Thursday, July 29, 2010

a pleasing consulation

I do love a pleasant surprise, don't you? My lovely recruiting organization prepared me for the visa application with emails like this one:
THE FIRST DISCUSSION I WOULD LIKE TO HAVE TODAY IS WE DO NOT HAVE MUCH TIME, ESPECIALLY IF YOU HAVE TO SEND YOUR DOCUMENTS BACK AND FORTH BY MAIL TO PROCESS YOUR VISA YOU ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO MAKE ANY MISTAKE (IF YOU MAKE A SINGLE MISTAKE IT IS GOING TO BE VERY DIFFICULT TO FIX IT AND MEET THE TIME FRAME).
Man was I surprised to find that the Korean Consulate General in Chicago is, in reality, a quite organized and forgiving place. It is downright charming. Compared to an ongoing battle over the receipt of my Master's diploma, a day long tug-of-war with the secretary of state office over a couple silly apostilles, and a series of completely stereotypical phone conversations with unsympathetic IRS agents, my trip to apply for my South Korean work visa was like a date with Ben & Jerry.

Not only was the office completely empty, making for an errand that totaled around 7 minutes, but there was a lovely woman speaking beautiful English who kindly told me to use the complimentary (!!) copy machine to duplicate my Notice of Appointment, smiled while stamping the heck out of my contract, and even giggled when I offered to return for the visa myself rather than wait for it in the mail. Fearing another snafu along the lines of my recruiter's warnings, I sheepishly whimpered, "Do you have any sense of how long it will take for the visa to be ready?" To which she responded thoughtfully, "Let me think -- today is Wednesday, so how about Monday?" My surprise must have registered so obviously (bad American! baaaad!) on my face that she quickly amended, "By 3 o'clock, ok? Can you come at 3 o'clock?" Um.... YEAH I can come... you do mean like five days from today, right? Can I come behind that perfectly polished glass window and kiss your adorable little bifocaled head?

So, my darling readers, this day marks an important milestone in the trans-world journey. My contract is signed and in the hands of a Korean consulate. My thesis is officially printed and turned in to the powers that be. And my days in Chicago are truly numbered: less than 2 weeks till I'm moved out of ole' 1D and en route across the sea. I actually didn't mean for that to rhyme but that just goes to show how completely synchronicitous (word?) this is after all!

Now if I could only get my hands on that Master's diploma so that I can drive back to the apostille for round 2, and convince those damn IRS agents to speed their booties up so I can get my tax exemption! Then I will really be set. For now, I'm just glad to know that there's a job waiting for me in Korea, and that I'll have the visa to get me there.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

auxiliary verbs lesson

Just fyi, if you were having trouble remembering why verbs are changed when reporting speech:

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

no more slacking, it's time for packing

Good news, friends! I am officially listed on the SMOE employment list for September, 2010. That means that (assuming I'm able to bring my apostilled Master's diploma with me to orientation) I have an official job in Seoul this fall. Yipes! This also means that my teaching contract is on its way into my hands and my days in Chicago are officially quite numbered. Yes, exactly 4 weeks from today I am beginning my multi-leg journey to the other side of the planet.

If you are most people, your [correct] response is: "Wow! That's so awesome and exciting!"

If you are my dental hygienist in Florida, your response is: "Oh my, really? Korea? Is that the South one? Wow... [pained expression] that sounds interesting..."

Packing my apartment is depressing. I haven't reeeaaaaaally done a big move.... ever. I mean, I moved to college with a couple suitcases of crap. And I moved into an apartment with Mil where we acquired more crap. Then I shoved all that crap down the hall to my current apartment where I added to it a carload of even more crap, on top of which I've been piling more crap over the past 2 years. This means not only a lot of crap to sort through, but a lot of memories and attachments. I'm very connected to my objects. And while Buddha would nod approvingly at my current attempt to cleanse for this trip, personally, going from this:


to this:


is really just sad to me. I am sad to be wiping my entire life into a storage bin and skipping out to God-Knows-Where, South Korea, with only a couple suitcases and a somewhat hypothetical and nonexistent contract to cushion my fall. It's a scary heap of change, and I'm not afraid to admit that I'm a little anxious about it. I'm a planner and a do-er, and I rely on strong images and goals to push me through. Without even a little image of what this coming year will hold, I'm apprehensive, if also excited, to get going and take the journey.