Christmas Greetings 2006

I’m not in the holiday spirit this season.  I’ve really been procrastinating when it comes to anything related to the holidays.  I finally finished up my Christmas chores today.  Yesterday I went shopping and bought some Christmas gifts for my wife.  While it was a speedy shopping trip, which I admitted to her yesterday, I ended up buying her some thoughtful, practical gifts–some cosmetics I think she wants, in her favorite brand, a Celtic music CD (she loves Enya’s music, so I guessed she would like this album), some Godiva chocolate to replenish the dark chocolate I pilfered from her, the movie “Chicago” on DVD (the movie we saw just before she gave birth to our son), and a parenting book.  You read it here first.  I am convinced that she will not read this entry before Christmas Day, so you, Dear Reader, will know what she’s getting for Christmas before she does–if you read this entry before Christmas.  Because this is my first blog entry in a week, I’m sure you were just dying to know.
Today I locked myself in this room and spent hours finishing my Christmas cards and electronic greetings.  Unfortunately, most recipients, including friends and some family members, received a Christmas e-greeting from me in the form of an e-mail and the Christmas letter pasted in below as an e-mail attachment.  In case you aren’t on my personal Christmas card list, you are more than welcome to consider this posting your very own Christmas greeting from World Adventurers.  Perhaps I should feel guilty about sending e-greetings to loved ones in a spam-like manner, but I really don’t.  We’ve received a dearth of Christmas greetings this season, in the mail or by e-mail.  At the risk of sounding like a whiner, I assert that it’s better to send an e-greeting than nothing at all.  Most recipients never reciprocate.  It seems that the only time I hear from them is when they don’t receive their annual Christmas letter.  Some of them may read this and can take it as a not-so-subtle hint to send us an update from time to time!  Well, have a blessed Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

 

Greetings from the Land of the Morning Calm!  We hope you had a wonderful 2006, and we wish you a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.  We hope to see you again next year when we return to the states.  Our two-year tour in Korea will end soon.  Next February, our family will return to the U.S. to get set for a new adventure.  We will make stops in Hawaii, Washington State, Idaho, and Montana, after which we will head to Washington, D.C. for Spanish training.  Then, in July, we will head to Asunción, Paraguay for two years.  Paraguay lies in the heart of South America, wedged between Brazil and Argentina.  We look forward to exploring South America for the first time and invite you to visit us anytime.  Asunción is a short flight to many great destinations, including Buenos Aires, Argentina, Santiago, Chile, and Rio de Janiero, Brazil.  Paraguay is also home to one of the world’s most spectacular waterfalls, Iguasu Falls.

In August, Mike lost his father, who passed away unexpectedly.   Mike attended his funeral service and shared fond memories of his father with family and friends.  We were fortunate to have had the opportunity to see Mike’s father one last time when we visited the United States in May.  We had no idea it would be the last time they would spend time together.  Mike’s father is survived by his wife, a special lady who is both a stepmom and a friend.

In April, we traveled to China and spent two weeks with family in Shanghai.  We also took a short trip to Xi’an, China, home to the famous terra cotta warriors guarding the tomb of Emperor Qin Shi Huang.  We also traveled around Korea, visiting Jeju Island, Wolchulsan and Odaesan national parks, and Yongpyong Resort, Korea’s largest ski hill and film location for “Winter Sonata,” a popular Korean drama.  We also welcomed a few guests to Korea, including Mike’s parents, cousin , and Mike’s in-laws, who are visiting us during Christmastime.  We are in Korea at a pivotal time in history, with tensions on the peninsula running high because of the recent nuclear tests and Six Party Talks, and with former Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon becoming the new Secretary-General of the United Nations.  Fortunately, the atmosphere here has been relatively calm, and we feel very safe in Seoul.

Our son had a really fun year.  He started the year participating in gym class, music class, and play group, but he is now a preschooler at a local Montessori school in Seoul, where he spends half days learning everything from reading to painting.  In the afternoon, our nanny takes him to the library, playground, and to over to neighborhood friends’ houses to play.  This fall, he started playing soccer.  Although he can’t keep up with the four-year-olds, he played his heart out.  We’re positive he’ll flourish in Paraguay, where soccer is a national obsession.  Our home in Asunción will also have a pool, and he will learn to perfect his swimming skills.

