Thursday, July 21, 2011

My Last Day in Seoul, South Korea: A Bittersweet End

As I begin my last post in this blog, I am speechless.  Not in the metaphorical, poetic sense - no, really, I have lost my voice.  After getting back to the dorms on Sunday night from the Mud Festival trip, my throat began to hurt.  Throughout the week it progressively hurt worse and now, my voice is completely gone.  It's strange, though, because I have no other cold-like symptoms - just a sore throat and lost-voice.  I debated going to the health clinic on campus, but I heard it is essentially a waste of time, and I should instead go to the hospital. I don't want to waste my last full day in Seoul at a hospital, so I have decided to drink tea and tough it out.  Hopefully I make it back alive!  Last night, we went out to celebrate Trey's departure to Nebraska.  He leaves today, which is definitely sad, as he has become a good friend to me.  As we walked into Cass Bar for Trey's last time, we spotted my Finnish marketing professor, Dr. Karppinen, drinking at a table with other professors.  She was likely feeling quite well when we ran into her, because she worriedly felt my forehead with her hand, as my mom would do, and said "Abbie, I am worried about you, you need to get some medicine.  It feels like you have a fever."  It was adorable!  I told her that I didn't feel feverish, and that I joked that likely I felt warm to her because she had been drinking.  What a funny, interesting lady she is!


On the morning of my last day in Seoul, I prepare to get pedicures (my last treat to myself before I consider myself broke) and shopping for last minute gifts.  Luckily, I have no class or exams today, so I can relax and perhaps begin to pack (though, I do not know where to start).  Our "graduation" ceremony is at 4:30 p.m., followed by an airing of the film students' documentaries on which they have worked diligently the past four weeks.  After the end of summer school this evening, many of us will go out together for one last night before we likely never see each other again. 


I hate to fall into the stereotypical "reflective last entry" trap for this final post, but as I leafed through my past posts, I noticed some changes between the Abbie who wrote them and the Abbie I am now.  I can't help but think of the quote from The Return of the King, when Frodo wonders, "How do you pick up the threads of an old life?"  Though I have only been gone for one month, it will be difficult to adjust to life in the States after having one of the best experiences of my life. 


As I initially imagined, studying abroad has helped me to become more independent.  Since international study is quite expensive, I'm glad I chose to live in a culture far different from my own.  I had many initial fears about living in Seoul - namely, living near the DMZ, eating the food, and living without a cell phone and constant contact with the people I love.  As I look back on these posts, I can't help but laugh a little, since these issues are now nonexistent.


In "Seoul, Dissected," I introduced the idea of a DMZ tour.  I wrote "while I doubt that I will take this day trip, reading about it raises curiosity about North Korea."  I remember initially reading about the tour in my Seoul City Guide and thinking "this is really interesting, but not for me."  As I felt increasingly more comfortable in Seoul, I realized that I had to live a little while I was here.  I didn't want to get back in the U.S. and wish I had done something that I hadn't done.  Who knows when I would get the chance to visit South Korea again?  Currently, I am working on a long post about my trip to the DMZ.  It should be done when I get back in the States on Saturday.


My Seoul City Guide was both a gift and a curse, but more so a gift.  By curse, I mean that I initially felt repulsed reading about the many strange foods, such as kimchi, beondegi, bulgolgi, etc.  I was sure that I would starve for four weeks.  "I'm sure many of you recall me reading off the list of 'daredevil foods' for the brave to try while in Korea.  You likely also recall my absolute repulsion to words such as 'silkworm larvae' leaving my mouth," I wrote in "The 4th of July in South Korea."  Despite my initial fears, I can proudly say that I have tried many things I never would have tried before this trip - including bugs!  I have come to love Korean food - the spice, the variety in texture, the care with which it is prepared and the tradition through which it is eaten.  I will miss many foods in the U.S., such as sundubu, tteok, bibimbap, gimbap, ramyeon, and ddukbokki.  I will miss the wellness I feel from consuming unusual vegetables (for me) such as bean sprouts and kimchi (the fermented cabbage eaten with every meal).  Eating in Korea is an integral part of the culture, and I will certainly miss it. 


