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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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Globutron
Joined: 13 Feb 2010 Location: England/Anyang
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Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 8:14 am Post subject: |
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| Certainly. But that is only 20,000won a week, |
Which is over ONE MILLION won a year! |
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allovertheplace
Joined: 02 Aug 2009
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Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 8:48 am Post subject: |
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| Globutron wrote: |
| Quote: |
| Certainly. But that is only 20,000won a week, |
Which is over ONE MILLION won a year! |
Really dude...really |
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jzrossef
Joined: 05 Nov 2010
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Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 3:32 pm Post subject: |
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| allovertheplace wrote: |
| Globutron wrote: |
| Quote: |
| Certainly. But that is only 20,000won a week, |
Which is over ONE MILLION won a year! |
Really dude...really |
In all fairness, he's on the right track. Try 20,000 won x (4 weeks/month) x (12months/year) = 960,000 won... that's not far off from 1 million won.
Wow, it does add up quickly. I might have to give up the idea of occasional wine now  |
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rumdiary

Joined: 05 Jun 2006
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Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 4:32 pm Post subject: |
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| My first year in Korea I didn't save a dime. I had read about how easy it would be to save 1 million won a month and assumes I would return home with 12 million won. Stuff adds up. Especially when you don't have bills to worry about and disposable income. Travel, imported goods, drinking etc. My second time around I only did slightly better. It was worth it though. Tons of good memories. Now that I'm back in the U.S I have to watch every penny. |
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jzrossef
Joined: 05 Nov 2010
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Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 4:43 pm Post subject: |
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| rumdiary wrote: |
| My first year in Korea I didn't save a dime. I had read about how easy it would be to save 1 million won a month and assumes I would return home with 12 million won. Stuff adds up. Especially when you don't have bills to worry about and disposable income. Travel, imported goods, drinking etc. My second time around I only did slightly better. It was worth it though. Tons of good memories. Now that I'm back in the U.S I have to watch every penny. |
Sounds like a slice of reality right there. Can you give me a jest of your typical spending? I'm not the type going off on a shopping spree (Ex. probably not so much on drinks (I drink mostly tab water... though installing water filter might be expensive) and imported goods... I know imported goods can get outrageously expensive.
Speaking of drinking habit... I know Korea fluoridates tap water. Any idea as to how much fluoride they pour into the water system? I think my local water supply has something like 0.5-0.7%... |
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PatrickBateman
Joined: 08 Jun 2009 Location: American Gardens Building, West 81st Street
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Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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I blow my money.
Not really a fan of saving it, so if there's something I want I just buy it.
Never was really a big fan of stashing a lot of money. |
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johnnyrook
Joined: 08 Nov 2009
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 12:10 am Post subject: |
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I've saved about 7 million won with one pay left to come of my first year here, so I expect to get that total up to 8 million. I was hoping to save 10 million won but I think I've done pretty well considering a few things:
-Didn't save anything from my first two pays. Actually didn't get my first pay until more than a month after I arrived, and I came with not a lot of money, so when I finally got cash I went a bit crazy, buying furniture and appliances for my apartment, and building a stylish winter wardrobe (since winter fashion doesn't really exist where I come from).
- In the subsequent nine months I've taken trips with my girlfriend to Shanghai, Singapore and Jeju, with the airfares and accommodation fully paid for by me.
- I like to cook gourmet meals (as hard as it is to do in Korea, with only a shitty stovetop to work with) so I spend over 100k a week on groceries. And when I'm not weaving some culinary magic in the kitchen I'm shouting my gf dinner.
- I've bought a buttload of books since coming to Korea. I love reading so I inevitably buy a couple of books at least every two or three weeks.
