Seoul trip
Sep/090
We visited Seoul at the end of July. Only now have I gotten around to posting the pictures.
In Seoul, we visited the largest Buddhist temple in the area. Unfortunately, the pictures we had taken weren’t very good and the temple wasn’t much different than Beomeosa in Busan.
We also visited one of the imperial palaces, Changdeokgung, and took a tour through the palace grounds. This palace was originally built in the 15th century and has been renovated a few times throughout history. Gung is the ending that signifies a palace, so this is “Changdeok palace.”

Changdeokgung tour

This is the king's road to his throne. The two sides of the road are lower, and the higher(middle) section was only for the king to walk on.

The king's throne room

This is the king's throne. Notice the picture behind it of the sun, moon, and five mountains. It's behind all the kings' thrones in Korea. The sun represents the king, the moon represents the queen, and the five mountains represent five aspects of his kingdom.


These are rooftop guardians of the throne room.

The king's living quarters. According to Confucian rules, men and women should sleep separately, so the queen had her own quarters.


The remodeled interior of part of the king's quarters. Now, it's just a large western-style living room.

After the king's quarters were lost in a fire (and later rebuilt), he took the opportunity to make his living quarters in the same building as the queen, and this mother of pearl couch is in the living room separating the two rooms.

This beautiful artwork is reserved only for temples and palaces. It was against the law for anyone else to paint a house or building in this way.


This ondol fireplace is used to heat the floors of the palace. On one end of the building is the fireplace, on the other end is the chimney. There is a gap under the floor, above which is a layer of clay which rests under the actual floor. The heat/smoke from the fire heats the gap and the clay, keeping the floor nice and warm for the winter time. It is because the heat comes from the floor in this way that Koreans do everything at floor level (eating, sleeping, pretty much everything). And that's why they take their shoes off at the door, to keep the floor - the surface they do everything on - clean.



Walkway to the Secret Garden

This is the largest pond in the gardens; behind it is the palace library.

The pond and library

Notice the three gates in front of the library (a big one and two tiny green ones on each side). Only the king was allowed to go through the middle gate. Everyone else had to go through the tiny green gates, which were intentionally made so small that you have to bow to walk through them. Only the king was allowed to walk upright through the gate.



This gate is supposed to keep you from aging if you walk through it. It's one of those "long live the king" kind of things.


A rose of sharon, the national flower of Korea

We also spent some time in Insadong, a tourist-centered area.
Here’s the only picture we took:

The alleyway to a vegetarian restaurant that we found in Insadong.
We also went on what was described as a “shaman walk” up into a mountainside where there is a temple and various shrines.

A view of Seoul

These are some rocks on a mountain behind a Buddhist temple that are supposedly shaped like a monk meditating. I think that shamanists worship there, too.


The Seoul fortress wall

Here's another view of Seoul and the temple

These rocks are the Skeleton rocks.
We also did some shopping in Seoul, but we don’t have any pictures of that, as it was really cramped and a picture wouldn’t really reveal anything about the experience. Hopefully, this weekend we will be going to Gyeongju, but if we don’t we will go eventually, and I will write about some of our other or future adventures.
Beomeosa temple
Jul/093
Today, we visited Beomeosa temple. This is one of the oldest and largest Buddhist temples in Korea. All over the pagodas and buildings are various Buddhist symbols, such as animals, dragons, and the Buddhist swastika, and of course, the Buddha.

Steles on the path to Beomeosa temple
On the walkway to the temple, Buddhist lanterns hung above us.

Path to Beomeosa temple
A volunteer at the temple was kind enough to be a tour guide, and showed us around the grounds, explaining the beliefs and symbolism behind the different buildings, decorations, and paintings. We encountered the first gate which is formed by four pillars, representing the Four Noble Truths. It’s called the “One Pillar Gate” because, as seen from the side, it is held up by a single pillar symbolizing the one true path of enlightenment that supports the world.

The "One Pillar Gate" of Beomeosa temple
Near the museum is the temple’s seven story pagoda. Contained within the pagoda is a Sari of the Buddha.

Seven story pagoda at Beomeosa temple

Stele near the pagoda
The museum was small, but very peaceful and quiet. It had a number of historical and religious artifacts, and the museum had some information in English.. Here’s a close-up of the museum’s outside architecture.

Beomeosa temple museum
At the second gate, there were four statues of the guardians of the temple. The guardians were gigantic. In front of the guardians, there are demons cowering.

Beomeosa guardian with a sword

Bemeosa guardian with a lute

Beomeosa temple guardian and me
After the second gate there’s a building that houses instruments (and the gift shop). There are four instruments, a drum representing land animals/beings, a cloud shaped gong representing birds/sky animals, a wooden fish representing water animals, and a bell representing heavenly spirits. They are all sounded each morning and night, and supposedly their sound makes all beings want to pray.

