Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Bop-bop, sing along
Just call me Santa Teacher!!
Monday, November 23, 2009
they're just little babies...
Friday, November 20, 2009
HALLOWEEN PHOTOS!!
Little Eric (in Colleen's class) was dressed as a pumpkin, but kept hopping around like a frog... maybe he thought he was wearing something else?
Remember how I told you Roy was tall for his age? Well, he's tall for this costume, too. I couldn't help but giggle every time he adjusted his hat. He always says "Kate Teacher" then laughs, I think he has something hilarious to tell me, but he just can't get the words out. Oh, Roy. Sweet, sweet Roy.
My kids working on their pumpkin "masks", in the shadow of the flippers.
We trick or treated on the third floor; the kids were grabbing for candy - to take, to give. CANDY!
Class shot. HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!
The "masks" (faces) are completed. See?
Alex was Spiderman. I sang to him what I think the theme song is, "Spiderman. Spiderman. Does anything that a spider can. Is he a spider, or is he a man? I don't know, but he's Spiderman." and he sang it the rest of the day. Awesome.
Hanging out on the 6th floor, listening to directions for some crazy hula-hooping game where the kids are matched up against one another - two at a time - and they hula hoop 10 times then run to the end of the room to bob for a piece of candy on a tray... sooooo not Swine Flu safe!
Top was a Power Ranger - sweet sword. All in all, Halloween at school was fun, but the day had only just begun, and the grown ups had to go home and get ready to Trick or Drink that night!! We went to five different houses around the neighborhood, each had a shot to take, then we went to the local foreigner bar to have some drinks and meet up with other friends.
Aidan had a sweet evil skeleton lego costume - that he MADE!! So awesome - wish I got a full length shot; he couldn't use his arms - but you can see there's a door on his right side where he could reach out for things - because he had to carry his legs which were detached boxes from the rest of the structure. And that's Andrea using Aidan's costume as a shelf for her beer.
During the Trick or Drink shenanigans, Andrea and I kept finding small doors (naturally we documented them), this is the smallest one. WHY!?!
Josh and Jeremy dressed as the Williams sisters and harassing locals, "Who's hotter? Me or her?"
Saturday night I went to Seoul with Andrea, Morganne, Jennie and Colleen. We met up with our friends Ashton, Ted, Colin, Jason and Lorna at this place called THE HIVE. I joined a costume contest. I won third place, and a bottle of Canadian whisky. A guy dressed as an iPod won 2nd (and 200,000 won!), and Ashton (as Jesus) won 1st place - two tickets to Jeju-do. I think it was the air guitar that made all the difference; I was dubbed the "Funky Penguin; Andrea found it for me on the street.
I was so happy I won!
Swine Flu!
That's the face that won me the whisky. It was a good night. Shenanigans in Seoul, for sure. As usual.
It's Hot. It's Cold.
November 18. 2009
I’m sorry I haven’t blogged in a while. I was distracted by Ms. Ayn Rand’s “The Fountainhead” which I finished on Saturday, and felt ever so melancholy for having done… what an experience that book turned out to be. I’m not sure if I understood every rambling drawn out character’s rationale, like crazy ole Ellsworth Toohey, but basically I gather that her Objectivism standpoint is that of Mr. Howard Roark’s character, to gain happiness through whatever it is for yourself. I’d like to think I live that life, by treating others how I want to be treated, or rather to do what makes me happy as long as it’s not hurting myself or others... granted all the characters did it in a 1930’s way of speaking, it being the 1930’s-ish and all, and on a higher plane of intellect than I just summarized, but that’s what my mind took away as the jist. But now, I’m rambling just as much as Ayn Rand, and without the delicious descriptiveness. There is no sign of Howard Roark’s creativity in
This Saturday, I even went into
Oh, also. In Gangnam Station, a Korean man stopped me to take a survey about living in
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Yes.
I was in a real good mood after lunch on Friday (so close to the weekend!) and feeling like joking around with my kids, especially since when I came back they were running around the room, laughing and seemed genuinely happy to see me and to get to work on Science. So, I was explaining (read: talking at them) the project/experiment to them and getting some blank looks, and I turned to Danny and said, “Do you understand?” and he said “Yes.” And I said, “Really?” and he said, “Yes.” “So you know about moving pictures and you can see how animation is made through sequence of slightly different images to make a moving picture?” and he said, “Yes.” “Really?” “Yes.” “Oh, okay. But, it doesn’t really matter what I say you’re just going to say ‘yes’ because you’re an agreeable boy?” “Yes.” “And I don’t even have to ask you a question I can just raise my voice a little at the end like I’m asking a question?” “Yes.” And I smiled, and he giggled. “Danny?” “Yes. Play Room?”
OLLEH!!
My kids love to say “OLLEH!” when they’re excited. At first, I was really impressed because I thought, Wow! They can speak Spanish, too!? and my kids are four (Western age), so I thought it was pretty cool, right? Then I noticed that my elementary students were doing it, too – and all of them would sing the “Ole, ole ole ole, ole, ole!” song that you hear at futbol games. Maybe it was them saying ole that made me want Korean to be Spanish and why sometimes when I was out in the world, away from school, I would find myself slipping into saying, “Si” and “Por favor” and the like, only to receive even stranger looks than I’m normally accustomed to.
Come to find out, they’re not saying, “ole!” but “olleh!” – which, yes, is “hello” backwards. Yeah. I know. What’s the deal with that? I asked Amy, and she said she didn’t know, but then again I think maybe she didn’t understand my question, because Koreans will always answer “Yes” or “I don’t know” to any question… I suppose the “I don’t know” is better than the “Yes” but it’s just as equally frustrating because you think that you phrased the question in such a way that it should be understood. I digress. So, I asked my kids and they said it means “Wow. Perfect”, whereas “Yay” is just “Wow” or “Wow” is “Wow” - whatever. “Olleh!” is some cell phone company, or if it’s not the actual company, it’s some sort of brand or plan, or something, but then again it’s on a building here in town, so yeah, let’s say the company. And there’s this commercial – where the shouting of “olleh!” comes from – that sings the song and after “Olleh!” flashes up on the screen, so do “Wow!” and “Perfect!” I still don’t understand why – kind of like everything Koreans do that is inexplicable to my Western ways – but at least now I know where it comes from… Also, thank goodness my kids aren’t saying it as much as they used to, so the popularity is dying off. They used to say “OLLEH!” for everything, and yeah, at first it was cute, but then it turned into me threatening to take away Play Room time if they said one more time. What have I become!?
If this isn't nice, I don't know what is.
Two of our teachers – Colleen and Rachel – are leaving tomorrow. Well, they’re not leaving
I guess it’s like God in a way (not trying to be blasphemous) how you’re with me wherever I go, and that’s a good feeling, because after all, “we are here to help each other through this thing, whatever it is.”
Peace and love.
Also, this song makes me happy, and it seems fitting: