Meanwhile in Korea

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I know what it was like for me to be on the road weekly.

Does she travel to you, or you travel to her every weeend, or sometime during the week?
Is there anyone else in Seosan that is family?

I travel to her most weekends. She sometimes travels to Seosan, but less often.
 
@Jae - how are you enjoying being on your own most evenings?

I know how I felt when it had been going on for weeks, but, I also was leaving children at home with my husband.
Are you getting any schoolwork done at night, or how do you find the evenings?

An hour commute to the other isn't bad. Mine was 5hrs each way which always made it a pain.
 
@Jae - how are you enjoying being on your own most evenings?

Pinga, I didn't say that I'm alone.

I find it quite relaxing. I finish work around 9 pm, hit the market, then come home for dinner and R&R. Yobo and I keep in touch, primarily through KakaoTalk.

Pinga said:
Are you getting any schoolwork done at night, or how do you find the evenings?

I graduated with my Master of Divinity in November, 2018.


Pinga said:
An hour commute to the other isn't bad. Mine was 5hrs each way which always made it a pain.

Five hours? That is a journey. How did you pass the time?
 
Will you and Yobo be starting a house church in Korea? Or has there been a change of plans? @Jae

We may still do that in the future. It would most likely be in Suwon. We've committed ourselves to be here in Korea for 5 years so we have until 2023.
 
Korean chat service with voice and video calling, I take it? Does every country/culture have their own chat engine now? In China it's WeChat.

Yes, that's right. Chat, voice calls, video calls, file transfer. There's also a thing called KakaoStory, which is kind of a private Facebook and KakaoTaxi to get rides.
 
5 hours -- it depended.

If I was driven by a service to the airport -- I slept -- that was about an hour.
if I drove, lol, i drove and listened to radio.
Once at airport, I had 2.5 hrs , which could be consumed by security. If it didn't, then, often a meal and/or work and/or a book read and/or talking with coworkers (didn't always have coworkers on plane, didn't always have time for a meal).
In flight,for an hour or so, usually slept - sometimes chatted or read.
Arrived - picked up luggage, got car and went to work (about 30min)

5hrs goes by fast.
 
We may still do that in the future. It would most likely be in Suwon. We've committed ourselves to be here in Korea for 5 years so we have until 2023.
Jae, I remember your mother is aging. Do you plan to return to Canada during those 5 years? EDIT: or do you forsee her coming to see you in Korea?
 
Yes, that's right. Chat, voice calls, video calls, file transfer. There's also a thing called KakaoStory, which is kind of a private Facebook and KakaoTaxi to get rides.

WeChat actually has a payment service similar to PayPal. Apparently Mrs. M's aunts use it to settle up after a night of mahjong.:D Some Asian grocers here are starting to accept it.
 
Jae, I remember your mother is aging. Do you plan to return to Canada during those 5 years? EDIT: or do you forsee her coming to see you in Korea?

We've invited my mom to come visit Korea, but thus far she's expressed no interest in coming. We plan to visit Canada when we can.
 
We've invited my mom to come visit Korea, but thus far she's expressed no interest in coming. We plan to visit Canada when we can.
Wow, Jae. I would think that is tough.

Who are you living with? Is it someone you knew before you got to Korea?
 
For many years we scrimped and saved in order to pay for my mum to visit us in Canada. Much cheaper than taking four kids to England - and much easier and pleasanter for everyone. We could arrange a sleeping space for one extra far more conveniently than my mum could find space for six! We could add one passenger to our vehicle easier than find transit fares for us all in England. Our kitchen held big enough pots and pans while mum's only had small ones. I could go on and on...…………...
 
For many years we scrimped and saved in order to pay for my mum to visit us in Canada. Much cheaper than taking four kids to England - and much easier and pleasanter for everyone. We could arrange a sleeping space for one extra far more conveniently than my mum could find space for six! We could add one passenger to our vehicle easier than find transit fares for us all in England. Our kitchen held big enough pots and pans while mum's only had small ones. I could go on and on...…………...

Sounds good.
 
For many years we scrimped and saved in order to pay for my mum to visit us in Canada. Much cheaper than taking four kids to England - and much easier and pleasanter for everyone. We could arrange a sleeping space for one extra far more conveniently than my mum could find space for six! We could add one passenger to our vehicle easier than find transit fares for us all in England. Our kitchen held big enough pots and pans while mum's only had small ones. I could go on and on...…………...

My grandma (Mom's Mom) came to see us every second summer, for at least 3 weeks, often longer from 1964 until not long before she died in '84.
 
My grandma (Mom's Mom) came to see us every second summer, for at least 3 weeks, often longer from 1964 until not long before she died in '84.

These reports of yours and @KayTheCurler are interesting Bette - but I don't see what they have to do with living life as a foreigner in South Korea.
 
@Jae, do you live in an apartment? I think that you said you were cooking, and that oven's aren't common.

What interesting food have you had?
Any new recipes you have tried?
 
@Jae, do you live in an apartment? I think that you said you were cooking, and that oven's aren't common.

What interesting food have you had?
Any new recipes you have tried?

Yobo and I actually have two apartments here Pinga. One is a "one room apart" in Seosan. The kitchen, livingroom, dining room and bedroom are all one, with a laundry area that's separated off from the rest by a sliding door, and a bathroom of which the door can be locked. This apartment came with my teaching position.

The other is a more luxurious three bedroom apartment in Suwon.

Foods - We've eaten in some good Korean restaurants - authentic local places with reasonably priced fare. The standard is meat that you grill yourself right at your table. Korean restaurants usually provide plenty of side dishes, and keep them coming - rice, lettuces, kimchi, small fishes, vegetables, tofu, etc.

I haven't tried any new recipes yet.
 
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