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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Christmas and Boxing Day

Our Christmas was enjoyable and relaxing! We especially loved being able to celebrate together for the first time ever! It sure beats only being able to chat on Skype... Christmas evening we had Fabrice over for a Christmas movie (Elf!) and then he took us to a department store, La Galleria, not too far from our apartment. We enjoyed the views from the eighth-floor balcony, browsed through a completely Korean bookstore (not my favourite type of bookstore...all the covers looked so appealing, but I couldn't understand one letter...), and ended up in the basement eating amazing American food!

Boxing Day (December 26 for those of you who aren't familiar with the Commonwealth holiday) was literally boxing day for us. We started to pack up our things and do a final cleaning of our apartment. In amongst the cleaning we also managed to find time to take Fabrice out to Toujours, a local patisserie and coffee house, for his birthday. Tuesday we continued packing, cleaning and moving furniture back into the rooms we found it in and today our apartment is empty of all our items (except the row of suitcases standing near the door) and ready for the next set of Seocheonan institute teachers to move in. We'll miss living in our spacious apartment and walking through the now-familiar streets of Cheonan, but we're excited for our 5-day sightseeing vacation to Busan, a city in southeastern Korea. Next term will be very different for us, but I think it will be good, too. Please pray for us as we move and begin a new chapter of our lives in South Korea.

Finished Christmas calendars (we managed to find them in the international aisle at E-Mart)
Eiffel Tower & Ferris wheel in front of La Galleria
Hedge bunnies
Smurf village (with oddly-sized animals)
La Galleria looking up from the ground floor
La Galleria's changing light walls displaying Christmas trees and snow
Christmas-themed blueberry cheesecake from Paris Baguette
Scrubbing the cupboards
(That purple bottle is the best all-purpose cleaner I've ever used! Sadly I can't read the name...)
The line between scrubbed and unscrubbed...
Jonathan vacuuming 
Tourjours bakery below, coffee shop above
Interesting coffee descriptions... (we decided to stick to hot chocolate and herbal tea)
Coffee beans on display
The infamous Kenyan coffee (refer to menu above)
An improvement on the traditional North American right-side-up Christmas tree 
Fellow Seocheonan teachers outside Tourjours - Fabrice, Ali & Jonathan
Neat circular walking bridge around a large intersection
View from the top of the walking bridge
Suitcases lined up ready to be shipped to Seoul while we head to Busan for the rest of our term break
Last picture of our apartment as we walked away to catch a taxi to the KTX station

Snowy walk in Cheonan

We experienced our first snowfall in South Korea on Friday Dec. 9. Earlier that morning Jonathan had mentioned that the weather seemed to have gotten a bit drier and he guessed we might have snow soon. By mid-morning we were doing our best to teach while the flakes steadily fell outside our classroom windows. It snowed off and on throughout the day, but no snow ever accumulated on the ground. The next Friday was dreadfully cold. Jonathan and I were visiting a nearby Buddhist temple with one of my religion students when the first flakes started falling and by the time we got back to our apartment the snow was sticking to the ground! We took some pictures to document the experience and hoped the snow would stay this time. But by the next morning there was barely a trace left. "Must be a weekend thing," we started commenting to each other. But the third time was the charm. This Sabbath morning we woke up and found a good two inches of snow covering the parking lot and playground below our apartment! We spent a couple hours traipsing around Cheonan in the snow, reveling that winter (the kind with cold AND snow) had made a real appearance. I'm sure most of the people who saw us snapping pictures left and right thought we were crazy tourists, but we wanted to make the most of the large snowfall before it, too, disappeared, and we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves. Amazingly enough, this time the snowfall wasn't just a weekend thing. It stayed overnight and we had snow for Christmas as well! Since then it hasn't got above 0 Celcius for long enough to melt any of it so we still have snow, although it's mostly ice now. Here are some of the pictures from our snowy walk.

Snowy car
Dr. Seuss trees
umbrella
Mystery shot - Ali
Winter slide - Ali
Snowy playground
Bikes with snow - Ali
Numbers - Ali's idea
Our apartment complex from afar
A random fake rock
One thing we've wanted to get pictures of before we left Cheonan is the monument to Yu Gwan-Soon. She was a student from Cheonan who organized a demonstration for independence from the Japanese occupying Chungcheongnam-do (South Chungcheong Province) in March 1919 when she was 16. Both her parents were killed by Japanese police during the demonstration and she was arrested and imprisoned. While in prison Yu Gwan-Soon continued to protest for Korea's independence and she died on October 12, 1920, reportedly as a result of torture. Her last words were, "Japan shall fall... my fingernails may fall off, my nose and ears cut off, my hands and legs broken. I can bear the pain. But the pain of losing my country, I cannot bear. That I only have one life to give for my country, it is my only sadness." Read more about Yu Gwan-Soon here.
The statue of Yu Gwan-Soon
The whole monument - Ali
Snowy flag - Ali
The other side - Ali
A big Christmas tree
A waterwheel outside a restaurant
Reflections
Strange wall
Satellite man outside the Korea Telecom building
A pretty Eastern European lady
Slide
A gazebo near our apartment - Ali

Friday, December 23, 2011

Trimming our tree

We survived our first two-month term of teaching English and religion here in South Korea! This past week was filled with listening to and evaluating our students' term project presentations, giving and marking final exams, and the always-hectic junior classes, but we managed to make it to our last day of teaching on Thursday in tact. Now we have a full 10-day break between terms!

Second on our term-break to-do list (after Number 1: sleeping in) was decorating for Christmas. One of my family's traditions is to go to the mountains and cut down a real Christmas tree every December. I would have loved to keep this tradition up in our new family, but instead we had to settle with walking to E-Mart - an upscale and much classier Korean version of Walmart - and choosing a small tree from a surprisingly large selection of artificial Christmas trees (the selection also included an artificial palm tree). This afternoon we had time to decorate our living room and decided that you might enjoy watching us trim our first tree together. Here are some pictures and a video of our decorating fun!
- Ali

Our decorations before we had a tree
We ran out of places to hang our chocolate ornaments
We finally decided to light the candle that we found when we got here
It looks pretty good with Christmas lights
Trimming our tree! (click Watch on YouTube to see it bigger)

Our first family Christmas photos!
Oh MY...
.....
- Photos by Jonathan