Saturday, July 28, 2012
우리도 불륜 커풀처럼
Friday, July 27, 2012
We are like an affair couple too
My husband’s hair is mostly gray now, and his belly sticks out a bit. I’m small and skinny—maybe built like an elementary school kid who’s been eating well lately. Blaming the muggy weather, I wore a sleeveless short dress—definitely not age-appropriate. To top it off, I had on red-framed sunglasses and a wide-brimmed hat pulled down low. Maybe that’s why?
Tired from the heat and the crowds, we ended up at the express bus terminal by the river. The next bus heading east was bound for Gangneung, and without a second thought, we got on. As my ears popped and the bus sped through misty mountain tunnels, I suddenly wondered—do they still use those old winding roads that once twisted around the hills?
When we got off in Gangneung, we took a taxi to Gyeongpo.
“The tunnels are great for tourists but bad for local business,” the driver complained. “People come and leave the same day now. No one stays overnight anymore.”
We checked into the hotel he dropped us off at and were directed to a restaurant nearby for dinner. At the entrance, a giant fish tank was filled with fish that looked less like they were swimming and more like they’d given up. On closer look, their scales were peeling, and their fins were torn—they seemed to say, Just kill me already. My appetite vanished. Just then, a woman with dramatically double-lidded eyes burst out, saying the hotel had called ahead and welcomed us enthusiastically.
My husband, usually cheerful about food and quick to order a soju, was strangely quiet as he stared at the menu.
The double-eyelid lady kept pushing us to order.
“Excuse me,” I asked, “why are there so many zeros?”
My husband was silently sinking into the table.
“We’re sorry,” I said, “but we really can’t afford this.”
As I stood up, she tried to stop us, promising to give us a good deal. My husband scrambled after me, flustered.
“Do you think they mistook us for an affair and handed us the ‘affair menu’?” he whispered.
“Seriously?” I asked.
“Think about it. If you’re cheating, you can’t exactly say, ‘This is too expensive,’ in front of your fling, right? Maybe it’s a sneaky tactic.”
If only I had known that during the day, the streets here are ghostly quiet, but by evening, everything lights up and people flood in—I wouldn’t have gone looking for a café the next morning. Still, we wandered along Gyeongpo Beach in search of a morning coffee. Not a single café was open. Then we spotted a woman selling coffee from a cart in a tucked-away spot. Her foundation was hastily applied, making her face look pale, and her lips were painted a thick, bright pink. We ordered two coffees. As she stirred our drinks, she kept glancing at us.
Was she thinking, What kind of couple strolls the beach at this hour—a graying man and a woman hiding behind sunglasses and a hat? Or maybe she’d heard about the restaurant incident the night before and jumped to conclusions?
Either way, sipping 1,000-won coffee by the quiet morning sea—with just a hint of scandal in the air—didn’t taste so bad.
Saturday, July 21, 2012
뜬구름을 잡으려고
화진포는 6.25전 이북 땅이었다. 지금도 김정일이 3살 무렵 뛰어놀았다는 김일성 별장, 이승만 그리고 이기붕의 별장이 표기된 커다란 관광 표지판이 있는 동해 최북단 해수욕장이다.
대진항으로 접어드는 길목 언덕에 자리 잡은 펜션에 짐을 풀었다. 침대에 누워서도 파도 소리를 들으며 물보라를 볼 수 있는 깔끔한 숙소였다. 로맨틱한 주인의 손끝이 닿지 않은 곳이 없을 정도로 방의 구석구석이 정겹고 멋졌다. 애정이 깃든 펜션에 대한 손길을 흩트리기 싫어 몸만 침대 속에 넣었다 빠져나왔다.
Friday, July 20, 2012
To catch the cloud
“Wasn’t Hwajinpo the best?”
Hwajinpo used to be part of North Korea before the Korean War. Even today, at this northernmost beach on the East Sea, there’s a large tourist sign showing the vacation homes of Kim Il-sung—where Kim Jong-il is said to have played when he was three years old—as well as those of Syngman Rhee and Lee Ki-boong.
We unpacked at a pension (guesthouse) on a hill near Daejin Port. From the bed, we could hear the waves crashing and see the sea spray. The place was clean and beautiful, with the owner’s romantic touch felt in every corner. The room was filled with warmth and charm, and I didn’t want to disturb the love that had clearly gone into it—so I only lay on the bed briefly before getting back up.
“No,” I said, “The best moment was when I was lying in that hospital bed.”
That was a conversation with my husband on the plane, after we finished our trip to Korea and were heading back to New York.
Just a few days before flying back, we had been traveling along Korea’s east coast. We stayed one night at a private hospital for health checkups. A doctor friend I hadn’t seen in a long time gave me a once-over and said,
“Your kidneys don’t look so good. How about getting a checkup before you go back?”