Well, I don't smoke or drink coffee, and I only drink alcohol about once a week and never excessively, so I guess that might balance out my spending compared to the typical foreign teacher. Excluding groceries I honestly don't really spend any money during the week (when my gf's busy with uni); I'd be luckily to go through man won through the working week. |
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jonpurdy
Joined: 08 Jan 2009 Location: Ulsan
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 2:40 am Post subject: Re: Spending vs. saving |
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| Yaya wrote: |
| I personally think frequenting coffee shops can be a huge waste of dough, but that's just me. You can brew your own cheaper. |
Totally agree 100%. However, I still go for the atmosphere. When you're stick in a oneroom or officetel in your off-hours it's nice to get out. I think of it like paying 5000원 for the ability to sit somewhere else for an hour or two, heh. |
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northway
Joined: 05 Jul 2010
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 2:57 am Post subject: |
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| johnnyrook wrote: |
I've saved about 7 million won with one pay left to come of my first year here, so I expect to get that total up to 8 million. I was hoping to save 10 million won but I think I've done pretty well considering a few things:
-Didn't save anything from my first two pays. Actually didn't get my first pay until more than a month after I arrived, and I came with not a lot of money, so when I finally got cash I went a bit crazy, buying furniture and appliances for my apartment, and building a stylish winter wardrobe (since winter fashion doesn't really exist where I come from).
- In the subsequent nine months I've taken trips with my girlfriend to Shanghai, Singapore and Jeju, with the airfares and accommodation fully paid for by me.
- I like to cook gourmet meals (as hard as it is to do in Korea, with only a shitty stovetop to work with) so I spend over 100k a week on groceries. And when I'm not weaving some culinary magic in the kitchen I'm shouting my gf dinner.
- I've bought a buttload of books since coming to Korea. I love reading so I inevitably buy a couple of books at least every two or three weeks.
Well, I don't smoke or drink coffee, and I only drink alcohol about once a week and never excessively, so I guess that might balance out my spending compared to the typical foreign teacher. Excluding groceries I honestly don't really spend any money during the week (when my gf's busy with uni); I'd be luckily to go through man won through the working week. |
I saved about the same amount with a lot of the same habits, though a lot more drinking and a lot less books. |
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Vix
Joined: 18 Jun 2010 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 3:21 am Post subject: |
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| johnnyrook wrote: |
I've saved about 7 million won with one pay left to come of my first year here, so I expect to get that total up to 8 million. I was hoping to save 10 million won but I think I've done pretty well considering a few things:
-Didn't save anything from my first two pays. Actually didn't get my first pay until more than a month after I arrived, and I came with not a lot of money, so when I finally got cash I went a bit crazy, buying furniture and appliances for my apartment, and building a stylish winter wardrobe (since winter fashion doesn't really exist where I come from).
- In the subsequent nine months I've taken trips with my girlfriend to Shanghai, Singapore and Jeju, with the airfares and accommodation fully paid for by me.
- I like to cook gourmet meals (as hard as it is to do in Korea, with only a shitty stovetop to work with) so I spend over 100k a week on groceries. And when I'm not weaving some culinary magic in the kitchen I'm shouting my gf dinner.
- I've bought a buttload of books since coming to Korea. I love reading so I inevitably buy a couple of books at least every two or three weeks.
Well, I don't smoke or drink coffee, and I only drink alcohol about once a week and never excessively, so I guess that might balance out my spending compared to the typical foreign teacher. Excluding groceries I honestly don't really spend any money during the week (when my gf's busy with uni); I'd be luckily to go through man won through the working week. |
Damn, are you still with the gf of yours, I kind of want to date you! |
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allovertheplace
Joined: 02 Aug 2009
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 2:15 pm Post subject: |
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| Vix wrote: |
| johnnyrook wrote: |
I've saved about 7 million won with one pay left to come of my first year here, so I expect to get that total up to 8 million. I was hoping to save 10 million won but I think I've done pretty well considering a few things:
-Didn't save anything from my first two pays. Actually didn't get my first pay until more than a month after I arrived, and I came with not a lot of money, so when I finally got cash I went a bit crazy, buying furniture and appliances for my apartment, and building a stylish winter wardrobe (since winter fashion doesn't really exist where I come from).
- In the subsequent nine months I've taken trips with my girlfriend to Shanghai, Singapore and Jeju, with the airfares and accommodation fully paid for by me.
- I like to cook gourmet meals (as hard as it is to do in Korea, with only a shitty stovetop to work with) so I spend over 100k a week on groceries. And when I'm not weaving some culinary magic in the kitchen I'm shouting my gf dinner.
- I've bought a buttload of books since coming to Korea. I love reading so I inevitably buy a couple of books at least every two or three weeks.
