Archive for July, 2009

update

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Too much has been going on – it feels like it’s been too long since I’ve posted anything – where to even start? This is why I often wonder about the usefulness, or desirability, of maintaining a blog at all. When I feel too far behind it seems like there is some unspoken pressure, an obligation, to get on it. Kellyshepherd.com is still here, obviously, so I haven’t done away with it yet – but sometimes I wonder. UPDATES. No photos this time, there have been simply too many taken recently.

1. I recently finished traveling throughout southern South Korea, tracing a big triangle on the map of the country: Seoul to Busan to Gwangju and back to Seoul. Excellent to visit old friends, eat good food, see some familiar sights and explore some new places too. Korea! So much ancient and sometimes painful history; so much profound and fragile beauty; so much to see and do. Bus travel: see the countryside, the mountains, the rice fields. The rural areas, even the rare wilderness areas. It’s truly a shame, I think, that so many people never see or appreciate the beauty of Korea’s landscape! It’s a place of endless mysteries, I think, a place of things hidden, things waiting to be discovered. But you need to go out and look! You have to get on a train or a boat, or hike up a hillside, or something. So many people, buying in to the illusion that they’ve somehow “made it” if they live in Seoul, will simply never leave the city. Never mind: many people are far more concerned with what’s happening to their favorite TV characters than with what’s actually going on outside their apartment windows! But maybe it’s for the best. It’s just like birdwatching here – people often say “What are you talking about? There are no birds in Korea!” and meanwhile there is a small mountain only ten minute’s walk away, teeming with woodpeckers, orioles, parrotbills, turtle doves, bulbuls, pheasants, and so on. Maybe it’s good that so many people are ignorant (or in denial) of these facts. Maybe it means that there will be that many less people on the trails (or on the buses, or in the obscure cities, or in the cheap motels), making noise and ruining the view.

2. Books. I’ve got nothing to read! No, let me rephrase that. I’ve got so many books to read but which one do I choose? I just finished the huge Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock. Not sure what to say about this one. It’s huge? An epic quest for explanations to many of the mysteries of the ancient world., for example the pyramids and other monolithic structures in Egypt, South America, and Mexico. Probably considered pseudoscience by some readers, and gospel truth by others. Interesting nonetheless.  Freakonomics was a big disappointment, though, another one of those so-called “subversive” books that promises so much, tells you it will blow your mind or shift your paradigm, etc. but then simply… doesn’t. Korean Temple Motifs, on the other hand, was an excellent read. Very informative and interesting. Nice photography. I wish I would’ve found this one years ago! An in-depth look at the symbolism behind the art and architecture of Korean Buddhist temples.

3. I almost forgot – speaking of birds -Bulam the Pigeon (the Bathtub Buzzard) was released into a big pigeon-friendly park quite a few weeks ago. He left his cardboard box, blinked, and immediately started pecking at ants on the ground. I have been back a few times since then to see if I could catch a glimpse of him, but haven’t seen him. Here’s hoping that he found food, shelter, and friends - and that as I type this he’s perching happily under the subway tracks or on a highrise window-ledge.

gainfully unemployed

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Friday was my last day at work. Hard to believe that was a full year! A place and a routine can just become a part of you, and then the time is finished, the contract is finished, and you leave that place and you have to find a new routine. To say nothing of the people you grow close to in that time. I won’t miss all of my students and coworkers, but I’ll miss some of them a lot. But this paragraph is microscopic! Certainly inadequate to convey what I’d like about these people – my favorite preschool students! – and this city, and this whole experience. I might be revisiting this topic for years.

Time for some traveling within Korea now, to see the countryside and visit friends. Looking forward to riding buses again. There is something about traveling, I’ve always thought, both the feeling of motion, and the idea of it. Going somewhere. Leaving the familiar, being deliberately open to what might lie around the next bend, carrying your possessions on your back. Moving. The idea that a journey can be, in itself, a destination. And so on. I rode Greyhound buses occasionally in Canada and always appreciated the glimpses into culture and personality that those trips offered. Not to mention the scenery! I always find bus rides (or ferry rides, or train rides, even subway rides) very conducive to creativity. Inspiring.

Seoul: buckets of rain falling these days: everything is increasingly more green and wet. Umbrella Days. This was never a city in which I’d want to stay for the rest of my life – too big, too busy – but for this past year it has become something like home.

. . .

Books. I’m currently reading Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner (subtitled “A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything”). Attempting to answer some unusual societal questions – such as “what do public school teachers and sumo wrestlers have in common?” and “why do so many drug dealers live with their moms?” – using the tools of economics. I feel like I should have discovered this book a long time ago.

Also reading Down the River by Edward Abbey. A funny, angry, passionate collection of essays about river ecology, the history of river management, and the author’s own experiences traveling down some of the great American rivers. Anti-establishment sentiments, wilderness philosophy, Henry David Thoreau.

The first book is like a coffee-buzz conversation, you’d want to stay up with these guys in a bright all-night cafe and talk until sunrise, talk until your throat hurts, listen to your own culture being dissected and then put back together again, and wish you had been recording the whole thing. The second book is like a long camping trip (or boat ride) with a grumpy uncle. He is opinionated and cranky but knows his stuff; he’s been doing this and writing about it since before you were born. He likes the coyotes that howl in the early-morning desert more than he likes you, but after you spend some time with him, it all starts to make sense.

from sidewalks and pathways

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

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Odd and beautiful Gingko Trees (Gingko biloba) line the city streets everywhere in Korea.

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Part of a larger park full of exercise equipment, a soccer field, picnic areas, and a running track, these photos show what we affectionately call the “Foot Park.” Small stones with varying degrees of smoothness (and sharpness) have been set into the concrete path, which you walk on to massage your feet. Stone reflexology.

Days of Roses: the rose season is almost over now, so these particular pictures are a little outdated now. As I mentioned in an earlier post, roses are grown extensively throughout Seoul beside apartment buildings, sidewalks, and retaining walls, as well as in parks and gardens. Colorful and fragrant walking.

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Magical pathways: various views of Bulamsan.

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. . . and last but not least, Happy Canada Day! My country is 142 years old!