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5 things I will miss about Korea

It’s been a few days since my last post. I intend to write at least a couple of times a week, but I’ve been really smoking busy lately and am having trouble finding the time. In any case a regular style post that I’m planning on writing here is 5 Things. In a 5 Things post I will write about 5 things that I will miss (good things) about Korea or possibly not miss (bad things). I will also be doing the same things about living in Canada – 5 things I am looking forward to (good things) or 5 things I am not looking forward to (bad things).

Who knows maybe I’ll change my mind later, but right now this is what I’m thinking about as I start to plan the move to Canada. Today’s post is 5 things I’ll miss about Korea.

  1. Service. Korean companies really know how to treat the customer right. If I need to have my internet hooked when moving I can call the company the same day and usually they’ll be there that day. If it’s a little late, they will apologize and be sure to arrive early the next day. Generally speaking customer service revolves around the convenience of the customer. Need something repaired or serviced, usually it’s just a matter of calling up the company and they’ll send a service guy to your apartment at a time that’s convenient for you. Gotta love customer service that is customer oriented.
  2. neighborhood shops. It’s really convenient that everything I need is walking distance to my home. Local supermarkets are often cheaper than the big chains like Homeplus (equivalent to safeway) though the selection is lacking. within a 5 minute walk of every home I’ve had in Korea (and I’ve moved a lot) I’ve always been able to find 2-3 local supermarkets, dry cleaners, flower shop, cheap restaurants, watch shop (selling and repairs), hardware store (nuts, bolts, etc..) and a computer shop.
  3. Public Transportation. public transportation in Seoul is cheap, clean and efficient. The subway system is extensive with 9 main lines and 3 subsidiary lines. Taking the subway costs about cdn$1 for a basic fare and will get you almost anywhere you want. Further rides out to the burbs might up the cost to cdn$1.5 The buses are also frequent, though a little scary to ride due to the psychotic nature of driving in this country (a topic for a completely different post). The best thing is the transportation card which is an electronic card that you swipe to get in the subway or on the bus. When leaving the bus you can swipe it and if you transfer to the subway or another bus you don’t’ get charged extra. Bonus points for having credit cards chipped with this so your bus/subway fare gets auto billed to your credit card each month. update just found a post about what’s wrong with public transit in Ottawa – this is what I have to look forward to?.
  4. cheap high speed internet. Broadband here is truly broadband unlike what you get in Canada. I’m currently running some downloads on my computer, streaming music and syncing my harddrive with remote storage (sugarsync) and I just did this speed test and got a typical result. My monthly internet bill is cdn$35 and I have no upload/download limits. broadband speed
  5. Korean. After being in Korea for so long and not having to listen to English everywhere I go, it’s easy for me to concentrate when I’m out and about. When people are talking around me, it’s just white noise and not distracting. However anytime I’ve gone to Canada for a visit, I go crazy walking around the streets, mall etc because I can’t help but listen in on what everyone is saying. I seem to have lost my ability to ignore what other people are saying.

Anyhow that’s the first list. Let me know what you think.

Oct 08, 2009 Comments(12) Save on Facebook

Comments

Picture of JMac

JMac: Thursday Oct 8, 2009  at  02:44 AM Korea (South)

Good first list ... be interesting to see where these lists lead as you get deeper into the bureaucracy. -JMac

Picture of Sean

Sean: Thursday Oct 8, 2009  at  06:50 PM Korea (South)

JMac,
I’m also looking forward to it.

Picture of Hannah Nedrow

Hannah Nedrow: Thursday Oct 8, 2009  at  09:31 PM Korea (South)

I totally agree about all five.

Picture of wendi

wendi: Friday Oct 9, 2009  at  02:32 AM Spain

Personally, I don’t miss anything, not even the food and I was quite a fan.  I found the Korean service over the top.  I hated being followed around by nervous or curious or foreigner hating salespeople when I needed to buy something.  I didn’t admire the Korean language - I thought is was sexist, agist and that good stuff.  I don’t notice the difference in Internet service between Korea or anywhere else.  Canada doesn’t have great public transportation but here in Spain it is just as good.  I still plan to get a car anyway.  I never even considered it in Korea because the drivers are so bad there.  You can look forward to a much higher degree of safety and lawfulness.  I had everything I needed in Canada as I do here in Spain.  I think that you will find you will not be pining away for Korea once you settle in.  You will be happier if you focus on what you will be gaining by “repatriating”.  English for your children is just a drop in the bucket.  Canada is a good country.