Mike’s wife has been working as a manager in the Seoul office of a global accounting firm.  She enjoys her job, but in January she will resign before we depart Korea.   She is looking forward to a change of scenery, spending more with our son, learning Spanish, and beginning new endeavors in Paraguay. 

Mike is almost finished working in Embassy Seoul’s Consular Section.  Mike also spent much of the year volunteering as board chair of the community association, helping improve the community and managing the association’s assets.  He enjoyed meeting Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, having drinks with Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin, and returning to his alma mater as a “Hometown Diplomat” to discuss careers in the Foreign Service with graduating seniors.

Blog notes:  Special thanks to the 550 visitors who stopped by this week to visit World Adventurers even though I have been offline for about a week.  I’ll try to write more often and give you more to peruse.  Thanks again!

Glad to be here

I read that weather conditions in the Seattle area have been atrocious and that the power is off for about 1.5 million people living in the area.  Apparently the number without power has decreased to about 950,000, but that’s still a large number of homes.  It reminds me of the Winter of 2003, when the power went out in our Seattle metro neighborhood no less than three times, once for about two days.  Life was miserable.  Life is bearable in Seattle during the winter when the power is on; without it, life is untenable.  While arguably better than living in areas that deal with large snowfalls, the cold, damp conditions that seep into Seattle-area homes during a blackout are miserable for people not accustomed to such wretched, sustained weather conditions.
 
Well, I’m thankful we’re here in Seoul now!  We could be in Seattle–we’ll be there in about two months.  Although the weather in Seoul is not known for being kind, it has been unseasonably mild here, for the most part almost enjoyable.  Yes, it is true, in spite of what my wife wrote earlier this month.  I’m glad we’re here in Korea enjoying the crisp, mild winter weather conditions.

This is what makes America great!

I know I’m probably the last tech wonk to stumble across this Internet phenomenon, but I think it’s absolutely hilarious!  The saga of Chad Vader, Day Shift Manager, is zany, brainy, and very entertaining.  I read that it is now one of the most popular indy short films available online and a YouTube staple, eclipsing illegal Jon Stewart and The Colbert Report clips in popularity.  In this fabulous dramatization, Chad Vader, Darth Vader’s younger brother, works at as a shift manager at an American supermarket.  The fourth installment was released in October, and the fifth installment is now being filmed.  The clips chronicle his struggle to win the respect of his employees through mind control, his seduction and subsequent dumping by fair Clarissa, no Princess Leia she, his fall from day shift manager to night shift manager, and lightsaber duels in the bread aisle.
 
Why does the saga of Chad Vader make America great?  Isn’t it just a silly series of short clips by a couple of unkempt dudes from Madison, Wisconsin, who are hankering for attention and Internet fame?  No, and here’s why.  "Chad Vader, Day Shift Manager" is a intelligent analysis of stereotypical American culture using an well-known icon from one of American’s great film sagas.  It is designed by a bunch of Americans, filmed in an average American supermarket and posted to the Internet, which was developed by the U.S. Government, using equipment either invented by Americans (the computer, the router, the movie camera) and/or built by American companies (Apple, HP, Microsoft, Cisco, Intel), watched largely by Americans on American web sites such as YouTube.  End to end, these short clips are at least 99.9999% American, from thought to execution. 
 
Sure, there are other influences at work, presumably the Greek tragedy or Japanese-made film equipment, but this work is an ideal example of Americana.  If you think the saga of Chad Vader is silly, then you might also be tempted to assume that America is somehow lacking if Chad Vader represents the pinnacle of all that is American.  I contend that it shows that America encompasses the big, bold, simplistic, and kitschy, yet at the same time, is deep and empowered, enabling anyone to excel.  I’m looking forward to watching the next installment of Chad Vader’s saga and dwelling on what makes America great.