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<I MISS KOREA>
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Dodge7



Joined: 21 Oct 2011

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 7:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

fustiancorduroy wrote:
Dodge7 wrote:
You sound like a very depressed person. Do you have any friends? I suggest going out with them.

And speak for yourself, I'd give anything to go back to the States where unfamiliar faces smile at me instead of scowl and where my wife and I can walk and be in peace instead of being scoffed at by strangers on the street and labeled dirty by the media. Where I can walk into any store and ask for help and understand everything everywhere I go.

Korea has some good things like good transportation and low crime, but there's no place like home, for me at least.


I have to ask: what's stopping you from doing that here? Of course, communicating with people in your native language is always going to be easier and more enjoyable than trying to do so in a foreign language, but learning how to read Korean is fairly straightforward and memorizing at least a couple dozen grammar structures and vocabulary words is scarcely more difficult. And your wife is Korean, correct? I would think you'd be studying Korean at least somewhat fastidiously to be able to communicate with her family, unless your wife has parents who speak good English -- which is unlikely. In any case, you should be able to learn enough Korean to communicate in stores with a couple month's studying, provided you actually go out and apply what you study.


There's no way I can possibly learn all that Korean with my schedule as busy as it is to be able to go into HomePlus and ask the person behind the counter what makes this electric shaver different than this one and understand all of their reply.

You have to be kidding implying that in some way it is just the same back home if I just study and learn a few phases and garble them out--most of times in which the person will just say, "Nae?" or laugh. I can do that, it's just understanding what's being said back to me that is the problem.

I was so relieved to go into the store and ask where something was when my wife and I went home to visit that I just started talking to the shop clerk for the hell of it because I could It felt so refreshing to communicate. What freedom it is to be able to communicate perfectly without a hint of confusion. Think about it, we spend all day not being understood or being spoke to not understanding. It's an agitating feeling.

Freely conversing at home just feels like a warm shirt right out of the drier--hmm, driers--something else I miss from home =(
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comm



Joined: 22 Jun 2010

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 7:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dodge7 wrote:
Freely conversing at home just feels like a warm shirt right out of the drier--hmm, driers--something else I miss from home =(

I've been fantasizing about getting one, and I couldn't imagine -not- having one if I were married. What's stopping you from picking one up?
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fustiancorduroy



Joined: 12 Jan 2007

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 7:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

...

Last edited by fustiancorduroy on Sat Feb 21, 2015 6:11 am; edited 1 time in total
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Yaya



Joined: 25 Feb 2003
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 8:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I say there's a big difference between "can't adapt" and "won't adapt." I'd say many of the whiners are of the latter category (and many of them in turn end up quietly returning to Korea after leaving despite vowing never to return, but I digress).
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bcjinseoul



Joined: 13 Jan 2010
Location: Seoul, Korea

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 11:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Modernist wrote:
My question for you, OP, is:

Why'd you leave? If you had it so good when you were here and everything was great--women, public transport, 'free' apartment [actually, your pay was just allocated differently, but never mind], travel, money, friends--why would you drop all that to go to America?

There must have been SOMETHING, some problem or concern. Something that bothered you despite all of the good things. So what was it? You even claim you know 'what it's like to have a job [you] love', and it was 'easy' to boot!

So why'd you walk away? Are you sure it wasn't because you came to understand the meaninglessness and dead-endedness of teaching ESL? That no matter what you did here you would never escape the reality of this joke 'profession'? Did you maybe want to have a real career, a real calling that meant something, that gave you a feeling of satisfaction and challenge and mental stimulation?

I have almost the easiest PS job anyone could get. I have to work but a fraction of what most teachers do, especially compared to hagwons. My kids are basically decent. I have an easy and short commute. My city is a lot better than most non-metros I've compared it to. My apartment is nice and well-located. AND I make a good bit more than average for anyone here except Uni professors. But 2 years here will be damn pushing it for me. I don't deny the things you mention. In a lot of ways living in Korea is easier than living in America. I have a hard time thinking of a job I could do in America as 'easy' as the one I have here for the same income.

