 3.8, but he or she's given the ol' 'we're not hiring' excuse at every interview. Meanwhile, his or her fellow grads who have the proper connections come behind him or her and land those jobs with nary an effort.

If you don't have a specialty degree in law, medicine, finance, engineering, or material science, you gotta know somebody to get a great job in this day and age. If you don't have one of those supercharged degrees and don't know anybody, you have to accept whatever you can find in help-wanted ads or on websites such as this one. These, of course, are the crumb jobs that those who are connected would never settle for.

Welcome to the domain of loser, my friend. In Korea, both types of 'losers' often rub elbows.


Tobias, you've said something along these lines many times.

Tobias, the "speciality" degrees you mentioned encompass practically every University faculty outside the Humanities. Now, no one forced you to study a BA in whatever, so with your 125 IQ and 3.8GPA you have no one to blame for your poor choice of degree than yourself.

There is still plenty of opportunity in the world. Sure, right now may not be the best time, but we've just come off a pretty big boom, so there were plenty of chances then to have made a name for yourself. Even in trying times, you may catch a break or wait for the next upswing. Hell, you may even be the next Bill Gates (he didn't come from a connected family, or "old money" as far as I am aware).

A designated loser would be someone from a broken home, living on the breadline who worked full time jobs and made a real effort to study only to come down with pneumonia during his finals which murdered his GPA.

You sir, are just a loser.
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 11:14 pm    Post subject: Re: Do you ever feel like a loser here? Reply with quote

Otherside wrote:
Anybody who is in ESL/EFL for more than a year or two, who doesn't enjoy it (or the life it brings) or is in it for the money, or is in it because it is the best they can get is a loser.


I'd like to think so, too. I really came to hate my first job and Korea and would have felt like a complete loser if I had stayed there or if that were the best job I could find. But work-wise I can't really think of many jobs I'd enjoy doing more than my current one, or where I'd get along with people so well. While the pay may be nothing remarkable - especially at current US exchange rates - and the career prospects stationary, I can't really think of what qualifications I'd rather have to do whatever other job elsewhere (maybe the same job with the same conditions for the same pay in Thailand, but that's about it).
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nicam



Joined: 14 Jun 2008

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 12:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I too left a "good" job back home, at an internet company that was run by one of the most notorious Draconian douches in Silicone Valley. It was so boring, and small, and the tactics (like the dangling carrot and fear mongering) were so over the top they were comical.

But, I had it easy, and I was proud to tell people where I worked, and delighted by their reactions. I walked from that job thinking my experience would land me a new and better gig, but then the recession hit, and after 5 months of fruitless job hunting I came here. Does this make me a loser? I really feel like one sometimes, as it only took me a couple of months to realize that my PS job here is beyond futile, and not only am I ridiculed and marginalized, but it's all for a measly $9 and hour given the conversion rate. This causes me to refrain from devoting any intellectual energy to the job, which makes me feel like even more of a loser.

I don't know about designated losers, but I do know that it's the smart kids who pursue degrees in humanities and the arts who seem to have it the worst. The less academically inclined kids join the military and get jobs as executive assts., or cops, or they work for the VA. Or, they blow fat lines of coke and make tons of money selling mortgages or stocks. They buy material things and procreate. They think they are better than depressive academic loser types who are stuck in low paying academic jobs. They are aggro and lack empathy, but they have "good" jobs, and live outside of their heads and in the real world.

I haven't met many "losers" here, but then again, I don't walk around thinking I am better than everyone.
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ESL Milk "Everyday



Joined: 12 Sep 2007

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 2:17 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Everyone has their own opinion on what a loser is.

For me, losers are people who don't care about finding any meaning in their lives, or don't care about understanding the world they are living in, don't make concessions when they are obviously called for, and are constantly asserting themselves through bullying, name-calling and other forms of intimidation... they also like to capitalize on people who make themselves vulnerable, because they enjoy more than anything having an easy target. These kinds of people never progress, never fully understand people, and always end up bitter and resentful. They also never actually manage to put themselves into perspective.

Being a loser has nothing to do with being in Korea, or your choice of careers... unless I suppose you choose to define yourself through your career choice, but if that's the case, then you're hardly alive, as far as I'm concerned. Having a wife, a family, a good job... it's all meaningless if all that it does is weigh you down, but people fall for it because they want the status. This is not to suggest that this kind of lifestyle is always like this, just that there's no reason to get married and have a family until you meet someone whom you know will be able to help you do it together.