Beomeosa temple building with the instruments and gift shop

Another pagoda

A shrine

Icons of the Buddha at Beomeosa temple that people have given offerings to.

A close-up of some of the building art at Beomeosa temple

The fish on the right is representative of the temple, as it is the "Temple of the Nirvana Fish."

This is one of the large prayer buildings at Beomeosa. There was chanting and music coming from within, I believe from monks or nuns.

This pathway runs through the middle of the temple grounds and leads to the hiking area.

A Buddhist swastika on a building.
We took the path up past the temple, which ran next to a stream.

Up the path we found what appeared to be an additional temple, or an extension of the temple grounds.

The temple up and behind Beomeosa
A monk greeted us here, (The Venerable) Sung Ta. Rather spontaneously, he invited us to view some of his artwork. He then invited us to tea. Next thing we knew, we were in his residence drinking green tea, getting an explanation of Buddhist principles, and being trained to meditate. We tried to give him a peanut butter and jelly sandwich as a gift, but I don’t think he understood the gesture. Then, he made a small painting for each of us to keep in our pockets as good luck charms. The painting is of what he called “Dalma,” which is supposed to be the Buddha as he was meditating right before he died. He then showed us his skills with a wooden sword.

Sung Ta showing us his wooden sword skills
Sung Ta then showed us a water shrine(small cave) behind the building, and gave us some of the water from the shrine. He walked us into the building and instructed us in some of the rights, such as incense burning and how to bow and prostrate. He then introduced us to some young Korean practitioners who invited us to their meeting/service. The service started with bowing, chanting, and a lot of prostrating. There were some opening procedures administered by a layperson, which lasted about half an hour, and then Sung Ta spoke, giving what was essentially a sermon. He also introduced us to everyone. Then a layperson took over again and gave a small sermon. It was very interesting, and two of the young Koreans explained some points of the sermon to us while it was going on. Afterward, we ate watermelon with Sung Ta and then continued up the mountain.

A group picture with Sung Ta in front of the temple
We continued up the mountain for about 2+km, and wound up at the north gate to the fortress wall. This wall is often nicknamed “The Great Wall of Korea.”

The fortress wall

North gate of the fortress wall

The fortress wall
…and that’s what we did today. It was pretty fun. Maybe I’ll go back and post pictures of other things we’ve done, like the beaches.

