I was thinking about telling the story of what I did last night, which included an encounter with a very large bear, but I realized no one would have any idea what’s going on because it mostly involves other people no one knows. I’ve always said that it doesn’t really matter where you are so much as who’s there with you, and there is an assortment of characters out here that you’ll maybe follow the blog a little better if you know them. So before the story, a dramatis personae, laid out maybe approximately? in order of appearance on this blog:
Nathan: my roommate in Jukjeon, where the Academic Program (latter half of this Dankook thing) is. A fellow UPEI student and dedicated military man. We were here for a couple of days before being in Cheonan with different roommates for the English Village. When we got back, I had forgotten the code for our door. He fixed me with a stare and asked, “What kind of Canadian are you?”, keying in 1812. He doesn’t blink very much.
Taylor: another Cheonan EV teacher (actually you can pretty much assume everyone is from Cheonan unless otherwise specified). Taylor is from Medicine Hat, and the first time he told me that he improvised a little bluesy song about it, mostly based on rhyming things with hat, I think. Taylor is the type to speak, or sing, his mind pretty freely.
Erik: also a speaker of his mind. He was one of my roommates in Cheonan. His uncle is a capitano in the Mexican police, I think in Durango or Sinaloa, so if I’m ever in jail in Mexico I just need to make a call. Erik has near-encyclopedic knowledge of World Star Hip Hop’s collection of Vines.
James 2: my other roommate in Cheonan. James bought a bottle of Johnnie Walker Blue at the duty-free store on his way to Korea, and we shared it out of paper cups over the course of many late nights (important note: no one in the room ever brought alcohol onto campus, which is strictly forbidden and, in my opinion, just plain wrong. Also the administration of Dankook University is exemplary in every respect). One night we got haircuts together and went to Gangnam.
James 1: my EV teaching partner. James is a creative writing major and, I think we decided, will one day direct Transformers 7. One night, we were walking around the lake in Cheonan with a small group. He turned to me and asked, “Do you feel like running? I feel like running.” He didn’t wait for an answer, but turned and ran down a side path that none of us knew the end of. I stared after him, my mouth still open in readiness for my brain to send an answer to the question, for about five seconds before I started to laugh.
Kristen: also present the night of James 1’s run. Went to Tokyo with Erik this weekend, after her family insisted she not go alone as she had planned. She had to go to Seoul one weekend to take a GRE, and Erik, James and I came along for the night and were out for quite a while. Someone thought of a funny situation then that I still laugh at, Kristen in a future grad school interview: “Well, your GRE scores are impressive.” “Yeah, and I was drunk at the time too!”
Hyeok Jeon: a student with truly atrocious smuggling skills. Like, unreasonably bad.
Jiye: another student. Our last night in Cheonan, we asked how many demerits everyone had (you get two for being late, and bad things start happening at eight). Everyone around the circle said zero. Jiye had six. We asked her, “Do you mind missing the curfew, then?” “No,” she said, with a look of unveiled contempt, waving her hand as if at a fly.
Seong Hwan: a more even-keeled student. Most commonly seen expression is one of surprise or shock, usually at the actions of EV teachers.
Gianna: an instructor from the Cheonan German Village. Her birthday was last night, and she told me she liked me but thought I didn’t really like her, but felt better at that point because I’m much friendlier after a few beers. People think I don’t like them a lot of the time. I mean a lot of the time it’s true, but also a lot of the time it’s just that I’m pretty reserved around strangers. Crap, I made this a profile of the wrong person.
Rae: I don’t think Rae and I spoke for quite some time after first meeting, and the first conversation we ever had was about how people are so scramblingly friendly here, in a university orientation week kind of way, and how tiring it can be to keep up with. One day we had dinner and happily exchanged about three sentences.
Edward Chung: the professor for my comparative religion class. Ask me about Pierre Bujold sometime if you want to hear about a teacher that regularly fell asleep during his own class in junior high, but it hadn’t ever happened at university until today, when Dr. Chung was seen to doze off during a short film about Confucianism. To be fair, I fell asleep myself during that class so I really oughtn’t throw any stones.

Ha ha! It was a bear statue, see? So anyway last night was Gianna’s birthday, right, that’s the story I was going to tell but then the character sketch thing got fun. Let a few brief impressions suffice: a tall can of beer bought at the CU and walked downtown; bumping into some friends with a head start on the evening and swelling to a group of about 20; a game of Loyalty that needed to be quieted down by some bar staff; a trip to the roof, looking for a bathroom, and finding a surreal little golf training facility; another bar, with excellent flavoured soju and terrible, terrible french fries; an unfortunately closed karaoke room; waiting out the curfew with a bowl of instant cheese bokki, all the while listening to some interesting strategies for dealing with North Korea and also, some decades too late, winning the Vietnam War. Background: if you enter the dorm between midnight and 0500, you get demerits. This leaves the intrepid explorer of Korean culture still out at 0200 two options: take the hit, or stay out until 0500. Sometimes people really don’t want demerits. So anyway I’m pretty tired. I almost feel like I might just fall asleep right n
Billy – Thanks for the updates, but a few fatherly comments: I hope you realize those demerits will likely stay on your PERMANENT RECORD. Also, please avoid public discussion of North Korea-BB is listening, and they may not have liked that crack about the “Number 14 Heavy Raincoat Factory”. Miss you, Dad.
Yes, demerits aren’t ideal, but every man has his price and mine is three hours of sleep. Miss you too.
Willy – are you over there teaching English at Dankook or doing courses?
FYI – the homestay student staying with attends Dankook – not certain the # of demerits she may have :).
Have Fun!
Both! I taught for three weeks and just finished my three weeks of classes. What campus is she at?