. . . . At least it seems that way here. I hardly ever go a week without updates, but lately that's been the case. It's 11:19 am on Tuesday, the 13th of September. Yesterday was known as Chuseok, Korean Thanksgiving holiday. It also has something to do with the eighth full moon of the year on the Lunar Calendar. I kind of feel like I've done nothing but sleep during this holiday.
Let's start with Friday night. After a long week of being repetitive (what this new job requires =( ), I had dinner with the ladies from work, Courtney, and Brittany. Trace, Courtney's fiance joined us as well for a fun meal at one of the restaurants near our apartments. I declined an invitation after wards to go downtown, and instead took on a little project with my washing machine.
Ever since I had moved in to the apartment, the washing machine hose had been leaking whenever I turned the washer on. So, I decided to take the hose apart and fix it. . . . and the one tool I had to rely on was a kitchen knife. The stupidity on my part was that I wasn't paying attention the whole time, and didn't put the pieces back the way they were supposed to go. After taking a long break, I finally got the darn thing fixed at 2:15 in the morning, so I was able to finish the small load I had been working on.
Saturday morning, I sluggishly woke up to get to the bus station and travel to where Annie lives. That was a little bit of a task being that it was a holiday weekend. There was a ton of people traveling on Saturday at least, but traffic flowed pretty consistently. I arrived in Gongju (where I used to live) about 12:55pm (traffic slowed us down by about 15 minutes). Annie and I some kind of full course meal for lunch which was alright. It was raw fish, but not raw fish at its best.
We finished our lunch and took a 40 minute bus ride to a Buddhist temple. Usually Buddhist temples are pretty cool sites to see in South Korea. On this day, not so much. It was raining off and on, and then the rain would get heavy at times. The scenery around this place wasn't much to see, but it was quality time together.
The only downfall of not having my own transportation in this country is sometimes you have to wait for a bus, and sometimes that bus may not come for an hour (according to its schedule). So we waited and waited and the bus arrived to take us back in town about an hour after we were finished with our tour of the Magoksa. Sorry, but I didn't even get any pictures -- I'm kind of burned out by the similarities with most of the places -- though there are a few good ones, that I may have to revisit.
I'll return to finish this soon!!! Soon shouldn't mean a week later, but that's the way it goes sometimes. That weekend went over well, since last week we celebrated Chuseok (Korean Thanksgiving). I celebrated with my Korean family and watched the Ancestral Rites, something that I had seen previously during the Lunar New Year holiday. I didn't feast like I normally do, but I enjoyed being around the Korean family (big and small people).