In our stomachs we each had yet another free Korean meal from the pockets of generous strangers in suits and ties with embedded rhinestones. Tonight, I had confidently poured the entire contents of a little dish onto my rice bowl (containing all sorts of strange bits). Apparently I was only supposed to add a few drops and so made the dish kind of gross by accident. The one principal, AKA, Andy's boss, (he who does not speak any English at all and forgets that we speak no Korean and so will look right at us and speak a mile a minute in Korean - kinda funny) switched mine with his, and had to get an extra order of rice to tone it down. This was the third meal we had shared with principals, sitting around tables, conversing in broken
It's new, but it's good. Very good. And we are wet and smiling as we climb the stairs to our new little apartment that smells just a bit like sewer. Tomorrow we may buy bicycles and maybe some new shoes.
2 comments:
You guys look right at home already. I like the perspective on the novelty of what you're experiencing, even if it doesn't live up to every romantic ideal. :-)
Also, I love the t-shirt.
All the best as you guys get settled, and get started.
It's great to hear from you, Catastrophe of Grace, I've missed reading your blog (darn that facebook, you KNEW it would do this to you).
I hope you enjoy Korea as much as my brother has (although a Korean girlfriend is OUT for you, Andy), so maybe not QUITE as much as my brother is!
Looking forward to more posts! (hopefully?)
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