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Friday, November 30, 2012

Guest Post Series: Matthew Marx

So this is my friend Matt.  He's from Wisconsin, but I met him while he was completely out of his element in Korean class in Seoul.  Our friendship adventures include going to Seoul SantaCon 2011 and me skipping out on a coffee date with him and our teacher.  Despite my poor platonic relationship skills here, Matt agreed to write about Home here, and I'm so glad he did.  There are few blogs that make me smile and laugh as much as Matt's.  (In fact, the only other blog I consider on this level is Ally Brosh.)  I know the topic of Home can be taken in all sorts of directions, but, Matt stays true to form.

"Home Is Where the Mart Is " 
by Matthew Marx 

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Guest Post Series: Sarah Lillard

Guys, this is my friend Sarah Becker Lillard. She's gotten married since I first started calling her Becker, but that's still my favorite nickname for her. We met in college. We were two school years apart, but we got to be in student government together, and we had a few classes together, too, because we were both communications majors.

One of my first memories of Becker is when she got in front of our Nonverbal Communication class to share different pictures she had taken while in Louisiana.  Wow, her photos were beautiful.  It's been so much fun and very exciting to get to know so many other parts of who Becker is.  She writes, cares, shares, and enjoys so very well, and I am very happy to introduce you to her and to publish her thoughts on Home here.

"The Places I Call Home"
by Sarah Becker Lillard

I have lived in many places. Texas, Virginia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee have all been places of residency these twenty-one years of life. I’ve had short stints abroad – France and England – and am looking forward to longer stints when my husband finishes graduate school.

I jumped on the chance to share some ideas on “home” – although after pondering the concept for many years, it took several days for my pen to start filling a blank sheet of paper! I think home is almost as simple as being surrounded by those you love and those who love you. I think it is also familiarity, a sense of safety, and a little something extra. In a sentence, I believe the concept of home changes from person to person.

I’ve learned that home is more about an experience than a place. Today, I’d like to share with you the five places I call home – and ask you to ponder yours!

My Grandparents House on the Lake – Ft. Worth, Texas


Monday, November 26, 2012

Guest Post Series: Blake Palmer

Number five in our guest post series is by Blake Palmer.  Guys, he tells such great stories, and you have got to check out the stuff he writes on his blog, Typus Orbis Terrarum.  When you go, you'll notice pretty quickly that his stories come from Korea.  That's where we met!  Blake and I work together in Seoul and have gotten to share many good conversations.  He always has well thought out ideas to say, and I'm glad he's written for us today!

"Manifold Homes for a Wandering Heart"
by Blake Palmer

Being a person who tends to move around a great deal, it has become a common occurance for people to ask me where I'm from. Despite being presented with a multitude of opportunities  I've yet to conjure what feels like a reasonable response to this seemingly simple question.

I always seem to sputter about for an uncomfortable period of time, naming off a few areas that seem like plausible answers before eventually resigning myself to saying something akin to, "The South, mostly."
My inability to gracefully handle one of the most basic pillars of introductory small talk has led me to spend a great deal of time attempting to define for myself exactly what home is.

My birthplace might seem like an easy answer to default to. I was born in Memphis, and would eventually spend two beautiful years there. There are deeply good people who inhabit that strange and gritty city that I count amongst the very best that I know. It's the beginning of what I have loosely categorized as my adult life, and the backdrop for most of my more significant professional achievements. However, those years were well after college, and hardly seem to qualify me for the exalted status of native son.

Then there are those elementary and middle school years in which I first began to awkwardly grasp at achieving some understanding of who I was, and who I wanted to be as a person. Those years belong entirely to a small town in western Kentucky called Mayfield. Being a rather socially inept little person who had been shoehorned into a part of the world where families have lived for generations, and social structures are firmly cemented by the end of kindergarten, I didn't have much in the way of friends. But I can thank a few good teachers and a great deal of spare time for this being the place in which I first developed a deeply instilled love for words and stories, without which I would be an entirely different person than I am today. 