She also thought my husband’s liver didn’t look great. So, thanks to her, we were both admitted to a small hospital she recommended.
I threw my tired body onto the bed in a simple, single hospital room. The clean, white sheets were soft and fresh. My husband was in the room next door. Being in separate rooms made him feel close, yet distant—not a bad feeling. I could see him if I wanted, or not. It felt... convenient.
In New York, we had lived almost like monks—quiet and isolated. But in Seoul, using my husband’s art exhibition as an excuse, we suddenly met so many people each day. It was exhausting. Even before I had the chance to lift my heavy eyelids and stare at the ceiling, I was already falling asleep, comforted by the faint smell of disinfectant and the soft white sheets.
I wondered if Jun-sik, the main character in Ju Yo-seop’s novel Chasing Clouds, felt the same way. In the story, he lives a hard life of labor in early 20th-century America, only to die alone in a hospital, broke and exhausted. He had spent his life chasing something just out of reach—like clouds—only to realize it was all in vain.
A nurse told me to lie on my side for a colonoscopy and endoscopy. The hospital gown was large and bunched up uncomfortably, but I thought, “Well, I’ll be asleep soon anyway.” As the sleep mask was placed on my face, everything faded. My usual, tightly planned daily routines no longer mattered. I couldn’t think of anything anymore, and that felt... peaceful. If death feels like this—losing all awareness—maybe it’s not so bad after all. It was the most comfortable moment of my life.
They cleaned out years of waste from my colon and removed three small polyps. On the way to the airport, I called my friend.
“Thanks. I’m heading to the airport now, feeling light in body and mind. I’ll come again.”
“Why don’t you get a small place in Seoul? Wouldn’t it be nice to spend our old age together?”
“Why not a big place?”
“A big place is hard to manage.”
And just like that, we returned to our everyday lives—once again chasing clouds—talking about big and small houses as we said goodbye.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
이젠 괜찮아
Friday, July 6, 2012
It's okay now
“Good morning,”
I greeted, cheerfully raising my hand with a smile. But she didn’t even look at me—pretended not to see me. Wasn’t this the same person who just yesterday had shouted a loud, echoing “Good morning!” as if trying to wake the whole neighborhood? Has she entered a depressive phase now?
When walking through the neighborhood, I’ve learned to watch the facial expressions of familiar people carefully. If you don’t, your whole day might start off on the wrong foot. I thought I’d quietly pass by without making eye contact, but then they opened their arms warmly for a hug—so I hugged back lightly and stepped away. Ah, back to the manic phase!
Over the years, I’ve met three or four people with bipolar disorder. The first time was in college, and since I had no experience with it back then, I had quite a hard time.
It was the spring semester of senior year. A tall, decent-looking male student returned to school after a break. He said he liked me and started following me around. We were clearly mismatched—he was tall and good-looking, and I was short and not particularly pretty.
Still, he stuck around all summer. Then fall came, and suddenly he acted like he didn’t know me, brushing past in a hurry. I figured he must have found someone new and lost interest in me.
Then one early summer day the following year, I ran into him in front of my house—he had gained a lot of weight and looked much bigger. He said he had something to tell me.
That “something” was:
“Let’s get married.”
I was stunned. He hadn’t even acknowledged me all winter, and now he was suddenly talking about marriage? Was he trying to use me as a rebound after things didn’t work out with his girlfriend?
He started waiting for me in front of my house every day. My father, unable to ignore it anymore, took him to a café and gave him some advice:
“If you want to win someone over, you should hide in the forest, observe your enemy, and wait for the right moment. Charging in head-on like this will only make them run farther away. Retreat for now and wait for your chance.”
Surprisingly, my father’s words seemed to work—he disappeared for a while. I felt safe enough to go outside again. But one day, I nearly fainted from shock. Not only was he back, but he had stationed himself outside my house like a guard, taking shifts with a friend to keep watch. His sister even came to visit me.
What she told me was completely unexpected: her brother had bipolar disorder. She begged me to be patient just a little longer—they were arranging for him to be hospitalized as soon as they could gather the money. Well, that explained everything. Who could possibly love me that much, right?
After that incident, I developed a habit of observing new people for several years before trusting them—watching through all four seasons to get a sense of their emotional stability. Some people with bipolar disorder cycle with the seasons, while others swing much more frequently.
With those people, you have to dodge their emotional waves like surfing. Once you get entangled, your life can spiral into chaos.
Thankfully, according to a college friend who visited New York last year, that guy—the one who chased me during his manic episodes and ignored me in his depressive ones—got married and has a stable job now. It was oddly comforting to hear.
But even now, I sometimes dream of him lingering in front of my house. In the dream, I run away in fear— Then wake up muttering to myself,
“It’s just a dream. It’s okay.”