"I think the hardest part of the trip will be missing my core-group of people I love in the U.S. - my family and friends," I estimated in "More Information About My Trip."  "This trip will be the longest period of time I will go without texting since I've had a cell phone.  It'll be such an adjustment, but I think it will be great for me."  Well, I guessed 50% correctly on that prediction:  Sure, the first few days were rough with the thirteen hour time difference and lack of phone, but I forced myself to get off the computer and dig into the city life.  I could not be happier with these efforts.  It was difficult at first, and I had a few moments of homesickness, but primarily, I have had so much fun every day that I've hardly though about missing text messaging and constant communication.  I even sat through six hours of class without a cell phone - something I never, ever, ever thought I could do!  Every time I felt lonely, I forced myself to plan an activity or join an existing one.  Sitting in my room will only prolong sadness.  Being around people always makes me feel better, and I have been blessed to be in Seoul with some of the coolest people I have ever met. 


Tomorrow, my flight leaves at 5:20 p.m.  Jake, Megan, Scott, Sam, and I will be picked up by a van service and taken to Incheon airport at 12:45 p.m.  From there, I will begin my fifteen-hour journey back to Detroit.  Interestingly, I will once again "time travel" - I depart at 5:20 p.m. and arrive a mere fifteen minutes later, at 5:35 p.m.!  I hope to hit the ground running, as I did on my first night here.  Likely, I will take a break from alcohol consumption to give my liver and brain a rest.  However, life is short, I can sleep when I am dead!  Sorry for those cliches, but they are fitting at this juncture in time.  


While I kept this blog for my own records, I also wrote to inform everyone at home about my wanderings in Seoul.  When I get home, I plan to edit my entries and have my blog turned into a physical book.  Such services are quite affordable.  I appreciate everyone who followed my journey and emailed me during my time here - seeing familiar names in my inbox always made me smile.  While I have been as accurate and detailed as possible, I undoubtedly have dozens of stories still to tell, and I am sure at some point, you will hear them.  Although this is my "goodbye" entry, it is not my final.  As I mentioned earlier, I will be adding a lengthy post about my trip to the DMZ when I return to the States.  Be on the look out for details about the coolest part of my trip!


Dr. Karppinen ended our last class yesterday with some poetry that I would love to share:  




Out of nowhere
Joy fluttering past
with butterfly's wings
falls into the nets of
those pure in heart. 
-Riitta Rossilahti


Once again, thanks to my followers!  I look forward to seeing you when I return.  




*Beautiful photos courtesy of my good friend, Rick Punt.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Q&A with a North Korean defector (DMZ and JSA tour)

On our trip back to Seoul, we had the opportunity to ask questions to someone who defected from North Korea to China in 2002.  By dictionary definition, a defector is someone who "gives up allegiance to one state or political entity in exchange for allegiance to another."  After being smuggled to China through a “broker” (smuggler), the woman traveled through several countries to South Korea, where she is now a citizen.  The rest of her family remains in North Korea.  As she crossed the Yalu River into China with several others, she watched as a woman’s baby floated away down the river.  The mother could not retrieve the baby for fear of revealing the whole group to snipers.  The defector cannot speak English, so Jin translated the questions and answers.  The defector must remain nameless to protect her identity on the internet, as officials may still be looking for her.

Q (mine):  “What was North Korea like in 1994 when Kim Ill Sung died?”
A:  “People were crying for about four months.  It was as if the world ended.  At the time, I was in the army and my unit went to the statue of Kim Ill Sung when it rained and we covered the statue with our army uniforms and flowers.”
The statue of Kim Ill Sung in Pyongyang, North Korea
Q (mine):  “Where did you live in North Korea and what was it like there?”
A:  “I lived in Chongjin on the east coast of the peninsula.  Over 70% of the population is starving.  We would cut the bark off trees and make soup.  Only 30% of the population has enough to eat.  The higher powers are aware but not willing to change it.”

Q:  “How would you describe South Korea in comparison to North Korea?”
A:  “South Korea is like heaven; in North Korea, women cannot wear tight jeans, have long hair, or wear earrings.  Women are working all of the time.  Here, ladies are the queens.”

Q:  “What was the education system like for you in North Korea?”
A:  “We were told that North Korea is the best place.  People know nothing of the outside world.  We only had one TV station and one radio station run by the government.  In general, we do not value life because the standard of living is so low.”

Q:  “What do you think the future of North Korea is?”
A:  “More of the same.  The people want change, but there is small chance of it happening.  A revolution like the revolutions that happened in Egypt and other places are not possible in North Korea because there are spies everywhere.  There would be no way to coordinate such an uprising.”