Well, I don't smoke or drink coffee, and I only drink alcohol about once a week and never excessively, so I guess that might balance out my spending compared to the typical foreign teacher. Excluding groceries I honestly don't really spend any money during the week (when my gf's busy with uni); I'd be luckily to go through man won through the working week. |
Damn, are you still with the gf of yours, I kind of want to date you! |
Why would you post Im a ESL teacher, moved to korea, dating a university student(really dude), and spent 5 million won on her while she lives at home and her father hates me because Im white. Ive done plenty to get some .... but really dude. Its because of crap like this that girls like that get away with what they get away with. If your a tool, get used to hitting your hammer head on a wall |
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toby99
Joined: 28 Aug 2009 Location: Dong-Incheon-by-the-sea, South Korea
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 3:19 pm Post subject: |
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Some actual ways friends of mine pinch pennies (or won, rather) in Korea:
-always take subway, never set foot in a taxi
-never travel around Korea unless on a school field trip
-buy the absolute cheapest cigs (saves 5-600 won/pack)
-drink soju at home before going out to family mart to drink, and, if going to a bar, limit yourself only to 500cc mugs of Cass/Hite
-buy bricks of the cheapest HomePlus ramen, mix with spam for dinner
-never order anju
-only use the big, cheap, generic bottles of soda available at grocery stores for mixers.
-don't touch the ondol--use spaceheater and wear slippers.
-make it a point of going to every school dinner/drinking session with the coteachers and eat/drink as much as humanly possible, since these will be your best meals of the week and you usually won't have to pay a dime. (unless you start going regularly over the course of a few years, in which case you'll probably be expected to pay for a round. I know some public schools will take 10-20K out of your paycheck each month to cover costs for these events, so it's a good idea to go regardless. But if you're only staying at your school for a year, you should be in the clear.)
I'm sure I'm forgetting more. A decent percentage of fellow ESL'ers in my neighborhood are trying to save as much as humanly possible during their stay here. Those are the guys who do almost everything on the list above. Not the way I'd wanna live, but, yeah, it is possible to live cheaply.
For me, on the other hand, it's highly, highly unusual NOT to burn through 1 million+ over the course of a month. |
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RedKristin
Joined: 27 Jun 2010
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 4:59 pm Post subject: |
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| toby99 wrote: |
Some actual ways friends of mine pinch pennies (or won, rather) in Korea:
-always take subway, never set foot in a taxi
-never travel around Korea unless on a school field trip
-buy the absolute cheapest cigs (saves 5-600 won/pack)
-drink soju at home before going out to family mart to drink, and, if going to a bar, limit yourself only to 500cc mugs of Cass/Hite
-buy bricks of the cheapest HomePlus ramen, mix with spam for dinner
-never order anju
-only use the big, cheap, generic bottles of soda available at grocery stores for mixers.
-don't touch the ondol--use spaceheater and wear slippers.
-make it a point of going to every school dinner/drinking session with the coteachers and eat/drink as much as humanly possible, since these will be your best meals of the week and you usually won't have to pay a dime. |
I do all this. I've found that cooking my own meals and using my electric blanket tends to keep my place very warm, too.
I also use the coffee machine at work for caffeine almost to the point of abuse. I think if I weren't bouncing merrily around the classroom, they'd cut me off. |
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winterfall
Joined: 21 May 2009
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 5:10 pm Post subject: |
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I haven't saved much money either. But I'm supporting a family. It wasn't until I got paid 2.2 a month that I really started to save more than a $100 bucks a month.
It could be your diet. Are you a foreign food only guy, do you mostly shop at costco? Costco may be cheap but, its not that cheap. It's more like buying in bulk for those luxuries you can't give up like nuts, bread, deli meat. |
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johnnyrook
Joined: 08 Nov 2009
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Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 5:18 pm Post subject: |
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| allovertheplace wrote: |
| Why would you post Im a ESL teacher, moved to korea, dating a university student(really dude), and spent 5 million won on her while she lives at home and her father hates me because Im white. Ive done plenty to get some .... but really dude. Its because of crap like this that girls like that get away with what they get away with. If your a tool, get used to hitting your hammer head on a wall |
I get along with her father fine, I'd been in a relationship with her for a while in my home country and we lived together for a while, we'd travelled a lot overseas together before I moved to Korea (and I wasn't paying for her on those occassions), she speaks almost perfect english. She's not just some random girl I've met here and showered with gifts to impress, she's never demanded or expected any of it. |
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