Niceville, Florida has a strong case for hometown status. It's where I finally began to see the high tide of painful teen angst slowly recede, where I spent the entirety of my high school years, and where I would return to during breaks from college. It's where I first liked a girl who liked me back, where I weathered my parents' divorce, and where I first made the types of friends that you keep for the rest of your life. There are a harrowing host of memories dwelling in that small, beachside town and it's always a bittersweet ordeal to see it again, but I will always want to see it again.

My last two years before leaving the US were spent in Austin, Texas, which, to date, possesses the highest concentration of people that I would trade all of my money to see and bear-hug into oblivion. It's a weird, transient town where, looking back, it seems like I accomplished nothing and everything all at the same time. In a very short time, it changed me at a deep and core level which I truly believe was for the better, and the stories I left with might not even sound believable to anyone who doesn't know first hand that anything is possible in Austin. If a place can become home in only two years, this would be the city that could do it.

Then there are those other pockets of the world that lay claim to little pieces of my life. Places where I've never applied for a library card or had my mail forwarded to, but still carry a significant weight on my person because there are people there that, by choice or by fate, I call family: 

I will probably never overcome my fear of winter for long enough to set roots in Idaho, but nothing carries the calm weight of home like standing over the stove with a hot cup of coffee in my mother's kitchen. Northeast Arkanasas is amongst the last places I would choose to move to, but it holds almost the entirety of my extended relatives, some of my childhood's most fond memories, and, if you catch me in an unguarded moment, traces of the deeply southern accent I tried to kill for a good portion of my youth. And I may be a far, far cry from holding any sort of claim on Glasgow, but there are good hearts and kind faces there that I will be deeply proud to call family for the rest of my life.

Which leads this wandering tale to where I am now. Tucked away in my own beautiful little corner of one of the biggest, busiest cities our world has to offer. I think I won't be able to know the impact that Seoul has had on my life until I've left it behind, but I can tell you that, right now, I wouldn't want to be anywhere else. Every week is packed with as many new and bizarre experiences as some people achieve in a year. To be certain, I am a stranger in a strange land, but it has already taken on so many of those core elements that turn a destination into what can only be called a home.

People will continue to ask me where I am from, and I will continue to fumble awkwardly for the words with which to tell them. But a close examination of my life has left room for only one true answer. Home is the people we carry with us, however far we may be.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Guest Post Series: Millie Sweeny

My BFF Millie Sweeny is posting for us next!  I really like her, so I'm especially excited.  It's also pretty cool that even though I know I'm terribly biased, Millie's still the coolest cat even if you're not her best friend.  You can check out her blog, Sugar and Spice, to see for yourself.  Her writings challenge me and open my eyes to new ways to spin words.  (Millie's a published poet which is killer awesome.)  And now, ladies and gentlemen, here she is!

"Slow-Cooking A Home"
by Millie Sweeny

Hi! I’m Millie. I think I can brag and say I hold the title of being Lindsay’s BFF for reals.


I’m not as cool as she is, but that’s okay.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Guest Post Series: Andrew Davis

The third installment in our guest post series comes from Andrew Davis of Eastward from West.  I call him Davis.  Davis and I are close friends from college.  We sort of had a cool kids club our senior year.  Eh, not really, but we did get together with other good friends to discuss our chapel lectures a lot.  I was often encouraged to go deeper when Davis would share his thoughts, and I'm very excited that he's sharing again here.  Enjoy!

"Home as Family"
by Andrew Davis

I walked up to the customs counter and handed him my passport. “What was your purpose in Canada?” asked the US agent. “Just visiting friends,” I replied. “Welcome home,” the guard said. Welcome home? I'm technically in international space in an airport. I'm not home. I haven't even gotten on a plane yet. Home is twenty-five hundred miles away and that's why I'm in the airport. I'm not home and I want to be home. I felt I had been cheated by that guard. I wanted to be welcomed home by people who made home what it is and have it said to me when I was actually home.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Guest Post Series: Jasmine in Brisbane, Australia

Next in our guest post series, I am honor to introduce you to Jasmine from Brisbane, Australia!  I found Jasmine's blog through clicking on another's friend's blog, and I was instantly taken by her photography and the candor she used in her writing.  I also think it's neat to have connections all around the world, so I started following her pretty quickly.