Me on Geumjeongsan (mountain)
Bizarre Korean beliefs and urban legends
Jul/092
1. Fan death – To me, this is the most hilarious urban legend that I’ve encountered. Apparently, a number of years ago, a man in very poor health was sleeping in a 90+ degree room with the windows closed and had a fan blowing on him, and the fan, in combination with his poor health and alcohol-induced state, caused him to dehydrate and have hypothermia, killing him. Conventional conclusion: don’t go to sleep drunk, dehydrated, and in poor health while the room is ridiculously hot and lacks proper ventilation. The Korean conclusion: fans and air conditioners, when used in an enclosed room, will somehow remove the air from the room and cause you to suffocate. The explanations can vary, like the device “sucking out” the oxygen, the device “chopping” the oxygen up, or pushing the oxygen down to floor and leaving you nothing to breath. Fans that you can purchase at all of the retailers here have shut-off timers on them that the manufacturers, government, and doctors strongly suggest for you to use so that you do not die from the fan. Everyone in the country, with few exceptions, believes in this and will not accept any notion to the contrary. Korean doctors and academics have researched and documented this “phenomenon” while doctors and academics from around the world have researched and documented how it is not the case and how ridiculous this Korean belief is. Read more on Wikipedia.
2. Never write a name in red ink because it will cause the person to die. The justification goes like this: red is the color of blood – blood’s appearance is a sign of death – conclusion: writing a name in red will cause someone to die. The children, and the teachers even more-so, are terrified of having a name written in red.
3. Your blood type has a direct correlation to the type of personality you have, or will have, and other various things about your life and lifestyle. Never mind things like genetics, environment, and life experiences – it’s your blood type.
4. The season you are born determines how tall you will grow. Again, never mind genetics and environment, it all has to do with the season you were born in. There has been substantial research in this field by Korean experts, and every time they find a population that doesn’t follow the trends that they believe in they will simply label it an anomaly and entirely insignificant.
-There will probably be many more to come.
We’ve moved in and started classes
Jul/091
We’ve moved into our apartment. It’s a small efficiency, but it works for two people. It’s fairly new and contemporary. We’ve chosen to maintain the traditional Asian approach to shoes and take them off in the entry(plus, the apartment makes it hard not to).
The kitchen area is small, with a two-burner stove, no oven, and only the basics. We bought stuff from the previous teachers(which was probably a rip-off, since they would have left it anyway), so we have some extra things like a microwave, cleaning supplies, and extra dishes. The washer is on the small outdoor porch area of the apartment (note: no dryer). It’s not always pleasant going out there because the neighbors give off some odd odors. This isn’t to say that they’re disgusting, only that Korean cooking scents are unfamiliar – well, and sewers run under the sidewalk so you can sometimes catch a wif.
Trash and recycling here are intense. They separate recycling into plastic, thin plastic, paper, and metal, and you’re expected to recycle everything. They separate trash into general waste and food waste. Recycling is free, but a pain to sort. For trash, you have to buy specially government-commissioned trash bags for your district for general waste, and you have to put your food waste in this tiny blue bin and then buy a sticker and place it on the bin so that they will actually pick it up.
Every morning at about 6:30, a lady shouts into the building. We’ve been told that she does dry cleaning, and that she can get it back to you by 9am. While to some this may be convenient, to us it simply means that we get woken up for a little while every morning. Also, about once a week it seems, there’s a truck that goes through all of the neighborhoods with loudspeakers. Sometimes it sounds like a salesman, probably selling fruit (there are a lot of corner fruit sellers around town). Other times, though, it’s a very calm male voice giving long proclamations, leading me to believe that it is a propaganda truck.
On a more positive note, the Internet here is ridiculously fast: 50mbps download rate. We’re in Gaegeum, which is 4 subway stops from Seomyeon, the major business and commercial center of the city. We’ve found a great vegetarian restaurant in Seomyeon called “Loving Hut.” While the cult surrounding Loving Hut is a little creepy, the all-vegan food is great. We’ve already gone to Haeundae beach and Songjeon beach; the water is cold at both, but still relaxing. We can do most of our grocery shopping at a local open-air market, where we can get great fresh produce. For everything else, we go to HomePlus, which is a Tesco-associated multi-layer department/grocery/mall type store. We can find a lot of American/Western-type products, but Koreans have this idea that Western food needs to be sweet(and not particularly flavorful otherwise), so most of what we end up finding is kind of bland and generically sweet; it’s not that we don’t like Korean food, though there’s only 1 or 2 vegetarian dishes, it’s that Korean food is either strong and cold or hot and spicy, and items of either combination always tend to taste the same.
Oh, and did I mention how cheap everything is here? A subway ride to the beach and back costs us about $4 each. A meal at a local restaurant costs the equivalent of $3 per person. Everything, absolutely everything, is cheap.
About the school:
It’s about a third of a mile away from our apartment. We have classes from 9:45-Noon, and then from 2:30 to 7. The kids are very eager and generally well-behaved. I teach kindergarten kids in the morning, and then elementary through preteen/early-teen kids in the afternoon. These kids are worked so hard that I always feel bad giving them any homework, but sometimes I have to. The school itself is somewhat disorganized, and there seems to be a large gap between what the school wants to teach and the capabilities of the students; some classes have material way over their heads, or simply too much for them to handle, and others have us making up a lot of extra assignments to fill class time. The environment is very positive, though that’s partly due to Korean ideals regarding passivity and authority, and I can usually get through a day without wanting to throw a kid out the window.
For pictures, videos, etc. – look at my or Brandi’s Facebook
I’ve landed in Korea!
Jun/090
I landed in Busan, South Korea last night. The flights getting here were interesting, particularly being shepherded through additional security in Tokyo while in a rush to our next flight. The manager of the recruitment agency picked us up at the airport and drove us to the hotel.
The hotel is essentially a block away from the school, around the corner down a small street. It’s a “love motel” – the kind typically reserved for affairs. It is an extremely nice little hotel, though, and apparently love motels are some of the best cheap hotels in the country. When we arrived at the hotel, I accidentally put my arm around Brandi in the presence of the recruitment manager, which public displays of affection are a faux paux here, but I don’t believe that he noticed.