Some people would be attracted to ESL because they have other projects and this job gives them ample time to finish them. While I'd agree that inspiration is somewhat lacking here, I would argue this kind of lifestyle would be ideal for a struggling band, or a novelist, or an artist of any other type or sort... not to mention travel junkies who live to have their minds opened, and are attentive and sober enough to actually benefit spiritually from seeing the world. I have never understood people who say that travel gets boring-- unless I know for a fact their whole goal was to get drunk with other foreigners and, if they're lucky, have sex with one of the locals.

Being a loser has nothing to do with your job, it's your attitude towards life, and how you handle your experiences.
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bogey666



Joined: 17 Mar 2008
Location: Korea, the ass free zone

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

a loser? am I? (well I suppose others may think so, and of course I am free to think of other interesting monikers that may fit them, or even use the same one.

do I feel like a loser?
HELL NO.

I'm old enough where I have nothing to prove to noone (and frankly I had little to prove to anyone when I was in my twenties too - I never got into the entire keep up with/ impress the Joneses game, etc) .

I've already had a successful mini career where I made more money than most people who might call me such a name. Not enough to retire on, but enough to have bought a nice condo very early on which the mortgage left to paid is less than a third of its value, even at today's deprressed prices. I also started traveling the world and massively so, to the tune of blowing probably around 12-15K USD a year just for travel purposes.

Then I decided why travel for short times only to come back to the US and become miserable (and chubby?) again?

it all depends on the choices one makes, your definitions of what is "loserlike" and not, etc.

Koreans might think I'm a loser for not having gotten married and had children like is expected of every Korean, etc Smile

of course, I look at their worker ant cigarette and soju soaked loser existence and wonder the very same thing about them... eh?


I've seen some people around who had that "loser" look, but I prefer not to make snap judgments on that alone.

actually, during interacting with other GEPIK teachers at orientation, I wouldn't have applied the word "loser" to the overwhelming majority of them at all!

p.s,. btw. are you the guy who a while back posted this big and long RANT about having to leave the US because of all the (Mexican) immigrants and how you felt you couldn't survive speaking just English in your own country, etc et etc?????

or am I confusing you with someone else?

I vehemently disagreed with about 99.9% of that rant, but it was a fascinating one anyways Very Happy
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Robot_Teacher



Joined: 18 Feb 2009
Location: Robotting Around the World

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

OP is right. I say many express this downtrodden age by how they dress and act. They suck.

Robot says those who still take pride in themselves and their work are not losers even though we may make much less money in this expensive age; the economy, incompetent bureaucracy, and weak volatile currencies are the losers failing us. I agree, some people need to dress better, do personal hygiene, and act like educated professionals. You may think you don't contribute anything back to your home country by teaching in Korea and it's OK to just say and do anything, but what you contribute is the impression you leave on people in other countries through your appearance, actions, attitude, and performance.

Robot and his peers are the most highly educated, capable, and skilled competent professionals in the history of the world. The economy is just not presenting an appropriate level of opportunity for us today. Losers are people who give up and stop trying.

Robot made twice as much money 10 years ago on just a 2 year degree and lived for half the cost of today when companies called on 20 somethings to perform good paying IT work that offered plenty of 3 day weekends and all holidays off which meant a bagful of 4 day weekends to go home on. But Robot is not giving up nor lowering standards until it's game over. Hey, it's not game over, get out of the holey jeans, backwards caps, and for Christs sakes; cover those tattoos and act like you got brains and a good education. You're not an unemployed dope smoking hippy in college anymore.
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Kurtz



Joined: 05 Jan 2007
Location: ples bilong me

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I agree with the above, but I shudder when I see a group of TESOLers in a group, swearing, wearing terrible cheap clothes, having holes and studs in their face, and seeing them look me up and down because I'm wearing expensive clothes, hearing the utter crap spewing from their foul mouths and I don't have to wonder why this field of employment receives little or no credibility from the outside world,

What is a "loser" is quite up to interpretation, but for me there is little doubt, this profession attracts less desirable people than many other professions. It seems to be full of backpacker types looking forward to their mundane holiday in Thailand, like WOW man! you're going to Thailand, that's so original!!!!!

Maybe I'm just old and bitter, but having next to no Western friends here is a a Godsend, as what I've seen and heard, I'd have it no other way.
To the faded t-shirt clad, shitty jean wearing, back to front cap wearing, goatey beard sporting, slack jawed , backpack toting, 23 year olds here, you are a walking and talking disgrace to Western people in general as you're actually real life examples of Western culture to these ignorant and judge mental people, and the next time you jump on Dave's to bitch about exchange rates, just imagine what your current plight would be in your crappy hick hometown.

