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Monday, September 23, 2013

FROZEN SOUL IN FREEZING SEOUL






Bitterly bone chilling cold is tolerable for five minutes. Into the sixth minute, hallucinations of hot burning scorching sun searing down my back commences the beginning of my insanity. If it were not for work, I would not opt to fly to Seoul, Korea in the dead of winter. My friend, Chung Kim, informed me over skype that outside his house, it was -15°C and predictions for the week, will go as low as -25°C

Any preconceived notions from all avenues of media, did not prepare me for the two things that struck about Korea, Koreans and the “Zeitgeist” of Korea.  The spirit of the age and the atmosphere of the place spelt “successfully clawed out of an abyss……hauling strength, self worth back up.” 

Early morning Seoul is a grey, misty and bone-gripping cold.  Sipping steaming tea whilst waiting for check-in time  -  Mr. Kim declined to waste time and took us on a visit to Jogyesa Temple.   Having practiced Buddhism in the threshold of “Theravadism,” the teachings of analysis, the doctrine that says insight must come from the aspirant's experience, critical investigation, and reasoning instead of blind faith.  To witness another form of Buddhism, “Bodhisattvas,” representing various aspects of compassion and wisdom filled my intellectual void.  

A white pine tree is located in the temple grounds.   Mr. Kim was proud to tell me that the Pine tree is a Natural Monument No. 9.  In the very cold wind, this was  my first leveler of nationalism.  The Cultural Heritage Administration of South Korea designated plants, landforms, and geological formations, nature reserves as natural monuments.   This lacebark pine had reached a height of 10 meters and estimated to be 500 years old; the lack of growing space has weakened its condition.  I could hear Mr. Kim’s American English continue to describe the temple fading into the distance,  as  my mind was on the Cultural Heritage Administration.  The ice cold temperature seemed to have lost its grip for a momentary spell, I was more mesmerized by a living thing, 500 years old sheltering me from the elements.  Held and treasured by Korean people, this tree became a significant feature to my introduction of all things Korean.

I have to admit that I have a biased attitude to all things Korean.  It’s a very female thing.   Unashamedly it is my unfound jealousy towards my partner’s ex-girlfriend  Sung-ji.  Obviously she made an impact on him, so all points she represented were doomed.   Poor Mr. Kim had to make up for things he had no idea how high a climb he needed to accomplish, in order to impress this jaded lady.





To combat the ice crystals forming in my veins, Sam Gae Tang was suggested.  This is the most wonderfully delicious chicken soup that even the best Jewish version could not compete and pales in comparison.  I stand my ground to any Jewish mother refuting otherwise. The fresh ginseng stuffed in the cavity of the chicken infuses the glutinous rice stuffed inside together.  The Cornish hens boiled for hours just falls apart with just a touch of a fork.   It came with a small shot glass of ginseng wine and perked my attitude up.  Completion of  DAY 1, my “Koreanaphobia” lessened just a notch or two.






Dongdaemun Market for some is the ultimate in shopping experience but I was not into cheap copies or wholesale buying.   For me, Jindo Fur store was what poor Mr. Kim was about to be dragged into for a whole afternoon.  My conscience for endangered species was not anywhere to be found.  I wanted a mink fur jacket.  Not a fox, not anything other than a mink to cover my shoulders. 




Mink jackets, mink stoles, mink coats, all shades were hung in racks upon racks in the vast warehouse.  I was the proverbial little girl in a candy store.   The entire afternoon slipped into a haze.  Mr. Kim was made of magnificent patience; he nodded off to sleep, shot himself up every now and again to sounds of ecstasy emanating from behind the fitting room. Decision made, payment selection made, I was ready for a new experience.






Jetlagged, mixed with red wine, and a full stomach, pointed only in one direction > sleep.  The inviting luscious bed of the Shilla Hotel, after a long working day and shopping afternoon, was tempting but my host was taking me to the NANTA show.


Sitting in the theatre waiting for the show to start, the sleepy haze effect I was fearing, was about to become my worst nightmare – my snoring habit was surfacing. It was so hard to keep awake.  Suddenly the drums started, I was about to witness the best show, bar any on Broadway NYC or Shaftesbury Avenue, London or Circe de Soliel, Vegas.



NANTA is the longest-running show in Korean history. In Korea it is performed in three theatres in Seoul as well as in one theatre on the island of Jeju.  The show’s back story of three cooks attempting to finish preparing a wedding banquet within a strict time limit while the manager installs his incompetent nephew among the kitchen staff. The performance involves acrobatics, magic tricks, comedy pantomime and audience participation. The unifying element throughout the musical is the use of traditional Korean samul nori music, which in this case in performed with improvised instruments, such as cutting boards, water canisters and kitchen knives. The performance is almost completely non-verbal.


I sat up completely spellbound with such originality.  The sheer creativity, in-sync, nonverbal, surpassing all culture, was when I deferred to their incredible society that I had originally dismissed.  

Here is where I found the true beginnings of  Korea and the Koreans I was privileged to see.  Their immense pride and nationalistic sentiments having achieved so much in the last fifty years is much to be proud of.   Selecting anything from their cars, airplanes, IT and cellular industry their fashion, cosmetic surgery industry, their TV soaps – they have committed to excellence.   Nationalistic pride is somehow missing in today’s emergence of borderless countries.  

I have only one major beef about the country.   The lack of warmth, of empathy, fallen through the cracks on their way up the abyss contributes to the freezing soul  in frozen Seoul.






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