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Tag: Korea

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

My Escape to Hockey Land & Other Things That Make Me a Psycho

Warning: The longest blog post you have ever read ahead!

The strange thing was after the decision was made to escape to the land of hockey, my life in Korea had an immediate shift to the realm of the more interesting. Sure, I have lots of interesting stories, particularly those relating to the fact that my nickname was “Man Eater” (what does that even mean?!), however, for those last couple months I had toned a lot of stuff down for health reasons, etc. Anyway, those last few days turned out to be epic in true Psycho form.

My flight was booked somewhere around 3AM on Friday morning, which prompted me to have “holy shit” insomnia until I was safely back home six days later. I had the best of intentions for my final weekend in Ulsan. I was going to be a good girl and get all my packing done, and say good bye to the people that had come to mean the most to me on the quiet. However, one of my friends has a bit of a gambling problem, and on that final Friday night my arm was twisted to partake in yet another Busan casino run.

The previous weekend I got suckered in for a poker stint of nearly 48 hours straight. I’ve seen this friend be up 2 Mil and end up in the hole 900K, and it seems I have to spend at least one portion of every trip playing the banker and managing his funds. This weekend was no different. I had told him I would only go on the condition that I did not see the sunrise Saturday morning (for once). We had agreed that we would only stay until 3AM, but of course once 3AM rolled around I was up 500K, and he was down 1.4M. Ouch. Finally, when all the chips were gone, and his bank account had been drained, I succeeded in getting him to take me back to my suitcases maybe 15 minutes before the sun came up. Two days later I would find out that once he dropped me off, he turned around and drove the hour back to Busan and tried to win back his money until 7PM Saturday night. Needless to say, he lost.

When I came to my final Sunday in Korea I had most of the packing finished, and was set to have individual get-togethers with various friends. I was having dinner with Cherry that night over by Lotte Department Store. For some reason I was really nervous about being there like I somehow knew that a showdown was going to take place. As we walked up to the concourse where the restaurant was, I was looking down at my feet hoping not to see who I knew in my gut I was going to see that night. However, as soon as we walked up to the door Cherry explained in a shocked and amused tone that The Dick was on the concourse. I took a deep breath and released a heavy sigh. For two months I purposely went out of my way to avoid him altogether. It’s hard to do successfully when you’re living abroad and the foreign bars in your town are few. After what I had been through because of him, though, I knew something ugly would happen if we had any run ins – and this was the night it was going to go down.

“Great!” I cried in defeat, “Why’d you have to say that? Now I have to go and slap him in the face.” I clutched my weapon of choice firmly in my fist. I figured a leather glove was the best option because I didn’t want to injure my own hand with the amount of force that was going to strike him. Plus a public glove slapping is obviously the ultimate shame for any man. Cherry followed behind me with anticipation he could hardly contain. He had clearly been spending too much time watching reruns of Gossip Girl. When I got to the non-hockey loving American, I tapped him on the shoulder and struck before he was even aware of who was behind him. The look on his face was probably the most incredible thing I’ve ever seen. He was totally stunned, and with an unwavering tone I can’t even described he said, “Oh my God. You’re fucking crazy.” It’s the quote of the century.

The thing is he’s right. What I learned from this whole experience is that I am crazy. I knew that before, but now I understand that it’s not quirky, it’s a problem. I get this feeling that I’m too insane to ever actually be with anyone. Anyone half way normal will not be able to handle me, and only scary things can come from a union with someone just like me. But why change? I just don’t care anymore.

My whole relationship with the American was fucked up from the start. For reasons I can’t even explain, my attraction to him was one of the most bizarre things I’ve ever felt in my life. I had seen him around probably five or six times in my first three weeks in Korea. Like I said, it’s unavoidable. But every time I saw him, it wasn’t intrigue or even lust that I felt, it was these horrible unexplainable feelings that I shouldn’t have been having for someone I hadn’t even spoken to or even really made eye contact with. I felt things like jealousy, and frustration, and maybe even anger, or at least some variation on the emotion that may or may not have a name in English. I didn’t even know him yet, and I was already acting like a crazy ex girlfriend. It was like I was already feeling the strain of our relationship before it had even started. I remember the first time he talked to me, my tone was really hostile at the beginning of the conversation. I was practically yelling at him when I asked what his name was.

