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Taekwondo Tests and Ajumma??

09/28/07

Permalink 11:27:30 pm, by admin Email , 487 words   English (US)
Categories: ...and Takes On, Korea, Tae Kwon Do, Feats and Defeats (Language)

Taekwondo Tests and Ajumma??

I paid 50,000 won on my T-card. The clerk looked at me and held up five fingers, saying nothing. I said, in Korean, "Yes, it's 50,000 won."

"Oh! You speak Korean so well!"

Later, I was trying to buy some filled buns from the market. I asked the woman, very nicely, how much they were. She dropped to the lowest form and sort of sneered at me while answering, "One thousand won."

I looked at her and said, "Excuse me, why are you speaking banmal to me?" in banmal. She froze.

I bought my buns elsewhere.

I've gone from being annoyed that Koreans assume I can speak Korean to being annoyed that they assume I can't even handle the most basic transactions.

***

Tonight's taekwondo class was a test, technically. It didn't look like a test. Crybaby and I worked on poomse and the boys worked on sparring while everyone got criticized. Master's Son sat on my lap to watch sparring, and Master's Daughter sat on Crybaby's lap.

A good class though, I was drenched by the end of it.

Before our test was the really big test. There were 13 or 14 people in my class, but on test days there's a bigger test at 5 or so. I got to the studio early and sat down, and approximately 50 pairs of eyes (possibly more!) stared at me and the students started poking each other to make sure everyone saw me. The few students in there who knew me (Amanda Eonni being one) sort of stood up taller. They smiled and waved at me and whispered knowingly to the kids around them, "Her name is Amanda! She's il dan!"

As they were being dismissed one ten-year old (Korean age) yellow belt came up to me, "Ajumma..." I gasped and said in Korean, "I'm not an ajumma!" This is the first time anyone in the studio has ever called me anything other than "Amanda" or "Amanda Big Sister" or "Waygookin."

He scurried off and Master laughed. I went over to him, knelt down, and said in Korean, "My name is Amanda. What's your name?"

He told me his name and he and his friends asked my belt rank and my age. Then Yellow Belt said, "한국 사람이에요?" Are you Korean?

"No," I smiled, "I am American."

We chatted a bit more and other kids swarmed and I was a movie star, once again.

***

On the way home five middle school boys saw me at the subway station. I was coming down the single-width escalator and they were huddled at the bottom, sorting themselves out. "Ohh! Oh," they said, jostling each other, "a foreigner!"

By this time I'd reached the bottom. I stared at them, expectantly.

"Oh! Unh! Hi! Hi!"

"Hi. 하지만 한국어를 말할 수있어요." But [I/we] can speak in Korean.

They immediately switched to Korean to make their small talk with me. Good thing they didn't ask anything I couldn't answer, since I said we could speak in Korean!

8 comments

Comment from: Robbin [Visitor] Email
Have you begun speaking any Korean in your English classes or would that be a bit too much?
09/29/07 @ 00:15
Comment from: admin [Member] Email
Yeah, I do. I'm not supposed to, but everyone lets me get away with it. It's minor stuff, "Sit down, don't do that...weather! Weather!"

Today I asked the kids "Did you want to come to school yesterday?" They gave me blank stares. I said it slowly, I rephrased it, I emphasized words...it didn't matter. As soon as I switched to Korean, they all yelled, "NO!" I don't always phrase it the way the Korean teachers would, I tend to always use the -yo and I drop markers, but they understand.

Also, today in one class, one table of kids was being awesome while the other three were being awful. I had the good table write their names on a piece of paper. I added, in Korean, "They did very well in English class today." The kids corrected my spelling. :D I always misspell 정말 as 장말!

I've also spoken Korean to the other teachers in front of the students ("Does he always talk? He was talking too much!" Or "He should buy a new book" or whatever.) so they know that I know a little Korean. One kid once called me an idiot in Korean and I made him do 25 pushups in front of the room.
09/29/07 @ 00:37
Comment from: [Mat] [Visitor] Email · http://matschitoryu.blogspot.com
Damn,
Where's the error?
Ho, the line is on the wrong side. (wow)
I guess I know nothing about korean language.