Today, Jasmine will show us around her city through her camera lens.  (Gosh, as if I didn't already want to visit Australia...)  Who wants to go?!

"A Tour of Brisbane"

by Jasmine

Brisbane City Hall

Hello, hello! I’m Jasmine from :: Lavender’s Green :: and I am so happy to tell you a bit about my home town while Lindsay is on her way back home. I live on the East Coast of Australia in a city called Brisbane, which is the capital city of Queensland, the sunshine state.

View of Brisbane City from the top of the Wheel of Brisbane

I moved to Brisbane when I was 10 and I love it here. It’s sunny almost all year ‘round (my perfect kind of weather) and has a fantastic laidback culture and vibe. Queensland is known for its gorgeous beaches and amazing theme parks. I love that I live so close to where other people from around Australia come for their Summer holidays.

Wheel of Brisbane

One of my favourite places to go is South Bank. South Bank is directly across the river from the city, it has cute cafes and boutiques as well as a man-made beach with a view of the city while you swim. On the weekend South Bank is full of handmade markets and street performers. It’s a great place to grab a bite to eat and soak up the atmosphere. South Bank is also home of the museum and art gallery, and the best part is, it’s only a stroll across the bridge back to the CBD.

View of Brisbane City from outside the Art Gallery

Bougainvillea at South Bank

View of Brisbane City from Mt Coot-tha

I think Brisbane is still a bit of an untapped gem. Most tourists come to Australia and immediately think of places like Sydney (and with the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House, who can blame them?), but Brisbane has so much to offer tourists from all around the world. An American musician who was touring Australia said to me last month that he loves Brisbane and how unique it is, because it’s the only place in Australia where you can walk amongst kangaroos and emus and pat them without the restriction of fences. He was talking about Lone Pine Sanctuary and it is a MUST see if you ever visit Brisbane.

Chilling with an emu at Lone Pine

A kangaroo at Lone Pine

I could waffle on about Brisbane, but I think I’ll leave it here. I hope you’ve enjoyed the mini tour of my city!



Feel free to let Jasmine know when you're coming to visit!  ^^
But really, you can comment here or head over to her blog at :: Lavender's Green :: to say hello.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Guest Post Series: Andrew Wilber

Guys, I am way pumped to be starting our guest post series about Home.  And, I'm especially excited to begin with this post from Andrew Wilber.  He and I met in college and got to share a few conversations, but I started to know him more through reading his blog after graduating.  He writes very well as he shares life and talks about topics that broaden my world.  (I usually feel smarter after reading his blog.)  I especially appreciate this post here; the conclusion he comes to leaves me with such a good and full sigh.

"Strange Places That Feel Like Home"
by Andrew Wilber


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Home - A Guest Post Series

Not long from now, I will once again be moving to a different country.  This brings many ideas about what makes home Home.  Over the next few weeks, I will be posting stories and musings from other bloggers here about that very topic.  I'm really excited about it, actually.  I've gotten to read many of the posts already, and I can tell you there's a lot of good stuff on the way.  And, it's our first guest post series!  You can see all posts in the series here.

Be sure to check in on what these bloggers will be writing.  Their work will be posted on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays until the end of the series.

I know I'm not a guest here, but I want to kick off the series with Seoul and how it's become home to me.

My first week in Seoul had me already in love with the city.  My first city.  My first place where I lived completely out from under all the wings that protected me at home and at college.  My first completely on-my-own experience.  Besides one friend I didn't know well who was living in Korea ahead of me, no one from my past was coming with me.  This adventure was mine.