I think there are two kinds of attractions in this world. There’s the “logical” attraction where on paper you know that this person would be a good catch. Maybe that person has a commercial look, and a good job, and supports your social status. You become attracted to ideas and material things, and make the relationship work solely because you think you should. Then there are the “illogical” ones that you can’t explain. The ones that evoke these strong emotions that seem to come out of nowhere and are directed towards a person you’ve never even met. Consciously you know you shouldn’t be with this person. You’d rather have the person that looks better on paper, but somehow you still can’t fight it. And my God, I swear to you, I didn’t want him. I knew he wasn’t for me; the total opposite of me, in fact. I told myself each time I saw him that it would be the last.

I really believe that we were both constantly straddling the fine line between love and hate. He would act like an angry little boy who wasn’t allowed to buy a new Batman toy when he didn’t get his way. When he was mad he’d do ridiculous things to try to get even with me, like posting questionable Facebook statuses, or “Unliking” the Psycho Lady Hockey page (LOL!). I’m surprised the guy didn’t make a Twitter account to rub his life in my face. However, after something like this would happen, the next minute he’d be on his knees at my front door, slobbering all over me, and begging me to “need” him. It was a volatile situation completely driven on passion. And while a passionate relationship can be fun for a while, it’s definitely not stable, and the fire will eventually just burn out – especially when you have no other common ground to connect on.

So I had glove slapped him (twice) as one final act of unbridled passion for not only the trouble he caused me, but because I felt I lost myself a little just in knowing him. He changed me – that’s for sure. You wonder why this website was quiet for the most part over the last seven months. Hockey had no place in my life. Clinging to hockey was like trying desperately to cling to a past life. It was almost impossible, and hockey started to have a smaller and smaller place in my life. Now that I’m back, I’m trying to test the waters and see if that fire, the one that drove me to hockey arenas all over the world, is still there. But what if it’s not? What if I’m over it? I guess we’ll find out this week.

Anyway, the second slap was four times as hard as the first. I turned away from him in triumph and walked back towards the restaurant where Cherry was watching from with an expression on his face like he had just been watching Brad Pitt make out with a Play Girl model. He would later tell me that he thought this was fate. That God knew I was leaving and gave me one last chance to “slap him in his fucking face.” I never looked back, and I didn’t bother to mention that in less than three days I’d be gone forever.

On Monday I decided I wasn’t going to go to work to simply keep up the façade. I called in sick, which meant that doing last minute errands like closing bank accounts and shipping boxes had to be done incognito a.k.a while wearing a brunette wig. I felt super sketchy walking on certain parts of the road, and turning away from the street while waiting for the lights to change, but a girl’s gotta do what a girl’s gotta do. Truthfully, I didn’t trust my employer not to fuck with my life if I had given them warning that I was leaving. They could have done something with my bank account, or locked me out of my own apartment. And they seemed to be the type to do this after what they had already proven themselves capable of.

I met up for some Korean BBQ and drinks with friends that night, again being careful to avoid certain places. So, it was a late night, but the insomnia insured that I wouldn’t sleep anyway. Around two in the morning I decided to take a shower. I had packed all but one towel, and I was trying to keep that last towel as dry as possible. So I had opted for the “air dry” option that night, and I was sitting around completely in the buff when I started to hear a banging at my window.

One of the first things I noticed when I moved in seven months ago was that the Winnie the Pooh film they covered my windows with, so people couldn’t see in, was botched. There was a long slit in the side of the window that caused a substantial peephole, which I knew would be trouble if any creepers were to learn of it. Of course, on my second last night the hole would be discovered. Two men tried to break into my apartment for the better part of an hour. I had no options. My cell phone had run out of time, and I didn’t see the point in topping up for another month when I was leaving in two days, so I couldn’t call the police. No one in Korea was on Facebook or MSN at the time, so I couldn’t get someone to help me out. I decided the best course of action was to completely ignore the commotion. I figured if they couldn’t get my attention they might go away. This is actually pretty sound logic. In Korea, men generally assume western women are prostitutes, which, therefore, makes breaking and entering and/or rape an OK thing. Most women who have lived in my city have a story or two about being followed home, or getting propositioned by cab drivers. It’s pretty much a fact of life there.

