



Soldier 1: You speak Korean?
Me: A little (said in Korean)
Soldier 1: Oohh! Speak Korean, please.
Me: How much do three apples cost?
Soldier 2: Oooh, very good.
Me: pants socks shoes hat!
Soldier 1: Oh, your pronunciation very clear.
Me: Face hair, hand finger um... legs arms eyes nose mouth!
Soldier 1: [makes some remarks in Korean to his fellows]
Me: Where is the bathroom? I would like to go to Seoul.
They all complemented my pronunciation, which made me feel good. I am going to tell Hee Young about this, but she will probably tell me that they were only flirting with me and actually I still suck (she likes to beat up on me a little in this area of my language acquisition)

Were's Alenado? Here's another huge group of Navy folks (including a couple of female officers). They were really so much fun to have around. I didn't really expect soldiers to be so laid-back and kind. I guess things are a little different when 2 years of service are mandatory.
This week has been otherwise exhausting. Wednesday was the official beginning of our May/June season. The main stage show looks great, and I am sooooo excited to go in as the lead in a little less than two weeks. It's great, seeing something that I had helped write come completely together with a set, lights, costumes, music and all of the trappings. The actors have done a wonderful job of making the simple script come to life and even though they have really made the characters what they are, it's really gratifying to see some of my ideas working well on stage.
All week I've been involved in understudy rehearsals for the aforementioned show, rehearsals for a mini show, Little Red Riding Hood (in which I'll be playing the girl in the riding hood, herself) and of course rehearsals for Children's Day, which is tomorrow. The days have simply been packed. I love the work, but I am really tired. Tomorrow will be crazy. Instead of our normal shows, we'll be running activities such as line-dancing (Hey, Macarena!) and group games. We'll also be doing our crazy 20-minute song and dance extravaganza. I really hope that someone video tapes it, because it is going to be fun and HILARIOUS. We are doing a medley of "Love Shack," "Mama Mia," an original "rap" and "Shout," but the words to the songs have all been changed to make them about English Village and Children's Day. I expect I'll be ready to drop dead at the end of the day, but instead I'll give Alex a German lesson and then we'll chat about life, and hopefully eat lots of chocolate, which I will have earned. I'll do my best to get some pictures of tomorrow's insanity.
5 comments:
Hi Alena--I cant resist a bit of editing--remember your papers in school? And my job now? Anyway it's mere rather than meer, and i think you meant the Navy parties the hardiest...although now that i think about it hardest works too. Anyway I love reading every entry. It helps when you're so far away. Love, your Daddy
In picture 3 you're doing the fingers-thing backwards:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V_sign#The_V_sign_as_an_insult
....this is to say nothing of the look on your face in that picture, either -- which is totally priceless. :)
I was about to pick on you for your title-typo, but it looks like your pops already handled that. :)
love,
-jp
You have eight Korean boyfriends now?!
Color me jealous. :)
Try not to drop dead this week. Love ya!!
Hey dad,
Thanks for the head's up. The sad part is, I wasn't sure of the spelling and looked it up in the dictionary. One of the definitions seemed close enough for me. Anyway, it's been edited now... and I did mean hardest. In this day and age, we party hard :)
Dad, it should be also be noted that you omitted the apostrophe in "can't"
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