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markness
Joined: 02 Jan 2013
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Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 9:24 am Post subject: |
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| Threequalseven wrote: |
| I played the computer game Age of Empires II in junior high, and I've always thought the Korean turtle ships were really cool. Can't say much more than that, though. |
Hahaha... I remember the "War Wagons" from them too, were those things real? |
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Xanetos
Joined: 23 Jul 2013
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Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 11:50 am Post subject: |
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| markness wrote: |
| Threequalseven wrote: |
| I played the computer game Age of Empires II in junior high, and I've always thought the Korean turtle ships were really cool. Can't say much more than that, though. |
Hahaha... I remember the "War Wagons" from them too, were those things real? |
Such a great game Lots of memories! |
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andrewchon

Joined: 16 Nov 2008 Location: Back in Oz. Living in ISIS Aust.
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Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 12:03 pm Post subject: Re: Korea Before You Came to Korea |
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| farfromhome wrote: |
| maitaidads wrote: |
| ... found 3 magnets on my refrigerator from the 1986 Olympics. |
1988 |
May be they are from 1986 Asian Games. |
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farfromhome
Joined: 01 Jun 2006 Location: seoul
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Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 10:44 pm Post subject: Re: Korea Before You Came to Korea |
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| andrewchon wrote: |
| May be they are from 1986 Asian Games. |
maybe |
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chrisblank
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Location: Incheon
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 3:26 am Post subject: |
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| M*A*S*H |
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silkhighway
Joined: 24 Oct 2010 Location: Canada
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 4:51 am Post subject: |
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Two memories. The 88 Olympics, my first introduction to South Korea. I didn't pick up much about it other than the Olympic coverage.
My second memory is a couple years later as a grade 7 student, and for some reason, I heard about people teaching English in Korea, but I don't remember where I heard about this. I had a mental image of people living in tall buildings, which didn't turn out to be too far from the truth when I arrived in Korea to teach English myself at least a dozen years later. It may have been from my Grade 7 homeroom teacher, because after the school-year was over, she and her husband moved to Thailand to teach at an international school. This is in the early 90's. |
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Threequalseven
Joined: 08 May 2012
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 6:37 am Post subject: |
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| markness wrote: |
| Threequalseven wrote: |
| I played the computer game Age of Empires II in junior high, and I've always thought the Korean turtle ships were really cool. Can't say much more than that, though. |
Hahaha... I remember the "War Wagons" from them too, were those things real? |
I also wonder about the war wagons. If they were used, they're certainly not as well-known as the turtle ships. I know the Chinese used horse drawn chariots in combat hundreds of years ago. Horse drawn wagons that shoot massive flaming arrows, however? Not so sure...  |
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Seoulman69
Joined: 14 Dec 2009
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 6:49 am Post subject: |
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About 30 years ago my daughter & son (7 & 3 at the time) pooled their resources to present me with a combination bottle opener & nail clippers for my birthday. Odd combination but it was pretty, with lacquered fish on it. Touching. I was a single dad & we were quite poor. It was stamped "made in Korea."
Flash forward to today. This item still sits in front of me on my desk. I just cracked a beer with it & in fact I trimmed all my nails with it this morning. The fish fell off a couple years ago & its a bit rusty but this simple unit has seen near daily use ever since I got it. Oldest & most favorite object I own. |
You made me tear up with that story. I must be getting soft in my old age.
The only thing I knew of Korea was their exploits in the 2002 world cup and the movie Sympathy for Lady Vengeance. Apart from that I didn't know anything. I didn't even have a thing for Asian girls. I just came over because I thought it would be a good laugh and better than the shit call centre job I had at the time. Turns out I was right.
I still don't have a thing for Asian girls. I'm with my woman because she's a good laugh, can handle her drink, and somewhere along the line became my best mate. I'm fucked if I know how that happened. |
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hiamnotcool
Joined: 06 Feb 2012
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 8:42 am Post subject: |
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| A good friend of mine was Korean American, and he would never shut up about how awesome Korea was. It worked though, I ended up coming here out of curiosity. He pretty much exaggerated the good and bad things about Korea, but overall he gave a pretty accurate depiction of what it would be like to live here. |
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Zyzyfer