Without raising suspicion I casually shifted my body away from the window to be less exposed than I already was. I think they were still getting some side boob action, but it clearly wasn’t as much as they were seeing before. Over time I managed to nonchalantly put the towel around myself, and arm myself with a pomegranate stained butcher knife, but the whole ordeal lasted an hour, and I was surprisingly shaken up about it. However, being the opportunist that I am, I decided to think of the best possible way to turn this frown upside down.

*Compose New Message*

Dear guy who is way too hot for me,

Something terrible has happened and I fear for my life. I can’t possibly spend my last night alone in my apartment. It’s unsafe. I think you should let me crash at your swanky ocean view condo on the other side of town. I wouldn’t ask, but you’re the “only” person I know with a couch. Let me know what you think.

Thanks.

I knew it wouldn’t take much. Dangling that last chance carrot is a difficult thing for a guy who already wants you to pass up. I met him a few days after things ended with the American. We went out a few times, but between him going away on vacation, and me leaving town on the weekends to avoid confrontation and alcohol, I just never really made the effort to start anything with him even though I wanted to. He had only just arrived back in town on Sunday, so the timing was kind of good for this whole mess at my apartment to happen, and, of course, he was more than willing to lend me his hospitality.

He is definitely one of the best looking guys I have ever seen, and while he’d probably be considered in the top percentile of attractive people no matter where he went, in Korea, however, this basically translates to him being able to get anything he wants. Not to mention the Ironman competitions, the fact that he wasn’t an English teacher like most of the foreigners there, and the Scottish accent (a.k.a. my new favourite accent a.k.a. Continent Challenge) didn’t hurt his stock either. However, he is probably just as crazy as I am. Our birthdays were four days apart, which made him a psycho Gemini as well. What’s worse was that he even had a Gemini tattoo, so you knew he really identified with the fact that we’re practically born to be semi- bipolar. We probably would have made a scary combination.

I obviously knew what was going to happen that night. He wasn’t doing this out of the goodness of his heart. In the past we’ve been in similar situations. He would lure me over there with red wine and back massages, and I would watch him squirm with great satisfaction as he struggled to take it any further. There’s obviously more incentive to man-up when you know that you won’t get another chance to go for what you want again. But…for my own amusement I still wasn’t going to help him out, though I did manipulate the situation a little bit. “Can we watch one of the movies on your PVR thingie. *Fake shocked gasp* Oh my, what’s this porn folder doing here?! *click*” Yeah, I had made a mental note of said porn file the last time I was there when we were watching 300. I knew I could use it to my advantage some day, and, boy, did I ever! Over brunch the following day, I referred to this act as, “tying up all the loose ends.”

I still couldn’t sleep that night, and in the wee hours of the morning, I crept out of bed and walked over to the window. Since we were so high up, I didn’t have to worry about any peeping toms seeing me stark naked. I watched the spinning beam from the lighthouse just off the coast illuminate the midnight ships as they pulled in and out of the port. It had been months since I had actually appreciated the Korean landscape. I had been so preoccupied with health issues, and high school drama, and couldn’t help but resent everything around me for what seemed like forever. But I stood at that window for at least half an hour that night trying to hold on to that image of the sea and the stars, and remember the prettier parts of my life over the last six and a half months.

Earlier that week, for the first time in my life I was able to see the two different paths I could take. I knew what kind of life I would have if I stayed, and what kind of life I would have if I went back to the old ways. Obviously, on that final night I had no choice but to get on a plane the next morning, and leave everything behind. As I watched the light spinning on the water, I wonder what would have happened if I had chose to live my life like second chances didn’t exist, like every day could have been my last day in Korea. Like, what would have happened if I had seriously tried to get things going with the Scottie-Aussie before my last night on the other end of the Earth? P.S. Remember back in March when I said my mission in Korea was to find the mythical Irish-Australian man?

