This was in Gangneung in June. This was the first beach I'd gotten to relax on in... a long time.
... and this was the result. It hurt, and didn't fade for five days.
We took some pictures again in taekwondo. This one turned out pretty neat.
That's Priscilla. She's cool, but losing our fight. One time, I accidentally kicked her in the face.
That's 여진. This picture makes me kind of sad because it ended, sort of badly, about a week later.
That's the Han River Park! I love that park, and I was really excited because the grass was green. I like grass. Sure, the sky was kind of a bland, gray that day, but it was really nice.
In some temple in Gangnam. 여진 took this.
I really wasn't going to put anything about my personal life in the blog, but... whatever.
That's my friend, 광호. This was at the North Korea - South Korea "football" game.
After the game the subway was massively crowded... "grab your children! pull him in before the door closes!"
unicorn fire laser : GOOD
We went to Mui Island, just off Incheon's coast with some of the teachers. I was wearing sandals accidentally, thinking we were going to the beach. We climbed a mountain instead. Oh well, if some of the teachers were bringing a cloth parasol, I think my sandals were fine. They were.
My last class with the little demons... er... first graders. They're actually really cute, just a little crazy. I was glad to be rid of them.
I had them all jump up at the same time. They loved it, once they understood what I wanted.
On Deok Jeok island. This is Scott, playing ball with a Korean family we met. I took this picture, though, to show the mountains int he background. Although it rained, it was still beautiful. It's so strange to think that all this is so close to my home in Incheon.
Me looking really pretty with my Poncho, eating the second real hamburger I've eaten in the last year. I went with foreigners and we grilled good ol' hamburgers on a grill. I miss that. so much. The other real hamburger I had was in Gwangzhou, China. McDonald's doesn't count.
Osteoporosis. It is frequent among the elderly in Korea, mostly because they were so malnourished until about the 1980s. It's really sad, especially when they're working intense jobs, like picking up garbage bags of trash on the street.
This was on Deok Jeok Island, when it was beautiful the second day. The sky was blue and the sun was bright, but on the horizon we could see a fog that covered all of the other islands, letting just the tip poke out. It looked really neat. I've never really seen anything like it.
I like how calm the water was in this little bay.
All this is so close to Incheon, technically part of the town. It's so nice and so close, yet I hadn't visited.