I've gotten pretty connected to this place in the past 16 months.  I've built many communities and relationships.  I've tried most of the must-do's and seen most of the must-see's.  I've gotten lost and claimed favorite restaurants.  And while I have collected many friends and acquaintances in this time, the fact that I'm technically on my own has given me ultimate power to completely claim this experience.  The freedom and its adjoining responsibility that came with moving to Korea  has been one of the defining factors as to why Seoul will always be immensely special and important to me.  I got to, and had to, do things on my own, and carving my own way here has made my time in Seoul unforgettable and distinctly mine.  Distinctly my own home.

The other half of why Seoul rocks my world is those friends and acquaintances I've collected.  I gotta say, it's their fault I chose to add 5 more months to my year-long contract.  My church, guys, my church is IT.  I think I've written here before about how I felt like my soul was home the first second I walked into the sanctuary at Jubilee Church.  Who knew the people I'd meet there would prove to be a life-saving support system and my favorite part of this entire experience?  Seoul is a great place even if you never put a foot inside a church, but Jubilee made it deep, amazing, and dag-gum hard to leave.


Friday, November 9, 2012

K-Pop: Beyond "Gangnam Style"

You have by now most likely seen the internet sensation of PSY's "Gangnam Style" (of which Korea is very proud).  In fact, you've probably seen a couple parodies, too.  (See my favorites Here and Here.)

I've got twenty-eight minutes and sixteen seconds worth of music to show you what you're missing on if you haven't checked into more beyond PSY's (awesome) song.

Welcome to the world of Korean pop music, aka K-pop.
But first, I gotta tell you that the majority of the K-pop I hear falls into neat categories.  Either it's snazzy club music, cutesy cute music, slow sappy music, or pure catchiness with influences from either of the first categories.  I know that American pop has its own categories, too, but something about K-pop makes me feel like it's all created in a factory.  Granted, factories have become trustworthy for a reason, but there's also a reason why the idea of "K-pop" takes a while for me to swallow each time I think of it.

I want to show you some of the songs that are on the fringes of the factory boundaries.  I don't claim to know all about the music of Korea, but I keep my ears open, and I make notes of what I find enjoyable.

First up:
"1.2.3.4" by Lee Hi (이하이)
(Just came out this week!)

Lee Hi was a finalist on "K-pop Star" (similar to American Idol), and it's easy for me to see how she would have won so many fans to get so far in the show.  Her 16-year-old voice has a similar quality to others that the West is familiar with, but it's so different from the rest of what you hear here in Korea.  For further commentary on the music video and (which I have to agree with) and on Lee Hi's production company, YG Entertainment, check out this article at The Prophet Blog.


 
Click here for an English translation of the lyrics.

"UP" by EPIK HIGH
(Came out a month or two ago)

I have to own up to how I was first drawn to this song by Monster Woo's second-long special appearances (the first one is at 0:59), but after catching my breath again after watching Monster Woo's krump magnificence, I really liked the song, too.  It's a party song.  One to shout with the windows down.  And, it's very different from standard K-pop, so it's worth a listen just for that.

Here's the English translation.

"Black Rain + Break Out" by Younha (윤하)
(From 2009)

Not one to be heard walking through the streets of Seoul (it is 3 years old), this song is a welcome distraction from the mind-numbing cutesy K-pop.  It shows you Korean music touches other ideas.  I like the way it sounds.  Electric guitar solo?  Absolutely.  It reminds me of the fun times my dad and I spent listening to classic rock.


Here's the English translation.

"Venus" by Shinhwa (신화)
(Came out March, 2012)

One of the cool things about this song is that it's come from a 14-year-old K-pop boy band.  That's right, folks, 14 years.  This is their big comeback song from this year after a four year break (during which the members served their required time in the military).  And dang, isn't this song just a blast?  It sounds like something Enrique Iglesias would do.


And the English translation.

---------------------------------------------

And now deeper into the throes of the more traditional K-pop.  The fluffy stuff.  The stuff blared from Korean convenience stores and the clubs.  I'm giving you a collection of most of the best of 2011.  Korea's favorites.  And, yeah, quite a few of my favorites, too.