Yes, even then I was considering that my switch to the Phoenix Coyotes was going to turn sour, and drive me away to the comforting arms of *crosses fingers* an Irish-Australian.

Well, that was before I realized the Scottish accent was way hotter. So, I’m just going to go ahead and give myself the two points and a check in the win column. Anyway, I guess these last few days gave me a new perspective on life.

Did I start to regret my decision that night? Maybe a little. All I can do is hope that something better is waiting for me just off in the horizon. The funny thing was I knew a month earlier that I was going home. Some people have warning signs; numbers or some other “omen” they feel is guiding them on their path. For me, Arizona has come to be that “sign.” Although, I’ll never be sure what the Arizona Prophecy was all about, it still seems to haunt me every now and then. I remember the moment that I knew I was going home. It was about a month before I actually left. We had a new coworker starting. For months we were told that he was coming from the UK, but when he showed up and I introduced myself to him, the accent I heard didn’t match up. “Where are you from?” I asked even though I knew exactly what he was going to say. “Phoenix,” he replied. I smiled the most bitter smile I have ever felt curl across my face, and I even felt myself laughing in the back of my throat. Even though this introduction would take place days before I got my test results from the doctor, and about a week before my employer would screw me over on the medical leave, I thought to myself, “Well, looks like I’m going home.”

Top Photo: Back to brunette. My mother saw me get off the plane and basically got on the phone to her hair stylist LOL!

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Sunday, December 12th, 2010

A life without hockey (Month 6.5)

Sooo…yeah. As you probably already know, I made my great escape from South Korea nearly two weeks ago (in true Psycho fashion, I might add). Now that I’m back in the land of hockey and maple syrup, it is kind of embarrassing that I still have one post remaining in my Farewell Tour. I’ll get to it don’t worry.

You can probably guess that my last month and a half was probably not that exciting hence the fact that I decided to leave. The truth is I had been on the fence about leaving Korea since the end of August. The honeymoon period was far from over – if I ever had a honeymoon period in the first place. Korea is a great place for a westerner if you A) can’t get laid at home, B) like to party, and C) never want to grow up. It’s not like Korea is a must see country. In fact, tourist wise it offers very little. The one consolation is that it’s close to the Asian countries that you DO want to see. The party aspect was great, and the lifestyle was way too easy, but after a while I started to feel like I was stagnating professionally, and on top of that health issues were starting to surface.

The Korean labour board is great in a lot of ways, like if you work in Korea for an entire year you’ll be given an extra month’s pay as a bonus at the end. However, contracts really mean nothing, and as far as the well being of a westerner is concerned, most employers could really care less. My symptoms started to get worse, and I don’t know how many times I went to the hospital and was simply either laughed at or turned away because I wasn’t Korean. Finally, I went to my employer seeking a two week leave to go back to Canada to see my doctors and make sure that this whole thing wasn’t anything serious. They were very accommodating, and even tried to get me home sooner than later. However, while they were ironing out the details, I managed to find a specialist in Korea who was willing to see me, and then confirmed that my condition was potentially quite serious (I was once again laughed at while given this news). With this information I went back to my employer asking them to confirm my vacation dates because it was now more important than ever that I see my doctors to A) at least confirm the diagnosis, and B) develop a baseline for them to monitor until I came back permanently. I also, quite frankly, needed a vacation to relax after two months of worry and stress. My employer decided to change their mind and “flat out refused” my request on the grounds that if I’m sick then I just won’t bother coming back. Yeah, I’d just leave all my shit behind and not bother coming back for it.

What was maybe more hilarious was that they then started to act like my request for vacation (which was laid out in my contract) was to be regarded as some sort of paranoid, illogical conspiracy against the company to the point that one of the westerners, that I was clearly friends with, was warned not to make it look like he had given me any advice on the whole situation. What. The. Fuck?!

