All quiet on the southern front

Mass transit bombings in Mumbai, India.  Fighting in Israel, Gaza, and Lebanon.  Iran and possibly North Korea referred to the United Nations for possible sanctions.  A disputed presidential election in Mexico.  I feel safe here in the shadow of the world’s largest front line.  Taking your family for French toast sticks and playing on the playroom at Burger King this morning felt just a bit surreal.  I think I’ll go watch "Superman Returns" and see truth, justice, and the good guy prevail over the villian.  Thank you, Hollywood, for taking my mind off reality for a couple of hours.

Weather puts a damper on the protests

We went home early today to avoid the onslaught of protesters in downtown Seoul who were protesting the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement (FTA) negotiations.  Round two of the FTA negotiations is currently underway in Seoul (round one was last month in Washington, D.C.).  I took a risk and drove to and from work today.  It took about an hour to come home today, 30 minutes later than expected due to heavy traffic.  That, and I had to be extremely aggressive to make headway in the standstill.  Once I left downtown the traffic was mild.  I received my first honk in Korea for apparently driving badly.  Well, that’s a first!  Usually I am the one cursing and white-knuckling the steering wheel from bad Seoul drivers.
 
It could have been worse.  Mother Nature dampened the protests today by dumping bucketloads of rain.  She either:  1) Felt sympathy for me; or 2) Supports the Free Trade Agreement; because she poured rain down on Seoul all day long.  The anticipated 50,000+ protesters never materialized because of bad weather.  When I left today, the protest consisted of about 7,000 souls willing to brave bad weather and a threefold number of riot police.  The U.S. and Korea are going to need help getting this FTA done, so having Mother Nature as a supporter is a good ally indeed. 
 
I really have to wonder sometimes about what goes through the minds of Koreans.  When their neighbor to the North, with which the South is technically at war, launches test missiles, about 20 protesters materialize to protest against the launches.  Is an FTA really that much more provocative than lobbing missiles that it can draw 7,000 people on an utterly terrible day?

Winter Sonata II: All in the Family

In the long-awaited sequel to the TV series "Winter Sonata," the most popular and beloved Korean drama of all time, Bae Yong Jun and Choi Ji Woo reprise their roles as Minhyung Lee and Yoojin Jung.  Five years have passed, and the two lovers have finally found true love and marital bliss as a married couple.  Now living in Seoul, Minhyung works 14 hours day, six days a week heading his own construction company with three full-time employees and a bunch of contract workers.  Yoojin has quit her consulting business and is now a housewife who takes care of her rambunctious three-year-old son, Minoh.  Longing to rekindle the magic they shared during those dramatic days in 2002, Yoojin and Minhyung decide to spend their one week of annual vacation in late August at Yongpyong Ski Resort–the place where they found true love. 
 
The lovers and their son return to the resort only to find it fantastically changed.  The cafe that Yoojin redesigned has been closed for some time.  An unfinished 20-story hotel now towers over the original hotel where they found love.  Yoojin and Minhyung, with little Minoh in tow, endeavor to reminisce about the past by sharing a romantic dinner for three at the same restaurant where they shared their first dinner together following Minhyung’s recovery from a bout of amnesia.  Mayhem ensues when Minoh drops chopsticks and food on the floor and spills sugar on the table, embarassing the enchanted couple.  Later, the family returns to the gondola that brought Yoojin and Minhyung to Dragon Peak in 2002, where they spent that fateful night together on the mountain during a heavy snowstorm.  The family waits in line with the masses for a gondola like the one where they shared a tender kiss.  And they wait.  They wait some more.  Finally, after a long spell, with crying son in tow, they reach the coveted peak and walk around in the clouds that obscure their view.  They find shelter in the Dragon Peak western restaurant where they spent the night together in 2002, sipping on instant cocoa available during the summertime.  Unable to reclaim the lost magic, they return to the hotel and settle in for a nice game of bowling and kiddie rides.  The family is happy once again.