Touring the DMZ, Panmunjom, and the JSA

Perhaps the climax of my time in Seoul, South Korea, occurred today as thirteen HISS students and I toured the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and Joint Security Area (JSA) situated between North and South Korea.  “The 4km-wide DMZ scars the land from coast to coast and divides the Korean peninsula into two antagonistic countries,” the Lonely Planet Seoul City Guide states (162).  The DMZ is the most heavily guarded border on the planet, protected by approximately one million soldiers.  South Korean soldiers are required to serve for 21 months while North Korean soldiers are required to serve for 10 years.  Specifically, our tour took us to Panmunjom, “the truce village” in the JSA.  This is the only place in the JSA in which visitors are allowed.
The layout of the JSA
Although many students expressed interest in attending a DMZ tour, I had an aching feeling that nothing would be scheduled unless I took control.  I booked our tour through Panmunjom Tours, located in the Lotte Hotel in Seoul.  It cost W77000 per person ($77).  Booking a tour under my name for fifteen people was definitely risky, especially with the 50% cancellation fee the day before the tour and 100% cancellation fee the day of the tour.  Luckily, everyone (except one girl) came through and arrived outside on Wednesday, July 20 at 7:30 a.m.  Navigating through the city to the Lotte Hotel with fourteen people during morning rush-hour was nerve-racking to say the least, but thankfully, we arrived in time to check in with our passports, pay, and grab a quick breakfast before the tour bus departed for the DMZ at 8:50 a.m.  I considered simply arriving on time a victory in itself.

As we departed for the DMZ, our tour guide, Jin, provided a brief history of Korea up to the recent tensions with North Korea, stemming from an attack in 2008 on a South Korean tourist.  From 1998 until 2008, South Korea functioned under the Sunshine Policy, which emphasized South and North cooperative business development, short-term reconciliation, and long-term reunification.  The goal of the policy, originally instated by Kim Dae Jung in South Korea, was to soften the hatred between the South and North and encourage interaction.  This policy was continued by Moo Hyun Roh until 2008.  Since the attack in 2008 and the discontinuation of the Sunshine Policy, dialogue between the North and South has been almost nonexistent and tension indefinitely exists.

As we pushed further north, the highway grew quieter and almost vacant.  What a strange sight that was, a lonely highway in Korea!  Whenever I looked out my dormitory window, I saw car behind car crawling down the highway in the usual city traffic.  As we moved north out of Seoul, the urban transformed into the rural, unveiling stretches of lush farmland framed by enormous mountains in the distance.  In preparing us for our arrival to the DMZ, Jin asked Americans to show their hands.  The majority of the bus put a hand up.  She asked us not to display anything “American” while in the DMZ, since North Korean soldiers, harboring hostile feelings toward the U.S. from the Korean War, become extremely upset at the sight of American flags and paraphernalia.  Somehow, Trey made it through the day wearing a shirt saying “Nebraska National Guard”; throughout the tour, we joked that he would be the first to go.

As we passed tall electrical towers scattered across these farm fields, Jin explained that much of the electricity goes to power Kaesong, the industrial complex in North Korea that employs many South Koreans, since the North cannot supply it with enough power.  Jin explained that many men in North Korea cannot find work, since the North cannot provide electricity for the factories.  This leads to social issues like high alcoholism rates.  North Korea used to allow tourists into Kaesong, North Korea’s third largest city, but such tours have been suspended since 2008.
Barbwire guarding the riverside
The bus grew silent as we continued along Freedom Highway into the DMZ.  After arriving at the first South Korean checkpoint and allowing the South Korean soldier to inspect our passports, our bus passed down a narrow dirt road surrounded by unruly green growth on both sides.  Jin explained that on either side of the bus lie thousands of landmines and barbwire obstacles, untouched relics of the Korean War.  Although I could not see any of these detriments, I strangely felt as if I was trespassing, as if I, an American college student, should not be mingling in such a tense and complicated conflict.