:D

the pushups were deserved, I guess.
09/29/07 @ 02:41
Comment from: Diana [Visitor] Email · http://storysinger81.blogspot.com/
My first week here, two little brats (who I love dearly most days), pointed at my rearend and said something in Korean that I am sure was unpleasant.

Oh there will be some sweet, sweet revenge when I can speak as well as you...

Our very small school is owned by a Korean man and his American wife, so the students are used to foreigners speaking Korean and regularly talk to me in Korean as if I can understand. I feel better now that I can understand phrases here and there. Keep schooling the Korean masses, Amanda!
09/29/07 @ 07:59
Comment from: Jennifer [Visitor] Email · http://www.jennipal.blogspot.com
Hey good to see you using the Korean.........how do you study? I went to university for 2 months but didn't keep up with it. And for the life of me, I can't seem to study independantly (even though my bf is Korean.....go figure!!!). Anyways, I just wanted to know your secret.

Keep up the good work!!!

Jennifer
09/29/07 @ 09:13
Comment from: admin [Member] Email
Mat, that little tick of a line is what made me call Studious "delicious" 맛있다 (which has sexual overtones!) instead of handsome 멋있다! See December 14th's post.

Diana, you're using the Sogang books, right? That's what I use. And really, I don't speak Korean well.

Jennifer, I studied a lot more BEFORE I met Good Man. He speaks English so fluently that he just does everything for me. I started self-studying with Sogang--I really like those books. I was doing one lesson a week, now I'm lucky to do one a month. I have, however, set a goal to start book 2B by December 1st, so I'd better start studying. I have a couple language exchange partners. This summer we haven't met a whole lot, but they do keep me honest. Because nobody at the studio really speaks much English, I was sort of forced to learn some Korean or look like an ass, so that was my original reason to study. I'd love to study at Sogang but don't think it'll happen any time soon.

I wish that Good Man and I spoke more Korean together, but it's just not going to happen. His English is so good. Besides, I've read that whatever your first date is in will be the language of the relationship. I think it's true.
09/29/07 @ 11:07
Comment from: Diana [Visitor] Email · http://storysinger81.blogspot.com/
Yeah, I'm using Sogang and taking a once a week class that's way over my head. It's forcing me to study tons so I don't look like a total goober in class.

Before I came, I learned the alphabet and then I also used a video series called "Let's Speak Korean" featuring these two cute Korean ladies that worked for me. Someone loaded them to the web here http://www.dailymotion.com/videos/relevance/search/speak+korean/1

It helps to put yourself in situations where you'll have to use Korean--like taekwondo class or having some Korean friends who introduce you to their freinds/family who don't speak much English or something. After Chuseok spent in the countryside with a Korean family I swear I grew in my comprehension by a factor of 5 or something.
09/29/07 @ 15:58
Comment from: admin [Member] Email
What's odd is that taking a break from formally studying Korean--as in I didn't meet YJ, my lang ex partner for about 2 months, and I was missing a lot of taekwondo, too--somehow solidified a bunch of stuff in my mind.

One day, in the elevator, I suddenly popped into the -sumnida form with my neighbor (I didn't know who she was, but she certainly knew who I was). I HATE the -sumnida form but it just sort of tumbled out of my mouth and then I had to use it. And today I somehow pulled "goblin" out of my back pocket. There have been other little incidents like that. I think my solid vocabulary is really solid now, and the stuff that wasn't I need to review, but what surprised me is that with time a bunch of grammar stuff sort sunk in.

Still, I need to get back to studying!
09/29/07 @ 21:04

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An American educator moves moved to Korea, presumably to teach English. Instead she discovers discovered that learning Korean one taekwondo class at a time is was a more captivating activity.

Somewhere along the way, she met a Good Man, fell in love, and ended up back in the States. Still doing taekwondo, still learning Korean...

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