Wednesday, June 17, 2009

First Day in Korea!


I arrived at Incheon International Airport (ICN) at approximately 5:15 in the morning. After getting off the plane, we were hearded into a hallway and instructed to turn in our health forms and submit to authorities taking our temperature via our ear canals. I was pretty sure I would pass, but there was a little apprehension in the back of my mind thinking that one little thermometer beep could really ruin my day. I chuckled to myself at the first of many “what the hell” moments that will be Korea.



Having passed this first test, I proceeded to choose the slowest moving customs line in the airport. I started somewhere near the middle of the pack yet managed to be the fifth to last person passing through through immigration from our Chicago flight. I guess this is Murphy’s law of travel, although perhaps it could be explained by the foreign kid who doesn’t understand anything and doesm’t want to do anything idiotic to mess up his immigration process (more on this later).



The immigration official asked one or two half hearted questions as she pretended to look carefully over my information. “First time in Korea” she asked me as she flipped to check that I had the correct visa in the back of my passport. “Yes” is all she required as she didn’t concern herself with such trifling matters such as my employer, address, etc. Not that I am complaining, as I would have probably struggled through this information and given her the wrong answer. In fact, I still don’t know how to tell people where I live other than “Choenho Emart-uh”. Choenho is the subway station I live by, and emart the direct copy of Super-Walmart, Meijers, or any one stop shopping centers. If you add "uh" to any english word, Koreans seem to understand it much better (i.e. the restaurant Bennigans-uh).



The “Pig Flu” paranoia didn’t end there, as we had to pass by thermal cameras so that we could be scanned once again for elevated temperatures. I think I was one of the few people that was aware of this. I almost didn’t notice them, but as we walked from immigration to baggage claim there were a couple of oddly placed camcorders on tripods. Their location and out of place look was in stark contrast to the incredibly well designed and orderly airport. I sat there for a minute or two watching thecolorful people shaped blobs floating across the monitors. Having made it through the gauntlet myself I sort of half hoped to see someone get carted off for carrying the plague over to the hermit nation.




I picked up my bags at the baggage drop and proceeded to customs. When you are trying to pack a year's worth of everything into two suitcases, you know exactly what you have brought and what you had left behind. My only question was the two bottles of Jack Daniels that I had picked up in immigration at the request of my two friends. This is, of course, Illegal. However, after talking for a minute or two to the customs official, I convinced her that I would in fact give one of the bottles away fifty feet beyond the door. A slight lie, but luckily she bought it. I had violated some sort of International trade law, sure, but all she made me do was promise to follow the rules next time.




I continued on. I had seen airports before, I had gone through the visa process before. This was the end of the familiar. I stepped through the double doors ahead ready to accept whatever it was ahead of me.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Flight Over

I’m sitting on Asiana flight 235. I have been flying for what I guess has been ten hours already sancwiched between a cloudy window and two politely smiling Koreans. The flight has been all together not aweful for the … twelve? Hours that I have been flying so far. (I am looking at the clock on my laptop which says 10:57 am, I believe this is still set to EST). Things can’t be all that bad when you’re asleep, though I have reached the point where it takes far more effort to stay asleep than it does to decide you’re up and might as well do something.

The travel agent called me at 1:30 yesterday morning to tell me that he had booked my flight and that I would be leaving the next day from the Detroit Airport at 7:30. Finally, there was some momentum to this after a weekend of excitedly and timidly waiting for a call that would suddenly make this all real. The best way I can think of to describe the feeling is to compare it to a roller coaster. You know you’re on the ride and buckled in, but that only somewhat prepares you for the “oh shit” excitement and thoughts of “what the hell did I get myself into?” as you stall at the top of the first hill.

Well the answer is still that I have no idea. Things will be interesting, tough, and hopefully worth reading about. I am hoping to brush up on my Korean for the last few hours of the flight as it so far consists only of hello, thank you, and bimimbap (delicious, order it next time you’re at a Korean restaurant). I realize that there will be someone picking me up at the airport, and that Nate and Adam will be able to help a little bit when they’re around me, but it’s a little bit terrifying to realize that you’re not going to be able to communicate or understand the majority of people that you meet on a day to day basis. Oh well, that is much of the excitement. As Di and I were talking the other day, you can’t take yourself that seriously when you’re pantomiming what you want to order for lunch.