We passed the entrance to Freedom Village, a small town in the South Korean DMZ area with a 100-meter tall flagpole.  The residents of this village are tax-exempt and farm the land in the DMZ.  They are required to stay there a minimum of 245 nights.  Women can marry into the village, but men cannot.  Conversely, in the North Korean DMZ territory stands Propaganda Village (a name we chuckled at), boasting a flagpole that stands an enormous 160-meters tall (built in retaliation to Freedom Village’s flagpole).  Jin noted that the flag atop Propaganda Village’s flagpole must be changed every three months because of the high wind impact it faces so high in the sky.  It is interesting to me (but not surprising) that the North Korean government spends money replacing this flag tri-monthly but has not tried to feed a higher percentage of its people.  Similarly, in watching documentaries about North Korea, I have learned that the government has pumped an extravagant amount of money into the capital city, Pyongyang – a utopian display of enormous skyscrapers and monuments that are always vacant.  The documentary explains that this capital city is a form of propaganda in itself – a utopian symbol showing the people that the country is doing well.  Only select North Koreans are invited to live in the capital city, and the elderly and handicapped are strongly encouraged to stay out of sight.


After a quick slide and photo briefing in the JSA Visitor Center, which explained the layout of the JSA and some historical information, we walked through the back doors and out onto a cement terrace.  We quietly overlooked several long, blue UN buildings straddling the border between North and South Korea.  Beyond the UN buildings and dozens of soldiers stood Panmungak, the administrative headquarters for the North Korean security force in the JSA.
A blue UN negotiations building guarded by a South Korean soldier.  Panmngak, the North Korean administrative headquarters is in the background. 
What a strange feeling it was to look at a building standing on North Korean soil!  We paused a moment, taking in the reality of the moment.  Everywhere, South Korean soldiers were poised in a sort-of “ready position,” with their fists clenched, feet apart, and knees slightly bent.  We watched North Korean soldiers beyond the UN buildings march in sync on the other side of the border, a mere 200 feet away.  Jin led us into one of the blue UN negotiations buildings, where we could snap pictures with the South Korean soldiers, though we could not touch them in any way.  In passing a window to stand on the North Korean side of the building, I glanced outside only to lock eyes with a North Korean soldier!  How terrifying, to feel his eyes following me as I passed each window to the back of the room.  Something tells me that it must have been for theatrics, to make me feel like I got my “won’s worth,” but then I realize that this is not, in any way, any type of show or performance.  It is a regular day for these soldiers, and they are doing their job to protect their side.  That soldier didn’t care if I felt satisfied with my tour experience.  Part of me wondered if he could tell I was American, which was a frightening thought, since North Koreans (in general) are taught to hate Americans.
Posing with a South Korean soldier 
Posing with a North Korean soldier
While in the UN negotiations building, Jin explained that on the days that South Korea and North Korea both hold tours, it is a race to get to the UN building.  She noted that sometimes, when she is in there with the South Korean tours, the North Korean guides and soldiers pound impatiently on the North Korean entrance and look through the windows.  Luckily, we got to the building first and passed through without incident.

After exiting the UN negotiations building, we once again stood on the cement terrace facing the North Korean building.  As we viewed the North Korean side, a North Korean tour emerged from a balcony on the building.  Visitors streamed onto the balcony, snapping dozens of pictures of us.  In the overwhelming silence of the area, we could hear the North Korean tourists talking.  This was likely the most climactic moment of the trip, staring back at people who likely know nothing of the outside world as they snap pictures of us.  North Koreans are exposed to one radio station and one television station, both programmed by the North Korean government.  On a documentary, I heard that the radio always plays in every North Korean home; it is possible to turn the radio down, but it is impossible to turn it off.  Essentially, North Korean citizens listen to propaganda 24-hours a day and know nothing beyond North Korean borders.  For example, in the same documentary, I learned that some North Koreans were not aware that someone had walked on the moon.  They also believed Kim Ill Sung, the founder of North Korea who died in 1994, to be a sort-of god, wielding powers beyond those of the normal human being.  There we stood, not daring to touch our cameras, as we were photographed and studied by people who have likely never seen Americans before.  Jin explained that North Korean tours often violated their mutual agreement to prohibit photography at this stage in the tour.  Her explanation on the dress code requirements now made sense:  “The North Koreans sometimes snap pictures of the South Korean tourists wearing tank tops and flip flops and use them as propaganda, saying that democratic nations cannot afford to be clothed.” 

We then took the bus around the DMZ, viewing various checkpoints and other significant locations.  The untouched, natural beauty of the DMZ is unlike anything I’ve ever seen before; nature goes unscathed, preserved not by environmental effort, but by a static fear of the other side. 

