Thoughts and snapshots of my time in the motherland DEC 2011-APR 2016
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Video
youtube
The Image You Won’t See in U.S. Mainstream Media
The Peace Report
Published on Nov 29, 2018
North and South Korean soldiers shake hands on DMZ in signs of peace: https://bit.ly/2KGjhng
38 notes
·
View notes
Link
Man South Korea is doing do great right now. If only we were more like them.
27K notes
·
View notes
Text
Oh dude, that's terrible writing! Unless this person's mother tongue is Korean in the same way it's mine; it happens to be the first language I spoke but is in no way or form the language I am most proficient? Either way, that is some shite writing for someone who claims to be able to teach Korean.
INTRODUCING MYSELF
WHAT IS YOUR NAME?
My name is Saeran.
HOW OLD ARE YOU? 18 (International Age)/20 (Korean Age)
Hello! I am a college student from South Korea: Korean is my native language. However, I can also speak Chinese fluently and I study English. I was born in Busan on the 22nd of July 1999. I’ll teach you how to improve your Korean; no one is too old to learn. I wish you the best of luck! Thank you~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
이름이 뭐예요? 저는 세란입니다.
몇살이에요? 20살이에요.
안녕하세요! 한국에서 온 대학생이에요: 한국어는 나의 모국어에요. 하지만 저는 중국어도 유창하게 할 수 있어요 하고 영어를 공부한다. 나는 1999년 07월 22일에 부산에서 태어났다. 한국어 실력을 향상시키는 방법을 가르쳐 드릴게요; 배움에는 나이가 없다. 여러분 모두에게 행운을 빌어요! 감사합니다~
80 notes
·
View notes
Link
Bambi girl! I subscribed for her reviews on road shop cosmetics at first and her latest video on how she no longer wants to be a beauty content creator really struck a chord with me. I really liked this video!
4 notes
·
View notes
Photo

Dont make the same mistake as me, and order cream cheese makoli. It is as disgusting as it sounds.
20 notes
·
View notes
Video
tumblr
This guy’s my spirit animal. 😂
218K notes
·
View notes
Link
“ I hate how 99% of mainstream discourse around Asian American oppression is about micro-aggressions and not militarism & imperialism “
249 notes
·
View notes
Photo





Taking Public Transit: Day 1 vs Day 101.
291K notes
·
View notes
Note
I appreciate your blog. I am learning so much with these articles you reblog. It's crazy that i was so ignorant to other countries issues. I am educating myself through your blog. ^^ Thank you (:
Hello Anon! I can’t remember if I ever replied to this or not.
Thanks for the message, I try to reblog korea-related articles/images/posts as often as I can. I’m not as active on this blog as I used to be seeing as I don’t live in Korea anymore.
Anyways, hope you have a good one!
1 note
·
View note
Text
Oh no! I quite liked May Island! :(
Noooo my favorite study cafe, May Island, closed down :( My motivation to study is gone now too.
12 notes
·
View notes
Photo





I somehow ended up going three hours outside of Seoul on an adventure to look at a bunch of flowers in the middle of nowhere yesterday.
@ Taean Tulip Festival 🌷🌷🌷 태안 튤립 축제
52 notes
·
View notes
Link
“Hanok” is the term used to describe traditional Korean houses. The architecture of these houses focuses on the infrastructure’s relationship to its surroundings — typically landscapes and seasonality. Many villages in Korea show mixed suburban and urban landscapes of both traditional Hanok homes and modern homes that take into consideration the characters of traditional architecture in a unique way. Modern Hanok architecture is inspired by both the natural principal of house positioning to showcase and frame beautiful landscapes, while also remaining true to materiality and interior characteristics.
Since Korea experiences extremely hot summers and cold winters, these Korean homes have a floor-based heating system for winters but are made of wooden flooring to cool off during hot summers. Common materials used in this type of architecture are soil, timber, rock, and curvy tiled roofing. These materials are often raw with minimal finishing as to blend in seamlessly with the natural environment. Interior plans make use of sliding doors made of “hanji,” a traditional Korean paper that creates a beautiful and breathable look.
While many Hanok homes can be seen in small towns of larger cities, most neo-traditional Korean homes are built in remote areas, truly capturing the traditional essence of Korean homes by embracing the surrounding nature in creative ways.
116 notes
·
View notes
Photo

