SEOUL | My first days pt. 1
Saturday, September 06, 2014My first weekend in Seoul and I was ready to explore.
But first things first, my roomie Kookkai, her Thai friend, Belle and I were on a mission to equip our not-so-equipped dormroom – or “cupboard under the staircase a la Harry potter” room, whatever you want to call it. I’m talking a dorm in a size that can be classified as “illegal” in some countries: with a kitchen but no kitchen supplies or utensils whatsoever. However I’m not complaining, it has everything I need (except the things that I actually need), it’s cheap and super close to the campus (and I’m talking ’10 hopscotches’-close). But more on that later.
So first, we went for breakfast, which ended up in a brunch, because boy, these people are not joking around when it comes to portionsize. I had Juk, which reminded me of good old “rijst met soep” meets bubur ayam meets porridge.
To get everything we need, we went to Daiso. It’s like the Dutch chain Action – or how my uncle likes to call it: A C Tión (*French accent*). The stuff in the average Korean store is colorful, printed and “cute”, which made it hard for me to find anything neutral. You see, it’s hard to feel like a woman while you’re doing your make up in a bear-shaped mirror.
I decided I wanted Hongdae to be the first place I visit in Seoul. It was supposed to be known for its young audience, art, street artists, cool stores and restaurants. And yet again, internet was not lying about this. It was student galore and you just didn’t know where to look: it was amazing!




Funny story: we found out that there are a couple of special seats in the metro designed for elders. In our metro that we took, these were red. Guess where we sat? Yes, the compartment was almost empty, but these three foreigners sat in the red chairs. We found out because there was an old man sitting across us with a big frown on his face just sitting there silently judging us.. But hey, everything is excused in your first weeks, right? (To add to the defense: no English signs or pictures were given near these seats.)
The restaurant had everything –even the menu- written in Hanguel only. You’d, expect that in this day and age of technology, common sense and English television; in an area near a university, people would take time to write their menu’s in English or atleast have PICTURES. But hey, “It looks Korean and there are a lot of Koreans, so it must be good and popoular among the locals” (We’re such tourists). So, we picked whatever was suggested (don’t worry, on a scale of 1-10, we only got scammed maybe at a level of 7), eyeballed the interior of the place, stared at our side dishes with a lot of confusion, peaked how other people ate the food, got help of a Korean girl on how to eat our food – We successfully blended in with the Korean people.
All in all, Seoul is A-MA-ZING!
Blessings and love,
Nin
5 comments
Papa moest lachen op A C Tión haha. Ik hoop dat je je daar vermaakt ma gurrll
ReplyDeleteKussiesss Ruth
Ahh groetjes thuis! <3 !
ReplyDeleteLeuk Nien! En al dat eten.... Zooww lekker!
ReplyDeleteDikke kus! XXX
Geweldige blog.
ReplyDeleteMoest wel even mijn old skool engels ophalen, maar ik heb je blog kunnen lezen. :-)
Have fun & take care
X, Terence, Debbie, Allison en stoute Abbygail
haha, love your writing style! Ik kijk uit naar je volgende verhaal:). Kan ik nog wat meer buitenland opsnuiven, aangezien mijn avontuur alweer voorbij is. X
ReplyDelete