Tag Archives: introspection

Inspiration from El Sur

@font-face { font-family: “MS 明朝”; }@font-face { font-family: “Cambria Math”; }@font-face { font-family: “Cambria”; }p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0in 0in 10pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: Cambria; }.MsoChpDefault { font-size: 10pt; font-family: Cambria; }.MsoPapDefault { margin-bottom: 10pt; }div.WordSection1 { page: WordSection1; }

This weekend we visited a small community which economic value is based off of sustainable, educational and intercultural tourism which was inspiring. The entire community has ten families and eight children in the school. The community is located on the backside of Carara National Park and has special permission to use a trail they created in the Park.

316911_1452856636447_1084200069_31324722_1259970984_n.jpg

After going on a guided hike, we learned how to process sugar and also learned the process for making cutting boards.

IMG_1231.jpg

IMG_1242.jpg

IMG_1244.jpg

IMG_1247.jpg

In the morning, we also helped milk the cows. Although, this community is thriving through tourism, it also meets many limitations, which we discussed with members of the community. First, animals from the park and the poor soil quality inhibit the community to participate in agriculture. This problem initially caused people from the town to move into the city. The families that remain in the town built all the infrastructure and EcoSur, a program for student groups and group trips to take advantage of when traveling. The families are looking to expand the visitors to students who want to practice Spanish and volunteer in the community. However, in the future, the eight children from El Sur might not stay to continue the progress.

This trip was an amazing experience for me. These people, with far fewer resources than I ever had were so driven to make their town economically successful while also maintaining remoteness and the people had no idea whether or not their plan was even going to be continued in the next generation. It was truly inspiring when I think about climate change, materialism and different crisis happening all around the world. Sometimes it seems as though the problems are too large to mitigate but like these community members, we have to try without knowing if it will work.


Location: El Sur, Costa RIca

Weekend off!

@font-face { font-family: “MS 明朝”; }@font-face { font-family: “Cambria Math”; }@font-face { font-family: “Cambria”; }p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0in 0in 10pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: Cambria; }.MsoChpDefault { font-size: 10pt; font-family: Cambria; }.MsoPapDefault { margin-bottom: 10pt; }div.WordSection1 { page: WordSection1; }

I woke up at 4:30 a.m. on October 8th to travel with 13 other students to Manual Antonio for our first weekend off. We stayed in the Wide Mouth Frog Hostel in Quepos and spent the day at the beach and ate coconut snow cones, which was much needed after a stressful week of midterms! 

manual.jpg

Quepos was a tourist area so food prices were inflated and the downtown area reminded me of the Jersey Shore strip which heavily contrasted with the conserved forest and beach area in Manual Antonio.

While we were away, almost all of us ran out of money on the second day because we did not plan for the expensive meals. When I was packing, I only brought $60 to limit my spending but after paying for my lunch in coins on Sunday, I  @font-face { font-family: “MS 明朝”; }@font-face { font-family: “Cambria Math”; }@font-face { font-family: “Cambria”; }p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0in 0in 10pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: Cambria; }.MsoChpDefault { font-size: 10pt; font-family: Cambria; }.MsoPapDefault { margin-bottom: 10pt; }div.WordSection1 { page: WordSection1; }humorously learned to bring more money than I expect to spend for future trips.

money.jpg

Note: I saw monkeys for the first time!!!!

monkeys.jpg


Location: Manual Antonio, Costa Rica

Zaijian Beijing (Goodbye Beijing)

Here I am in Kimpo, South Korea, a few weeks after that fated day, the day when I last saw Beijing.  I’m still dazed and confused, utterly blindsided by what just happened to me these past few months.  Indeed, what just happened? 

I woke up at 7 that morning, but went to sleep at 3.  Last day celebration extravaganza at Wudaokou, Beijing’s foreigner/bar district.   Wasn’t too tired that morning.  It was more of a wispy “dude, I can’t believe I’m leaving this place, this place I’ve called home for the last 4 months” kind of feeling.  I packed up my stuff.  Ended up buying so many souvenirs that I had to buy a second luggage case.  For some reason my judgment lapsed during that purchased and I convinced myself that 300 RMB wasn’t bad for a luggage case.  I completely failed to factor in the Chinese’s continual dedication to craftsmanship and quality (insert sarcasm).  But hey, you get what you pay for.