For the others, enjoy making money doing very little, and remember, you're making 2 or 3 point whatever WON, don't convert to your own currency as you're not living there right now, and hello to those wondering about your next move in this life of which Korea (hopefully) is just another of life's experiences, just don't let too many years slip through.

Lastly, to those who say Korea is full of losers, well, nobody is making you stay here, so go take your superior arse off someplace else where you can feel superior somewhere that's not in Korea.
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Kurtz



Joined: 05 Jan 2007
Location: ples bilong me

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

My response was to ESL milk BTW
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shantaram



Joined: 10 Apr 2007

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 3:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
others had horrible accents (don't know which country but supposedly it was an Englishee speaking one).


You think you don't speak with an accent?
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Ukon



Joined: 29 Jan 2008

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 3:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Kurtz wrote:
I agree with the above, but I shudder when I see a group of TESOLers in a group, swearing, wearing terrible cheap clothes, having holes and studs in their face, and seeing them look me up and down because I'm wearing expensive clothes, hearing the utter crap spewing from their foul mouths and I don't have to wonder why this field of employment receives little or no credibility from the outside world,

What is a "loser" is quite up to interpretation, but for me there is little doubt, this profession attracts less desirable people than many other professions. It seems to be full of backpacker types looking forward to their mundane holiday in Thailand, like WOW man! you're going to Thailand, that's so original!!!!!

Maybe I'm just old and bitter, but having next to no Western friends here is a a Godsend, as what I've seen and heard, I'd have it no other way.
To the faded t-shirt clad, shitty jean wearing, back to front cap wearing, goatey beard sporting, slack jawed , backpack toting, 23 year olds here, you are a walking and talking disgrace to Western people in general as you're actually real life examples of Western culture to these ignorant and judge mental people, and the next time you jump on Dave's to bitch about exchange rates, just imagine what your current plight would be in your crappy hick hometown.

For the others, enjoy making money doing very little, and remember, you're making 2 or 3 point whatever WON, don't convert to your own currency as you're not living there right now, and hello to those wondering about your next move in this life of which Korea (hopefully) is just another of life's experiences, just don't let too many years slip through.

Lastly, to those who say Korea is full of losers, well, nobody is making you stay here, so go take your superior arse off someplace else where you can feel superior somewhere that's not in Korea.


Are you talking about wearing causual clothes in general...it's one thing to dress poorly, but when I meet korean teachers outside of work, they dress hipster like(young ones) and wear the same stuff(no studs!) including baseball caps. I agree about going to work in those clothes, but it really depends on your workplace's dress code....
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Zantetsuken



Joined: 21 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:58 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yu_Bum_suk wrote:
Tobias wrote:
I was in Masan today and saw a couple of new arrivals. They were ready to make a fine first impression at their new digs: worn jeans, backwards uni baseball caps, five-day-old chin fur, boatshoes, faded T-shirts. The only thing missing was the seedy superbowl couch and week-old pizza box.

Jesus. I can understand where the OP is coming from.


And to think that in the eyes of the LEA perhaps you're no different from them.


Exactly. To the average Korean guy, the white guy wearing faded jeans, t-shirt, backwards cap and beard and the white guy decked out in armani are one and the same. They both are non-persons...don't belong.
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GwangjuParents



Joined: 31 Oct 2008

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 7:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Exactly. To the average Korean guy, the white guy wearing faded jeans, t-shirt, backwards cap and beard and the white guy decked out in armani are one and the same. They both are non-persons...don't belong.


Exactly. To the average White guy, the Asian guy wearing faded jeans, t-shirt, backwards cap and beard and the Asian guy decked out in armani are one and the same. They both are non-persons...don't belong.
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madhusudan



Joined: 30 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 7:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

nicam wrote:


I don't know about designated losers, but I do know that it's the smart kids who pursue degrees in humanities and the arts who seem to have it the worst. The less academically inclined kids join the military and get jobs as executive assts., or cops, or they work for the VA. Or, they blow fat lines of coke and make tons of money selling mortgages or stocks. They buy material things and procreate. They think they are better than depressive academic loser types who are stuck in low paying academic jobs. They are aggro and lack empathy, but they have "good" jobs, and live outside of their heads and in the real world.

I haven't met many "losers" here, but then again, I don't walk around thinking I am better than everyone.


Well said
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