I had decided, in principle, not to resign. I wasn’t going to be forced to quit my job because the entire system is fucked up. But there was an obvious shift in the way I was being treated. Like suddenly I couldn’t be trusted because Korea ruined my health and I wanted to do something about it. In my personal life I had done everything possible to get better and reduce stress. I had been living like a hermit since the end of September – trying to avoid alcohol and smoke filled bars as much as possible, but the bitterness at work just kept mounting. I didn’t hate my job, but I didn’t love it either. The life was easy, but it wasn’t a question of COULD I finish the year in Korea, it became a question of SHOULD I. I started getting strange colds, and being a burning ball of hate every day is no way to reduce stress and get healthy.

It was literally a last minute decision to flee the country. It seemed like I was calling my family members every day trying to debate the decisions I could make in the matter. Obviously when I had told them the diagnosis, they wanted me to come home. I, on the other hand, didn’t want to leave because I viewed quitting as weakness, but I also saw staying as letting the bad people win. Finally, literally five days before what would become my great escape, my mother basically made the decision for me and booked me on a one way flight to Toronto, and there was no turning back. According to my contract, I had to give them a month’s notice if I was quitting. I gave them ten minutes. And that’s how I got myself banned from Korea.

Boys:

1.Messier
2. Bauer
3. Scotty (Bowman)
4. Ovi
5. Modano
6. Bure (Pavel)
7. Maurice (Richard)
8. Linden
9. Cherry
10. Simpson (Craig) [New]

Girls:

1. Darcy (Tucker)
2. Vezina
3. Quinn
4. Kovy
5. Souray
6. Bobby (Clarke)
7. Ricci [New]
8. Tie (Domi) [New]

Top Photo: Yes, my hair really was this awful colour!

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Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

I knew it wouldn’t last when he fell asleep during Slap Shot…

You’ve all heard of people forming romantic unions despite the fact that their “his and hers” hand towels have different NHL logos on them. Although I’m sure Rangers, Oilers, and Leafs super fans can’t possibly fathom falling in love with the likes of an Islanders, Flames, or Sens fan. Game time would likely become a violent brawl for possession of the TV remote and control of what game is watched that night. And taking them to the rink would likely be an embarrassing scene with your man or lady friend sporting enemy colours. However, team rivalries are really small potatoes in the grand scheme of things. As I’ve learned the hard way, anyone dating an “enemy fan” should be kissing the sky that they managed to shack up with a fellow hockey fan at all. Some of us have not been so lucky…

In Korea *heavy sigh* sometimes we make some bad choices. As my guy friends say, Buddy* struck at just the right time. I was fresh off the latest boat from Canada, and therefore “vulnerable.” I suppose that was somewhat true. Maybe not so much vulnerable as it was uninhibited. Back home I was more the private type when it came to romantic affairs. This was partly because I wanted to have the chance to save face if things ever went bad. I didn’t want to have to explain to friends and family why I’m not seeing this guy or that guy anymore. After all, it takes a special type of man to be willing to love a psycho. Anyway, in Korea I didn’t have to worry about any of this. In fact I was lucky that this guy wasn’t really known in the foreign community despite being in town for seven months already. Though, that obviously changed when people started asking me about the tall blond guy they would always see me with.

Buddy first struck on my birthday, so I won’t lie, alcohol played a large role in this union. He was the stereotypical American. Stereotypical in that he was the red, white, and blue, apple pie, football, basketball, and baseball type. He had absolutely no idea what hockey was or any interest in it, although early on he claimed to be “getting into hockey” because of me. I’m sure that had more to do with the fact that I’m “aloof” in the early stages when I’m not sure if I want someone around or not, and he was simply trying to butter me up, and had identified that hockey was my crack.

Before knowing me he had all of one hockey reference, and of all things it was the Sean Avery “sloppy seconds” incident. He thought Avery was hilarious and seemed really interested in finding out if I had ever banged him. See, guys can be puck bunnies, too. After I did the Paul Bissonnette interview, he also decided that he was a BizNasty fan, but that was really the extent of his hockey appreciation. It didn’t seem like a problem at first, however having to explain the whole history of a team or a player just to mention something that happened in a game or around the league goes from cute to tedious pretty damn quickly. I couldn’t even show him hilarious Don Cherry segments without first having to explain who Don Cherry was! That’s practically blasphemy! Since I have a one…well two…track mind, not being able to talk about hockey really limited the conversation to the realm of the less interesting. A girl can only listen to the same Les Grossman quotes so many times, and it can get really annoying when someone is serenading you with I Just Died in Your Arms Tonight while you are trying to sleep.