My friends all gathered to my dorm room door at around 10:30 in the morning.  They wanted to catch lunch with me before I headed off, as I was the first to leave out of our group.  With some degree of poetic irony, I chose the shoujuabing stand.   As Gob Bluth once said: Return from whence you came.  I slapped Nick on the back and asked him if he remembered  our first time there and the buttload of troubles we had just trying or order something, anything.  We didn’t know the menu, any of the Chinese characters on the menu, or what we were supposed to say.  So I resourcefully said “I want the same” after the guy in front of us ordered.  It turned out to be the first of many times I ate a delicious shoujuabing, but that day was to be my last.  With a much greater degree of fluency, I ordered the works, something I’ve been too stingy (or maybe scared?) to try before.  One crispy flour pancake wrapping around cheese, egg, lettuce, a variety of sauces, and not one but two pieces of bacon.  It was to die for and the most fitting of last meals. 

So we all grabbed our meals and a drink and sat outside the tables just outside the Red Umbrella convenience store, thusly named for the red umbrellas it puts out during the summer.  I’ve yet to see these umbrellas and probably never will.  We chatted, reminisced about our adventures in China and our plans for the summer.  Then I said my goodbye.  Many of my friends planned on staying for the summer in order to better solidify their Chinese, so they urged me to stay as well.  Perhaps if I didn’t already have plans this summer, I would’ve obliged.  But alas, I have Korea and an internship waiting for me in the States. 

So is this goodbye?  This may be copying a little too directly from Will Fienberg’s IES Beijing commencement ceremony speech, but whatever.  Zaijian translates to “goodbye”, but more literally, it means “See you again”.  In that sense, maybe I will see this country again: a place where explosive growth is happening, a place of extremely deep and profound culture, a place that boasts one of the most difficult languages to learn…  A place I’ve once called home.  I’ll see you again someday.  As for my friends, I’ll see you guys again someday too.  Till then, zaijian.  


Location: Kimpo, South Korea

Just 5 more weeks

Hi my name is Dannie and I’ll be going to Beijing, China during the spring semester of 2011.  I’m going primarily to improve my Chinese, but also to get a full China experience. 

People always ask me “are you excited to go”.  Strangely enough, the answer is always “no, it hasn’t quite hit me yet”.  And I reckon it won’t until i step out of Beijing National Airport on January 15th.  I guess a main reason why it hasn’t hit me is because this semester was so hectic.  On top of all the school work, the entire application process for studying abroad was quiet cumbersome.  Applying for scholarships was also pretty taxing.  But now that mostly everything has fallen into place, all my forms are in order, my plane ticket has been purchased, and I have selected my courses.. yeah, I’m a looking forward to it. 

What is your biggest deterrent for studying abroad?  Mine was probably cost.  In terms of credits, I came in with enough to graduate on time; I’m taking mostly electives abroad but I don’t mind.  I want to step out of my comfort zone and explore a grand world we live in, so that wasn’t the issue either.  But even the biggest reason against going to China has been resolved!  Praise God, I’m essentially going abroad for free, after all the generous scholarships I have been awarded.  For anyone seriously interested in studying abroad, I believe that this could be a possibility to you, so give me a shout out if you want to learn more about the Whole World Scholarship or the Gilman Scholarship. 

Isaac Newton was a famous physicist and mathematician.  However, despite his accomplishments and discoveries, he humbly says, “If I have seen further than others, it is because I stood on the shoulders of giants”. And in a lot of ways, I feel the same way too.  I feel as though despite my own reasons for doing things and for having goals, a lot of it was derived from people who I look up to.  As much as I want to take ownership of the Language Intensive Program at Beijing, it was John Cho who influenced me to do it.  Rediscovery.  Validity for something I think is not mine.  I couldn’t quite find it here, maybe I’ll find it elsewhere. 

Till next time,
Dannie Kim


Location: State College, Pennsylvania