But life is about more than having it easy. At least it is for me. Every weekday morning I have to drag myself out of bed. I don't look forward to my days. I'm happy when I manage a good class that maybe actually taught a few of my kids something new for once; but there's no deeper satisfaction there. It's just going through the motions. I want to do better than a life where it's all about the evenings and weekends and just grit your teeth until you make it. Don't you?


I agree and disagree with what you're saying here, and you've made some great points. As you can tell from my original post, there are a lot of jobs I can't do and/or don't want to do, and I give you a great idea of what many things I DON'T want in a job.

Unlike most people, I learned a lot of Korean, put up with the culture and the locals just fine, enjoyed my jobs out there most of the time, thought the women there looked better than over here, never minded dragging myself to work - beats the hell out of so many jobs I'd rather not do.

My dad is old. I don't know how much time he has left. My sister is getting married this fall. My mom hates not having me around for Christmas. Family does take it's toll and puts you on guilt trips. I think family keeps me back in the States more than anything.

I'd love to get something with editing, writing, PR, etc...but have no real experience with that, beyond writing a million blogs whilst in Korea. Beyond that, I'm open a GOOD office job, like an HR generalist, paralegal, marketing research guru, etc, but have no experience doing something like that, either. I'm also open to teaching, but NOT at a public school, and lastly, I'm open to a really, really good customer service career - like bank branch management or auto insurance adjusting - two other things I have no experience in.

I've applied to plenty of jobs online like these on and off with all sorts of different resume styles and formats and all sorts of job boards -with minimum callbacks, interviews, etc. The post 2008 job market sucks. People with skills have jobs (engineers, scientists, computer geniuses; great fields btw; as well as stuff that doesn't look good to me, like accounting which I hated in college, and a long list of healthcare careers, as well as teaching or learning a trade at 6 or 7 am in the morning. I could go on...), but if you don't have a skill, you better be an amazing salesman, which is something I've become with my current low-end sales job, but it's hardly meaningful work, like say, working on a cure for cancer, designing computer mainframes, engineering rockets or designing video games, let alone writing the all-American novel.

I dunno. I wish I could be 25 and in Seoul forever. Too much I miss. Oh well...

At the same time, I wish I had saved a ton more money in Korea, and had gotten myself back into school right after, pay as I go, live off the money, not work, and not have to take out student loans. Shame on me for having too much fun. They really were my glory years...
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northway



Joined: 05 Jul 2010

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 1:09 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

comm wrote:
Dodge7 wrote:
Freely conversing at home just feels like a warm shirt right out of the drier--hmm, driers--something else I miss from home =(

I've been fantasizing about getting one, and I couldn't imagine -not- having one if I were married. What's stopping you from picking one up?


Korea's tiered electric pricing scheme would likely lead to some very, very expensive bills if you were to get a drier. I've assumed this is why they haven't caught on in Korea.
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Squire



Joined: 26 Sep 2010
Location: Jeollanam-do

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 2:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

fustiancorduroy wrote:


I understand your feeling, which I suggested in my original post. I went back to America myself not too long ago, and it was nice to chat with people in stores without any effort.

And it's true that I don't know your schedule. You might work 50 hours or more each week. But learning even a little Korean each week, say one word a day, adds up over time. You're right that you'll never be able to communicate in Korean as well as you do in English. But in my case, after living here six years, and studying Korean a fair bit during the first three, I am able to communicate quite well in most day-to-day situations and, perhaps more importantly, understand what people are saying to me, whether they are telling me information about different types of bank accounts or explaining why my boiler isn't working. I hope that you, too, eventually reach this level of moderate communication in Korean.


Bear in mind a word a day is only 365 in a year if you keep it up diligently. I believe the TOPIK level 2 wordlist is 2000 words, so it would take 6 years to get to that level. It's pretty tough to get from survival Korean up to a decent conversational level
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redaxe



Joined: 01 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 2:53 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The grass is always greener on the other side, my friend.
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fermentation



Joined: 22 Jun 2009

PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2012 3:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

northway wrote:
comm wrote:
Dodge7 wrote:
Freely conversing at home just feels like a warm shirt right out of the drier--hmm, driers--something else I miss from home =(

I've been fantasizing about getting one, and I couldn't imagine -not- having one if I were married. What's stopping you from pic