It was bad enough that I was isolated from hockey by simply living in Korea, but I personally can’t handle hockey being absent from every area of my life – especially the most fun area. One weekend, Buddy was bedridden, and wasn’t I the lucky one that it was my bed he had hijacked. For entertainment, I busted out the Slap Shot DVD in hopes that it would turn him onto a real sport. I heard him laugh once, and then the room was flooded with his snores. It didn’t seem possible that even a non-hockey fan could fall asleep during that movie, but I suppose there is a first time for everything. I tried to brush it off, and chalk it up to the fact that he had been throwing up all day, but I knew deep down that this wasn’t going to last. As I laid there rubbing his stomach while his snores drowned out Paul Newman’s witty remarks, I couldn’t help but feel just a little bit dirty.

*No, Buddy is not his real name. I’m just Canadian…

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Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

A life without hockey (Month 4)

As you can see, it has been a quiet month blog wise. My fourth month in Korea was full of a lot of ups and downs. All of a sudden I was bitten by the Korea bug, and I started to think that I was never coming home, or at least not for two years instead of just one. I’m sure part of this had to do with the fact that I started going to the beach a lot more. I don’t know why it took me so long to get there in the first place. The first four months really just flew by, and I hadn’t realized that the summer was practically over. Ulsan can be a bit of a black hole. You’re more than happy to just sleep in late and hang out with your friends at the same dirty bars Saturday after Saturday. I was almost starting to think that maybe I could be happy here, but then everything collapsed all at once.

Things aren’t as bad now as they were then – I’m actually about two weeks away from the fifth month mark as I’m writing this. I’m sure the fact that hockey season started in Korea five days after I hit four months had a lot to do with it, but I’ll talk more about that next when I discuss my first Korean hockey game. (Note: I almost wrote “ice hockey” there. I clearly have been away from home for too long!) Oh yeah, and I’m sure I’ll get around to finishing the posts from LAST season as well – my bad! Anyway, I was pretty miserable for a while. I went from thinking I could stay in Korea forever to searching for the next flight out of Incheon airport. Although there were “domestic” troubles and drama at the office, no issue seemed quite as devastating as the hair crisis of 2010. I knew Korean hair stylists wouldn’t be able to dye my hair properly! They can’t dye their own hair properly and my hair is just as dark as theirs! Luckily I’ve found a way to make it work, and, like Caps fans everywhere, I’m rocking the red…though, really, it’s more of an orange.


I also experienced my first loss in Korea. The sad thing about the foreigner community is that people are constantly coming and going. It can make relationships challenging, and I think people take a strange approach to dating, etc because of it. Although I’ve seen many people leave since I’ve been here, in my fourth month one of my friends went back to the other side of the world. It was the first time that I cared that someone was leaving, and I know that he is just the first of many that I will see get back on the boat while I’m still stranded here – sad face!

While the first four months went by really quickly, I have this dreadful feeling that the next eight months will not. I find myself thinking more and more if eight more months is really what I want. Luckily, now I have hockey to amuse me for a little while. Anyway, that’s all I really have to say right now. You can follow Canadian Psycho Worldwide for a better look at what goes on in the Korean Psycho universe. Until next time… stick on the ice, etc.

P.S. There are a few new hockey names this month! Here’s the updated list:

Boys:

1.Messier
2. Bauer
3. Scotty (Bowman)
4. Ovi
5. Modano
6. Bure (Pavel) [New]
7. Maurice (Richard) [New]

Girls:

1. Darcy (Tucker)
2. Vezina
3. Quinn
4. Kovy
5. Souray
6. Bobby (Clarke) [New]

Top Photo: Mr. Busan strutting his stuff on Haeundae Beach.