We stopped at the site of the 1976 axe murders, where two American UNC officials trimming a poplar tree that blocked the view between two checkpoints were murdered by North Korean soldiers.  The monument stands in place of the tree, which was cut down completely shortly after the murders.
Axe Murders Memorial surrounded by untamed nature.
We also paused at the Bridge of No Return, a wooden overpass constructed after the armistice was signed in 1953.  The bridge allowed Korean POWs to cross back into their respective countries.  Oral tradition claims that many North Korean POWs chose not to return to North Korea.  However, once crossing the bridge, one could never return to the other side.  On each end of the bridge stand checkpoints; the South Korean checkpoint has been abandoned for years, while the North Korean checkpoint is still manned 24-hours a day. Once again, I felt an odd sense of intrusion as I looked at the rickety bridge, as if I could see the ghosts of the soldiers crossing the bridge from one shattered side to the other.  The rusty, dilapidated presence of such Korean War remnants in addition to the eerie silence of the DMZ evokes emotion that is hard to define for me as an American.  Having never experienced war or worldly conflict, it was hard to understand the shocking sadness I felt at these locations.  Stagnant is the best word I can use to describe the way these locations feel, as if time has stood still for decades, weathering the physical structures while preserving the 1950s Korean War ideologies.
The Bridge of No Return
After we finished our Panmunjom tour, we took the bus to Imjigak, a peace park situated just south of the DMZ.  The park includes various memorials and monuments, such as the Peace Bell, which symbolizes efforts toward reunification in the 21st century.  Other meaningful places include the Freedom Bridge, which eerily ends in a barbwire fence before it reaches another side.  The fence is adorned in Korean flags and colorful ribbons with not only hopefully wishes for a unified future, but also mournful reflections for lost loved ones or families separated by the division. 
The Peace Bell
An interesting juxtaposition of ribbons bearing messages of hope and peace beneath barbwire
Freedom Bridge 
The abrupt end of Freedom Bridge, covered in hope-bearing ribbons and Korean flags
Inside Imjigak stands a rusty, dilapidated train full of bullet holes.  The train, a Korean War remnant, pays tribute to the sacrifices made by both sides; it once ran on the tracks connecting South and North Korea visible at Imjigak, which are still disconnected.  The bridge carrying the tracks jarringly ends at the line, which is interestingly symbolic of South Korea’s untiring efforts toward reunification in the past decades.
The train from the Korean War
The railroad once connecting North and South Korea
From Imjigak we went to a little restaurant where we enjoyed bulgolgi and bibimbap.  On the trip home, I learned that Jin is from Columbus, Ohio and her daughter is a pharmacy student at the University of Toledo!  Small world, huh? 

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Today was the Perfect Day...


...to go on the roof of the guys' dorm.

The mountains came out of hiding.
Who knew the month, the friendly weather?
I was thinking somewhere else so
I was here. Stray maidens, stay.
Pray for all my other times of year.

-"Poem with Contrails," Timothy O'Keefe

What a beautiful city, doused in sunlight.

There’s a shy puppet
in us.  Lean in –
we’ll show our black pins.
"Candle," Timothy O'Keefe


Monday, July 18, 2011

Mini-Series Post #8: Another Favorite Meal

Tonight we went out for one of my all-time favorite Korean meals, makkoli and bindaedukk.  The rice wine, makkoli, is nothing like the grape wine we are accustomed to and comes in various flavors, such as orange and pineapple.  It is a milky color and has a bit of a grainy texture.  I've tried the original rice-flavored makkoli, orange, and pineapple, and love them all!  
The original rice-flavored makkoli, served in a giant bowl to share with others.
This is the seafood bindaedukk, with pieces of squid and shrimp inside.  
The pineapple makkoli is also dangerously delicious, not at all resembling our Western idea of wine. 

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Mini-Series Post #7: Unwanted Attention

Exercising in Seoul has proved to be easier than I originally believed.  There is a tiny exercise room in the basement of the boys' dorm and a running/ bike path along the Han River, which flows parallel to our dorms across the street.  On dry days, I love to run along the river, over which a tall, cement highway structure carries people wherever they intend to go.  Interestingly, along the river are outdoor exercise machines, somewhat like the ones pictured below:  
Outdoor gyms along the Han River
As I run along the path, adults exercise on these unusual machines.  I pass dozen of people walking and riding bicycles, but not many others running.  I usually do not pass anyone looking my age or younger than me, with the exception of today, when I passed a group of young boys that proceeded to jog alongside me for several seconds until I moved away from them.  Apparently, regardless of the culture, young boys are always looking for trouble!