Picture of Sean

Sean: Friday Oct 9, 2009  at  06:42 AM Korea (South)

Hannah,
thanks for dropping by. Are you in Korea right now or in the States?

Wendi,
Thanks for the comment. I’m happy to hear that Spain is working out for you. Any plans to return to Canada eventually?

Picture of Hannah Nedrow

Hannah Nedrow: Friday Oct 9, 2009  at  07:53 AM Korea (South)

Yup, still in Korea. I’ll be back in the States for a few months next year to finish my M.A, hopefully, but planning on staying here longer.

Wendi—-Honestly, I felt uncomfortable speaking Korean for a few years because I also thought it seems very agist, but I eventually realized that it is more related to social position than to age.  I heard a lot of people speaking “ban mal” to their parents or grandparents.  One good thing about Korea is that it is actually less sexist than English. There is no conjugation for gender in either verbs or nouns and pronouns also have no gender (unless you count the literally 3 person singerlar female 그녀).

Well, enough rambling. . .

Picture of Perry

Perry: Friday Oct 9, 2009  at  12:17 PM Canada

I was in Korea for 3 years and I thought that was a long time. you have done well my friend. Easy access to everything in Korea is a joy along with the excellent public transit. Although, I remember being on the subway for long periods of time. The buses were great. The hospitality of everyone in Korea from the waitresses/drycleaners/store owner/telephone companies etc. is just superb. Very hard to match it but when you come back to Canada you may wonder why you’re no treated well it’s just the standards in Korea were so high. So when you’re being served in a restaurant and waiting for 30 minutes, your needs are not being met, it’s just the way it is here in good old Canada. The comparisons of Canada to Korea will continue for a few years. You will seek out Korean restaurants, Korean people, and Korea will be in you for the rest of your life. Be thankful for your courage to go to Korea and to come back to Canada.

Picture of wendi

wendi: Friday Oct 9, 2009  at  03:46 PM Spain

Canada is not out of the question for me.  I have no immediate plans to move back but I don’t see myself living abroad forever.  I do think moving back to Canada or just leaving Korea alone is a big change.  It was for me.  You are wise to be planning and preparing for the differences well ahead.  What about making a top 5 things you are looking forward to in Canada?

I don’t think third person in English is sexist anymore than assigning grammatical gender to nouns is, as the use of neither signifies your “social position.”  I quit Korean a year after I arrived so what do I really know except that I wasn’t endeared.  But the ability to just tune everything out is a handy one and much easier to do if everyone around you is speaking your second language.  I notice the same thing when I visit Canadia.

Picture of Sean

Sean: Friday Oct 9, 2009  at  05:59 PM Korea (South)

Hannah, Perry, Wendi,

Thanks for all of your comments. Facebook is wonderful for driving a little bit of traffic to a new blog and I appreciate your thoughts.

Am off to the in-laws for the weekend and will be back with some pictures of the countryside. Yes this blog will be much more personal than EFL Geek. Repatriate Me! is definitely more of a diary style blog, though I’m still hoping that my posts related to immigration and red tape will be useful for others in the future.

Wendi,
5 things is going to be a semi-regular feature and I’ve definitely got a few of the “looking forward to” variety planned out.

Picture of Kevin Robinson

Kevin Robinson: Sunday Oct 11, 2009  at  02:22 AM Korea (South)

Good list.  I cringe at the thought of paying for internet and a cell phone back in the States.  My dad pays over $100 a month for internet, home phone, and TV.  For me, it’s about $40.  I’ll suck it up though.

Picture of Sean

Sean: Friday Oct 16, 2009  at  03:59 AM Korea (South)

Got a few hits to this post from http://www.maangchi.com/talk/topic/5-things-to-miss-about-korea

Thanks Stanford for the shout-out. drop by anytime, hope you leave a comment sometime.

Picture of XUP

XUP: Sunday Oct 18, 2009  at  12:09 PM Canada

I don’t know when you were in Canada last, but we are seriously lacking in all of those 5 things so I suspect you’re going to miss them more than you know.

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