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Thursday, August 26th, 2010

A Life Without Hockey (Month 3)

안녕하세요! In this installment I will discuss how I have chosen to spend my third month in Korea by replacing hockey with public indecency and Chinese food. Give it a try if you’re experiencing severe offseason withdrawals… and even if you’re not – 아싸!

They say in three months you’ll know whether you love Korea or hate it. Truthfully, I find myself disliking my life here more and more. Not that I expected Korea to be a smellier (you know, squid on every street corner) version of North America, but culturally there are some things that are hard to live with every day especially if you are the type that is prone to over think pretty much everything. Although things are starting to change here, and I’m sure in ten years South Korea will be even more Americanized than it already is, men and women in Korea are not equals, not even on paper. I don’t want to go on a rant or anything, but I will say that I tend to look a little more closely at the other westerners here because of that – especially the men. I know a few guys here that were offered jobs just walking down the street, and, while such opportunities are rare anywhere, the fact that I know that this would never happen to me here BECAUSE I’m a woman irritates me in principle. Don’t get me wrong, I would say a large chunk of Koreans that are my age and younger are less traditional, but at the end of the day, I still live in place where men feel like they have the right to follow me home and try to break into my apartment because I’m Caucasian and therefore must be a Russian prostitute (not that those actions would be OK even if I was said Russian prostitute) –zhopa!

Anyway, as I mentioned last month, the wanderlust was starting to creep up on me again. Luckily, I had my first vacation period schedule at the end of July. Sadly, there’s no hockey anywhere but Australia at this time, and I wasn’t really into making the long trek down unda for a four night stint. China on the other hand was a much easier commute as Korea is essentially China’s dick anyway – geographically speaking.

If I had any advice for people traveling to the other side of the world, make sure you have a good two weeks to dedicate to China (at LEAST). And be prepared not to have any relaxation time during your stint. I would also advise not to go on a soju binge hours before your flight, but that’s another story. There is so much to do in China. I felt like I was on the go non-stop. My friend and I never slept in later than 7:30 in the morning. Considering that we normally start work at 3PM every day, and don’t often get up before noon, this made for some minor unpleasantness. Beijing was an interesting city. At times it felt like I was back home in Toronto, and at other times it felt like I was in Cuba. The Great Wall was definitely the highlight of the trip for me. It’s one of those places that you never think you’re going to experience for yourself, so even seeing it from a distance is really incredible. Oh, and make sure you dedicate a full day to JUST the Wall, and a full day to the Summer Palace.

The food in China was really great and dirt cheap as well, but it tastes a lot different than the stuff you’d get back home, and even the Chinese food we have here in Korea. The shopping was just as cheap. Make sure you visit the markets. If everyone took a trip to China once a year to do all their shopping, they would be A LOT richer! My friend was smart, she brought a big suitcase, I didn’t as I’m not much of a shopper, but let me tell you, I became one in China! If you’re the type that likes your designer stuff, you can get some of the best knock offs in the world there for next to nothing. I actually think these people steal the real things from the factories and resell them because making any money on them is worth it, as most people don’t make more than $800 a year, which is the tragic part of China. Even little babies know how to beg for money IN ENGLISH!

So I’m probably boring you with my China adventure. I’m sure what you really want to know about is the public indecency. Well, that’s pretty self-explanatory I would think. Some of the westerners have a saying that in Korea everyone will develop two addictions. The popular choices are drinking and smoking, but I’ve not been one for those two vices – even the drinking. Back home I’d never have more than a drink or two if I went out. The problem is that a drink or two of soju will just utterly fuck you up, it’s not even funny. So we all know that hockey is my first addiction, and if I’m not one for the drugs and alcohol, then all that’s left is…………………….. Quiet! It’s a REAL disease!

Before I sign off again, I’ve given a few more Korean kids some hockey inspired names this month. Here’s the updated list:

Boys:

1. Messier
2. Bauer
3. Scotty (Bowman)
4. Ovi [New]
5. Modano [New]

Girls:
1. Darcy (Tucker)
2. Vezina
3. Quinn [New]
4. Kovy [New]
5. Souray [New]

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