What, might you ask, did I do this weekend?
Jongsan Electronics Market. WOW!
You can get anything that you can think of that is in some way connected to computers. And Cheap!! It is just a matter of being patient and walking around for computer or screens or fans or mice or games. I also seem to have found a place for a spot of DVD shopping. I fell in love with the place! I have to go back soon to get a few DVD’s and other supplies. You figure out the maze. Then you can start shopping. There are stands that seem to sell nothing but Memory and hard drives. Others that seem to sell nothing but boxes that you use to build the
I would love to go in to even more detail about that place, but basically the most exiting thing I can tell you about my adventure there that might interest others that don't actually want to buy computer parts, is that I got lost going to Itaewon afterwards. The line that I had to take does this strange circle jobbie, but at both ends of this circle it splits off. One end goes to Incheon and the other goes to somewhere I know nothing about. It seems that some trains go in a circle all the time and some turn off to one of the line ends. I got onto a train that seemed to be going to a stop close to where I was going, but the problem was that it went to that stop goingwrong way around the circle, the long way round. When I got off and tried to ask someone how to get to Ichon, the stop next to Itaewon, then kept on telling me the way to Incheon. Sheeeez! And I thought Westerners got confused. To make matters worse I live in Icheon. Icheon, Incheon,
As I said, after Jongson Market I headed to Itaewon to meet with another English teacher from another town and after her a Korean girl that I met online before I came to
Something about Itaewon that bothered me was all the Westerners and not just the teacher types. There are lots of American Solders. In
I am sure I will go back to Itaewon, if for no other reason than to go to What the Book. It is said to be the best English Language book store in the city. They do have a lot of second hand books on everything you can think of and then a number of new books on various subjects. I suspect the Westerners give them their old books when they leave the country. English books are quite valuable here as you don't just walk in to any bookshop and find what you are looking for. Even the big book stores in
Other than that it was just the basic drill of cleaning the house on Sunday. As I had done shopping on Wednesday, I didn't have to go to E-Mart again.
For next week I was thinking go going to
Till next time.
Go well.
*Please note that the statements in this Blog are not intended to make anyone look bad. I do not look down on Koreans. I'm merely describing how amusing I sometimes find people and I am mostly describing it to other westerners. Feel free to come to South Africa and tell the world how crazy we are because heaven knows, we are.
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