What I notice most during my runs along the Han River is the bounty of direct stares I receive from men and women alike.  As I jog, I try to figure out why every person I pass stares at me, sometimes to the point of turning their heads to follow me.  Maybe it is what I wear - a tank top and shorts.  I also have yet to see another young girl running, so maybe that's it.  Or, it could be that I don't look Korean.  Who knows?  I hope I'm not breaking any clothing rules for outdoor exercise, but it too hot to wear anything else but what I wear.  Maybe it's a combination of all of these things, or maybe it is something entirely different.  It could even be the difference in the symbolism of the stare between American culture and Korean culture; in the U.S., it is impolite, but here, maybe it is acceptable.  Regardless, now I run with my head down.   


My friends and I receive similarly unwanted attention when we go to some places in Seoul.  In Insadong, it is not uncommon to be photographed by Koreans and foreigners alike, especially when smiling for one of our own cameras.  At the mud festival, we felt like movie stars as dozens and dozens of photographers snapped our pictures.  Ultimately, my question to these people that randomly snap my picture is this:  What do you plan to do with a blurry photograph of me, in which my eyes are likely half closed or I am making some kind of weird, mid-talking face?   

The Last Field Trip: Boryeong Mud Festival & Chunripo Botanical Garden

What an eventful weekend!  Early Saturday morning we boarded four large buses to drive to Boryeong for the 14th annual mud festival.  This festival is very popular among foreigners, offering mud slides, mud wrestling pits, mud jails, and other fun activities involving mud.  The festival is situated along the coast, so visitors could hang out on the beach where a stage hosted various music artists.  Thousands of people swam in the ocean and floated around on rafts and inner tubes.  I wore an old bathing suit and black shorts, which I threw away at the end of the day.  They were definitely beyond repair.  Any reservations I had about walking barefoot into public bathrooms, swimming in a giant pool with strangers from all over the world, and getting completely dirty in general immediately disappeared when I saw how much fun everyone was having; I couldn't wait to get a little muddy, too! 
Getting crazy in the mud wrestling pit!
Absolutely filthy.
The only downside to this event was all of the mud that got in my eyes.  We spent most of our time in the mud wrestling pit, pushing one another down into the pool of mud.  Someone would push me down, filling my eyes with mud, and as I would try to stand up again, someone else would push me down again.  This may not sound like fun, but I could not stop laughing!  I have some bumps and bruises, but it was worth it to get completely filthy.  Most of the day I felt like I had cataracts; everything looked cloudy and my eyes burned.  My eyes were bloodshot for the rest of the night as I tried repeatedly to wipe the mud-goop out of my eyes.  I feared waking up blind, but alas, all is well now.  
Mud wrestling
It was a little rainy when we arrived, but the for the majority of the day it was sunny and hot - perfect weather to play in the mud! A friend and I both woke up with crusty eyes, and I'm pretty sure there is still mud in my ears.  All in all, this was one of the highlights of the trip!
In the ocean!
After the mud festival, we drove an hour to stay in a pension by the shore - a homey, hotel-like place with traditional Korean-style rooms.  The girls were lucky enough to get 2-person beds - the guys had to sleep four to a room on the floor with mats :)
A Korean-style Pension
The beach
Feeling good!
For dinner, we had Korean barbecue, soju, and beer. After, we all partied together on the beach - a great way to end a fun day.  Waking up early today was a little rough, but we had a lovely breakfast of fried rice waiting for us.  To be honest, that had a hint of sarcasm in it...I am ready for some pancakes and bacon.  Before we left for Seoul, we ventured to the Chunripo Botanical Garden, where we toured the grounds.  This was a little tiresome for most of us who were exhausted from the night before:
At the Chunripo Botanical Garden
Now, we are back in the dorms.  We are tired and ill-prepared for class tomorrow.  What is most upsetting is the sadness beginning to creep into our minds, the understanding that the end of our summer in Korea is a week away from completion.  It's hard to believe that I've been here for three weeks now and that in one week, I'll be back at home.  While I'm certainly homesick and ready to see the people I miss and love, I will be truly sad to leave this place - Korea has been absolutely wonderful to me.   


NOTE:  I temporarily removed the Mini-Series post about my DMZ trip.  I don't know how the internet is monitored here, and I definitely do not want to cross any lines.  I will update the blog about that experience afterwards!