Humans of Seoul is recruiting new translators! If you are a native English speaker with a high level of proficiency in Korean and love for Humans of Seoul, please send us an email at [email protected] with a brief introduction of yourself, Korean language proficiency, current city of residence, work, and other information that you might want to share! Applications are due on February 14th, 2017. Feel free to email us if you have any questions!
31 notes
·
View notes
Video
tumblr
Please watch Sam Okyere tell about how he was discriminated for his skin color in South Korea.
149K notes
·
View notes
Text
TEACHING IN KOREA vs TEACHING IN SPAIN
Hey Guise :) Remember me?
What happened to me? Here is the abridged version: Spain, Masters, busy, head exploded, putting self back together, answering your question now.
*Based off of my experience through the Franklin Institute MA in Teaching Program. Shall we begin? Let´s start.
In Korea you will teach for 4 hours in a public school under the EPIK, GEPIK or SMOE education system. You will also have 4 hours to desk warm and think about life or zone 100% the heck out and look at internet memes. This is Monday through Friday. Spain is a little bit different. In Spain you will teach for 4 hours 4 days a week with BEDA, UCETAM, or MEDDES –but depending on your area or program it could be 20 hours a week. You will not desk warm. After your 4 hours you will go home and have a nap, eat a sandwich, or do whatever the heck you want.
In Korea you are given a text book and you work alongside a co-teacher. You are expected to either plan the lessons, or play the games. This is the rule not the exception. If you have a really awesome co-teacher like I did you will have the freedom to plan the lessons the way you see fit and you will not have to stick to the textbook. I taught at a high school in Spain in a bilingual school, so my overall experience was a lot more relaxed. You will be given half of the class and you teach them in a separate classroom. The teacher will prepare something for you to work on with the students– and if you are luck they will not. In Spain you have the option to teach other subjects outside of English. I taught World History as well as english and debate. Some friends even got to teach P.E, music, and art.
One of the beautiful things about teaching in the Korean public school system is alllllllll those days off and that sweet vacation time! I think GEPIK now offers 20 paid days off including Korean holidays, and school and local holidays. I went to Australia for a month (Time it right :). I went to Cambodia and Thailand–and the plus part is that it is all paid for. Don´t expect that in Spain. The only time you get off are the holidays. And aint nobody paying for your trips but you. WAIT! before you stop reading let me say this– with Friday or Monday off you can take a vacation every weekend if you planned accordingly. Most places in Europe are 2.5 hours away from each other at max. While living in Spain I went to Morocco, Portugal, and Germany 3 times–this was during the school year.
Spain doesn´t have these winter and summer camps that make it mandatory for you to teach during the winter break or over the summer break. School finishes in June (or was it July?) and that is when your ass is done. Now that could be really awesome because you don´t have to return back to work until the end of September or the beginning of October. SWEET cookies unless your ass didn´t budget properly and I promise you you will not. You have an apartment to pay for and you don´t get paid when you are not working over the summer.
Korea has your back right there. They pay for your housing and you know when you go on that trip to Bali there will be some funds deposited into your account right in time. But damn that winter and summer camp makes it feel like you are not getting a full break. At least your airfare is paid for.
Korea takes care of medical and you pay into a pension so there is a sweet parting gift for you when you leave. Leaving Korea three years later lined my pocket with like 10k-12k or something crazy like that. And trust me I needed every penny of it because while I was making 2,300₩ a month in Korea rent free. Spain was a different story. My apartment (which I had to find on my damn own) cost me 250€ everything included, but I was only getting 1,000€ a month. that isn´t enough to live off of and travel. Food and transpo. is really cheap in Spain and clothes are cheap as well. But when that sun is staying out until almost 11pm during the summer so are you and so is your wallet. Now one positive thing about living in Spain is that you can private tutor legally on the side. You CAN NOT do this in Korea on your E-2 Visa. The students will ask you to teach them. Their parents will ask you. The great grandfather of your neighbor´s cousin will ask you and you can. This is a great way to make extra income. You can also teach at summer camps in Spain. They have summer camps in Germany, France, Ireland, and Italy. I taught at a Performing Arts Summer Camp in Italy . That is another blurb for another time.
I guess the main question is What are you looking for? Do you want to make money and save while seeing Asia but have to work harder for what you make? Or are you okay with making less (way less) and traveling Europe while working in a relaxed and chill environment. I´m telling you working and living in Spain was stress free. Well the kids aren´t as well behaved but nothing is perfect, right?
Because I had saved so much while living in Korea and I worked three weeks at a camp in Italy, I was able to stay one month in Berlin, travel to Paris, enjoy the beach in Athens and eat delicious food in Naples. A lot of teachers start in Asia and then make the move to Europe as their next big step. When researching new places to live I came across a lot of programs to live and work in France, Belgium, and a few other really cool places. The only problem with some of those programs is that there is an age cut off. So if you are reading this and over that dirty 30 YOU TOO OLD!
Teaching in Korea and Spain both have some amazing benefits (medical and health care ^_____________^) and they both have some serious drawbacks. But if you are thinking about moving to Spain after Korea, what is stopping you? Why not try something new and exciting. Keep on excelling and making yourself great. If you are thinking about teaching and want to know which one is “better than the other” I can´t help you with that. They are both great in their own way and our experiences will always be different. Get in where you fit in my friend!
I hope this helped.
Oh! I´m way too lazy to read over this. Sorry for grammar mistakes. HAHAH English isn´t my thing.
39 notes
·
View notes