The hotel room has an entry for taking off your shoes and provides sandals for use in the bathroom. The electronic devices are all very integrated; attached to the room key is a card that is put in a slot in the entry to turn on the power in the room, and the remote for the television also controls the air conditioning. There’s a water cooler, since the tap water isn’t potable. The bathroom is very nice; it has a drain in the middle of the bathroom for the shower, which is closed-in toward the top but allows water to pass under the glass.
For breakfast this morning, we bought little pastries from the nearby market. We went to the school before lunch and met with some of the staff and other teachers, and then three of the teachers took us out to lunch. The school is on the second and third floors of a large corner building, and the facilities are very modern and brightly colored. It looks like a very fun and positive environment, and all of the people we met were friendly.
For lunch, we ate at this little restaurant near the food market; I had bibimbap(a hot rice, noodle, vegetable and egg dish) and Brandi had gimbap(kind of like Sushi). The meal for all five of us cost 13,000W, which is about $10.
We just got back from shopping at HomePlus, a Tesco-owned multi-floor department and grocery store. We were surprised to find a lot of familiar U.S. products, but the store as a whole was more expensive than the local market vendors when it came to most things we saw.
Most people know a few words of English, and in general everyone has been very polite. It’s weird to be unable to communicate, and to be an outsider in a very homogenous culture. I definitely feel like we stick out, and that everyone around us knows it.
Tonight, two of the teachers are going to bring us to a Vietnamese restaurant for dinner and show us around a little. They’re also going to help us get subway cards, since the subway runs right by the school and it will be our primary way of getting around.
A video should be forthcoming, so that you can actually see Busan.
Why wireless input devices are a bad idea
May/090
A guy at slashdot has summed up the problems with wireless keyboards and mice:
Your decision to move to a system that requires an independent power supply (batteries) is an invitation to Murphy to send his law to your house / place of work at the most inopportune moment.
Oh, and radiation. I’m sure it’ll kill you too. Bluetooth will force you to visit your dentist too.
Plus what are you going to fight off the ninjas with if you don’t have a mouse cord?
Holy surrealism, bantha!
Another poor customer service experience at Best Buy
Apr/090
Prior to arriving at the store, I had researched many products and found one that suited my needs in that it had a good processor and memory, reliable brand, dedicated graphics card, and other features that were desired for the price range. Best Buy had the best price and had the product on display, so it was the choice destination.
I asked an associate for help in retrieving the laptop for purchase, and she brought back the wrong laptop. It was similar, had a better processor and was more expensive, and lacked the dedicated graphics card. I pointed out that it was the wrong model, and she condescendingly insisted that this one was better for my needs, despite the fact that I had never told her what my expectations were. When I explained that I was interested in the laptop with the dedicated graphics card, she reluctantly went to retrieve the laptop. It turns out, this particular laptop was in a locker that she did not have the key for and she did not want to retrieve the key. On her way to the locker, she took an unnecessary walking path in order to walk between my fiance and I and interrupt our conversation. She then delivered the laptop the customer service counter.
At the customer service counter, the employee began to ring up my order. This employee offered me the service plan, which I declined. He then tried to “scare” me into buying it, offering up scenarios where it would be physically damaged or otherwise irreparable. I explained that I currently work in IT, have exceptional computer experience, and that I would be out of the country and the service process would be exceptionally difficult. He then became condescending in that he told me it would be “foolish” to not get the plan, given that it has international coverage, again trying to scare me by the prospect of a cracked screen. To only way I could get him to stop trying to sell it to me is by saying that I know that the only thing that the service plan would do for me is give me the opportunity for extra customer service hassles when BestBuy no longer carries my product and offers me a sub-par replacement(citing articles in the Consumerist about these practices).
What was originally a pleasant experience became very irritating due to these two individuals. I typically home-build my computers from components ordered online and only shop at Best Buy for CDs/DVDs, Wii games or accessories, or small items like cables. After this experience, I may be avoiding Best Buy altogether.
Another “scholar organization” scam
Apr/091
As a result of your dedication to scholarly success in University of North Texas, North America Scholar Consortium extends to you an invitation to apply for membership in the NASC Honor Society. Membership application is by invitation only; therefore, membership is a special honor afforded to a small group of outstanding students.
I receive this today, and I’m curious about the organization’s legitimacy. As a student, and now as an alumni, I receive these every so often.
For one, I looked up the domain registration information. This “old and reputable organization” has only had a website since October 2008, and it shares the same web server as an online dating/sex website. Second, the only websites that come up when you do a google search of the organization are forums where people are asking about the site’s legitimacy. Now, they were clever, because they named their “organization” something similar to other legitimate ones in the hopes that in your own research of their legitimacy you will not be paying attention to these differences.
Conclusion: this organization is a scam. Don’t give them your money.
I hate stuff like this
Mar/091
Stuff like this is pointless and annoying: Don’t click here!
At least it could crash your browser or something.
WoW is getting dull
Feb/091
Since Christmas, I’ve been playing World of Warcraft, and it has been a generally pleasant experience. Since 2005, they’ve made many improvements, added content, and fixed various balance problems. After nearly two months of playing, though, an old irritant is starting to rear its head: boredom.
When I began playing again, it was with my level 31 Druid, that I have now gotten to level 49. The problem I’m encountering is that the content I find more enjoyable is group-oriented, but most players are far above my level, and at the times I play there are few other players on around my level, so I am mostly stuck with playing repetitive solo content. Most of the new and exciting content is for much higher levels, and the grind to get there is rather uninteresting.
My game time expires in about a week, and I was given a game time card with which to renew my subscription. I’m becoming very tempted to tell Brandi to return the time card. I feel bad because I haven’t even reached any of the Burning Crusade or Lich King content that was opened up for me when I was given the expansions, but I don’t know if I can persist long enough to enjoy those aspects of gameplay.
Maybe tomorrow I will have better luck.