Showing posts with label In Busan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In Busan. Show all posts

The Lotus Lantern Festival (5/20)

I    S L E P T  like a rock after our crazy Saturday at the temple and in Busan, but woke nonetheless to the morning gong around 5am. I tagged along with my roommate Andy for a run along the river in the crisp morning air and had a great conversation about International Affairs, Buddhism, Korea, and the world in general. He's on a year-long Fulbright scholarship to study Environmentalism among Buddhist nuns-- his blog can be found here-- so you better believe we had a lot to talk about! Between the exercise, the scenery, and the conversation, it was a phenomenal way to start the day!

Dr. Yi's morning lecture session
A S   W E  returned to the temple, we learned just how busy the day would be for our study abroad group and for the temple at large. It was a week and a day before Buddha's Birthday, and the temple was swarming with people practicing and preparing for the festivities on top of the usual templegoers. The mix of people-- young and old, from near or far, working or worshipping, etc.-- was something I'd grow accustomed to in my stay at Hongbeopsa: it illustrated just how embedded the temple is in its surrounding community.

Dr. Yi sat us down, laid out or schedule for the day, and asked for our reflections on our previous day's adventures. I was shocked at how densely populated Busan was, and apparently it's got nothing on Seoul! The number of people, the sheer number of different stores and how closely-packed they are, the ads and lights and sounds, the number of fish in the fish market... it was all extremely impressive, exciting, and alluring! And I even found an international ATM!

Finally got some won!!

Time Travel! (5.17/5.18)


what a trip!
Flightpath: Georgia > Canada > Alaska > Syberia!!! > China > Korea!

I  H A D a pretty good idea that this trip was going to be a Trip months before I set foot in Hartsfield-Jackson, but the gravity of the situation didn't sink in until I felt my stomach drop as my 777 beat gravity and bid adieu to American soil. (I don't know if that feeling will ever grow old-- it's easily the best part of flying; that visceral point of no return)
I could tell I was in for a slew of surprises when something as simple as flying blew my mind, but the surprises certainly didn't stop there. It seemed like every aspect of the flight was foreign, ranging from the superficial-- the language, look, and uniform of the stewardesses (who really are as attractive as the Korean Air adverts make them out to be), to the surreal-- the fact that the sun stayed stubbornly still in the sky as we flew against time and daylight; the way that time turned to putty and folded around the plane as it flew. My excitement, the novelty, and the absurdity of the flight conspired to give it an other-worldly aura which simply reinforced the voyage's allure.

international flights take forever
Around 11 hrs in, insanity began to take over-- note Aveek's fingers in the row behind me: I think they're trying to crawl into his nose. Absurd.
I'm sure the ceaseless sun had something to do with it, but for some confluence of reasons I was ridiculously productive on the plane. That too seemed to separate my time in the air from reality-- I never got bored; I never got tired; I never wondered what time it was or how much longer was left before arrival. My mind was going about as fast as my flight (approximately 565 mph, to be precise)-- I tore through a slew of dense articles on Orientalism (by the likes of Said, Menon, Prakash, and Ning), a few movies (Haywire, Coriolanus, and Dangerous Method), and a ton of classical composers (Saint-Saens, Dvorak, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Copland, Liszt, and Mozart).

My true focus was the articles-- I thought it would be intellectually negligent of me to go to Asia as an ignorant Westerner and NOT expose myself to the influential and controversial scholarship that spun from Said. To summarize, Said and the scholars who follow him are interested in the shortcomings of “Western” conceptions of the “East” as the Other, specifically revealing how biased assumptions can pridefully be mistaken for understanding. The name of this blog is a nod to the problematic conception of "The Orient" as an essentialized and generalized amalgam; one goal of mine for this trip was to test Said's theory and see first-hand just how true or false "Western" claims about "the East" are. I figured the flight was the perfect time to crack into the canon, so I did! And I loved it!

(The movies and music were just icing on the cake between articles, to give me time to reflect and make sure I didn't melt my brain too thoroughly, although they all were valuable in and of themselves. Particularly Coriolanus-- a rather tenuous film due to the original Shakespearean dialogue, but an interesting and apropos rendition nonetheless. Check it out!)

skyberia, if you will
A view of Syberia from the plane-- purely breathtaking.