It's just over 12 minutes, but if you watch the entirety of this next video, I can promise that you will:
  • taste the most annoying version of cute ever (#9).
  • sample the melodrama Korea goes wild for (#8).
  • see how popular cosmetic surgery is among Korean celebrities (#10-1).
  • glimpse two dudes who made a cameo in "Gangnam Style" (#4).
  • get a small punch of  the special blend of sexy+cute seen in K-pop (#3).
  • gain a broader view of what influences young South Korea (#10-#1).
And I am not going to expound upon that last one this round...


If you find yourself completely turned off by the first few songs, don't flake out just yet.  I don't care for those ones, either.  I don't think the good ones start filing in till #7 with "Hands Up" by 2PM. (The kids like singing the chorus in class.)  Actually, besides #5, "Good Day" by IU, I really like all of numbers 7 to 1.  And if I wanted to make this post extra long, I'd make sure I pointed out just how much I enjoy these four songs in particular:

#6 왜 (Keep Your Head Down) by TVXQ
Man, I love this song!  It's got so much more oomph than what you find in the typical K-pop songs, but even separate from that comparison, I am so digging this song.  And did you check ou tthe video?  They've got some slick moves!  I am a huge fan.

#4 "Tonight" by Big Bang
I'm pretty certain this song could make it in the American circles.  It reminds me of summer hip hop.  It's a little lighter than what you hear in the States, but everyone's got their own flavor, right?

#3 "The Boys" by Girls Generation
I know it has the depth and sass of blue cotton candy, but this song is so dang catchy!  I've watched the video loads of times, and I've tried to figure out a couple of the moves.

#2 "Roly Poly" by T-ARA
Okay, here we come to the more guilty of my guilty pleasures.  I consider T-ARA flavor to be on the more annoying side of the K-pop scale, but... you gotta try the dance moves, man.  Then everything will make sense.  It's just fun.

Please, please, please, tell me what you think of these songs!  Hate them?  Love them?  Wish they weren't in some foreign language?  Wish you could move like that?  (That's what I think every time.)  I know how I feel about K-pop now that I've been in Korea for 16 months, but what about you guys?

Sunday, November 4, 2012

What Ruby Found

Maybe I've told you about how my preschool students will sometimes be the best people in the world and ask, "Teacher, can I play with your hair?"  I love it when they do that, however it is not my favorite thing when Ruby will catch my attention to say, "Teacher.  White hair."



I let them pull out the ones they find in the back, but I tell them I want to keep the ones that are congregating around my right temple.  They don't know who the X-man, Rogue, is, but I tell them that if I keep those white hairs growing in that area, I'll look awesome.  Er.  AwesomER.

I don't think they believe me.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Korean Culture: Vanity

I've been keeping a list of differences between American culture and Korean culture.  I've been sifting through the list a lot lately because I don't want to forget about some important way I'll have to adjust when I go back to the States.  Fore example, I'm going to have to remember to tip waiters and baristas in the States, and I won't be able to expect free food and samples and extra service when I go shopping or eating.

I think one of the hardest things to stop will be looking in the mirror.

Okay, I know that sounds silly.  Allow me to explain.

In Korea, looks are everything, and everyone is expecting to behave that way.  When a young boy spends four minutes looking in the subway window reflection and sweeping his hair, that's completely normal.  When a gaggle of girls spend their entire meal with their handheld mirrors close to their faces, it makes sense.  There are even mirrors in some of the most unexpected places to give people more opportunity to check on how they look.  And don't even start to look down on everyone taking self portraits on their cell phones.

The thing is, none of this is considered vain or even unhealthy.  It's completely natural to want to look your best, and we all know that first impressions are important.  It's not looked down upon at all to check yourself out in the mirror over and over and over.

Unfortunately for those of us who have blended into Korean culture, that is not the case in the States.

Dear friends. If you see me spending too much time in front of reflective surfaces in America, please don't think the worst of me.  I promise that I have other interests than myself, I just want to make sure that I look the way I want to look.

After 16 months of living in Korea, this is what I look like now:



Just kidding!  That's Lizzy from the K-pop group, After School!