Joined: 29 Jan 2003 Location: who, what, where, when, why, how?
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 9:50 pm Post subject: |
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When I was a teen, one of the neighboring families in our apartment complex was a retired Air Force guy I believe, his Korean wife, and their two sons. I was pretty good friends with the two sons for a while, but I remember how everyone in the complex was kind of weirded out by the mother. She didn't really speak English and had a rocky relationship with her husband - they were separated but still lived together - so she came off as very eccentric. I feel bad now when I think back on how isolated she must have felt, since her kids didn't even really seem to speak Korean, and all of the other people living in the complex were not even of Asian descent, let alone Korean.
Later on, after I had decided to come work in Korea, this one very odd guy that I knew found out where I was going. I guess he had spent some time long ago in Korea? Anyway he started talking about how random old dudes would be walking up to me on the street and offering me their daughter's hand in marriage, and how slighted they would be if I refused. I assume now that he was just ribbing me a bit, but at the time I was caught off guard. |
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Squire

Joined: 26 Sep 2010 Location: Jeollanam-do
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Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 11:24 pm Post subject: |
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Earliest impressions were South Korea being a playable country in football games, the 02 world cup, Park Ji Seong, Korea being a scientific (lol) and commercial civilization in Civ 3 and the general impression that South Korea and Japan were more or less the same. Much of my ideas of South Korea were based on what I knew of Japan. I associated the countries in the same way I associated India and Pakistan, Australia and NZ, Iran and Iraq, Sweden and Norway, Russia and the former USSR countries etc. Naturally I knew something of North Korea but they were always completely distinct in my mind
What I had no awareness of at all before the prospect of living here came up were Korean food, K-pop, K-dramas and the breathtaking notion that it has four seasons.
Really Korea had no impact on my life at all. It was a country I had some very basic knowledge of, but that was as far as it went. To my knowledge I never met a Korean before coming here |
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Newbie

Joined: 07 Feb 2003
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Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 5:28 am Post subject: |
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| When I was really young, about 5 or 6, I had a "Memory" board game in which all the tiles you had to match were the flags of different countries. I remember thinking the South Korean flag was really cool. That and Kenya. For some reason though, often when I told this story to Koreans they got all excited about me thinking they're flag was cool, but when I mentioned i also thought Kenyan flag was cool they'd give me a disgusted "ayisshhh" with a head shake and "no-no" hand wave. (ok, sure, that only happened with 3 or 4 different guys. But it's fun to tell the story as if every single Korean was disgusted by having their flag held in the same esteem as an African flag!) |
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Newbie

Joined: 07 Feb 2003
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Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 8:48 am Post subject: |
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| Seoulman69 wrote: |
I didn't even have a thing for Asian girls. |
Something about that comment intrigues me... are you under the impression some/many westerners come here because they have a thing for Asian girls?
That seems odd to me. In my experience most come here thinking nothing of them, but then suddenly become interested when they're exposed to them and see how much interest they receive from them. |
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robbie_davies
Joined: 16 Jun 2013
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Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 10:43 am Post subject: |
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| Newbie wrote: |
| Seoulman69 wrote: |
I didn't even have a thing for Asian girls. |
Something about that comment intrigues me... are you under the impression some/many westerners come here because they have a thing for Asian girls?
That seems odd to me. In my experience most come here thinking nothing of them, but then suddenly become interested when they're exposed to them and see how much interest they receive from them. |
Well, I had no interest in Asian women before I came to Korea. Absolutely none whatsoever, but Korea changed that - for the better I must say. The vast majority of the blokes I know who I knew in Korea were interested in the local women. Some liked them before coming and some didn't but most of us were singing from the same page after a month or two here.
My dad served 12 years in the British Army and he was stationed in Korea, he was stationed longer in Egypt guarding the Suez Canal so Egypt should be my next ESL stop!  |
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Seoulman69
Joined: 14 Dec 2009
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Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 4:09 pm Post subject: |
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| Newbie wrote: |
| Seoulman69 wrote: |
I didn't even have a thing for Asian girls. |
Something about that comment intrigues me... are you under the impression some/many westerners come here because they have a thing for Asian girls?
That seems odd to me. In my experience most come here thinking nothing of them, but then suddenly become interested when they're exposed to them and see how much interest they receive from them. |
I think a number of men may have their decision influenced by a positive disposition towards Asian females. I don't know and haven't guessed as to what kind of number that might be.
In my post I used it as a possible reason which may have influenced others, but didn't influence me.
If that seems odd or intriguing to you, then you should look to yourself as to why you feel this way about an innocent post.
Let's do it together:
Have you returned to your country of birth or do you still live in Korea?
If you returned home do you feel insecure about having an Asian wife? Expanding on that idea, do you feel that people assume you have some kind of "yellow fever"?
How would the idea of people assuming you have "yellow fever" make you feel?
Could your feelings towards your own relationship have made you more sensitive, or anxious to find extra meaning, in my earlier post? |
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