Congratulations Uzique. I am really happy you have the opportunity to experience something like that.
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Doing the the Lord's work.uziq wrote:
i will be here every single day from a cafe in hongdae or itaewon to tell dilbert he is a schmuck.
it's just by far the best 'base' in that region for your average westerner. modern, convenient, relatively affordable, high level of english language skills and literacy (yes, i know, but spare me; i'm not learning a brand new language to fluent level for the sake of 12 months, and korean doesn't really have the global usefulness that something like mandarin would carry). fastest internet in the world, super modern city transport (that's like a dollar per day to use), amazing food, good culture scene (lots beyond k-pop and k-drama). oh and the women are of course the best in asia, let's face it.Larssen wrote:
So what made you choose SK?
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i've had an asian gf before so i'm not going there to chase any strange fetishes or obsessions. of course, going somewhere where the locals are attractive is important. it's the same reason why i would never think of teaching business english in a gulf state, despite it paying near 6 figure with zero tax. being simpatico with the locals and having an, ahem, full social life is kinda important.SuperJail Warden wrote:
I hope you find an Azn girl to settle down with out there and have some hapa kids. Most hapas are bitter at their ancestry so you should give at least one of them the middle name Mac to really rub it in.
this music festival is internationally recognised and most of the roster are in fact european artists. the techno/ambient scene in japan has a huge overlap with NA/EU. it's very outwards looking. i read you on the social conventions and mannerisms, though: korea has them too. things like always using two hands to give or receive anything, otherwise it's taken as a huge insult. even when passing someone your credit card in a store, or a drink, or something. if you see how english people interact and gesture in a pub in england, you'll know how funny that notion is.On the music festival--one thing I found really tough was all of the social traditions/mannerisms that really run deep in Japan. It's little things, like who bows first, or who sips the tea fist, or who can and cannot be left alone together. Now, if you get it wrong the typical Japanese person isn't going to drop-kick your uncouth ass, but my recommendation would be to bring along someone who can excuse you in Japanese when you get it wrong.
So, you'll be in the same time zone as me?uziq wrote:
i will be here every single day from a cafe in hongdae or itaewon to tell dilbert he is a schmuck.
Seems like a good choice to stay if you want to explore the region, universally people are positive about SK. Definitely go and spend some stretch of time in Indonesia too, the archipelago has some absolutely beautiful nature and waters and is quite western friendly too. I've also heard good things about Myanmar lately.uziq wrote:
it's just by far the best 'base' in that region for your average westerner. modern, convenient, relatively affordable, high level of english language skills and literacy (yes, i know, but spare me; i'm not learning a brand new language to fluent level for the sake of 12 months, and korean doesn't really have the global usefulness that something like mandarin would carry). fastest internet in the world, super modern city transport (that's like a dollar per day to use), amazing food, good culture scene (lots beyond k-pop and k-drama). oh and the women are of course the best in asia, let's face it.Larssen wrote:
So what made you choose SK?
japan might seem the obvious choice but as well as being very expensive (same as living in the UK effectively, and i want to cut my hours not increase them), english fluency is very low, and it's just a pain in the ass in so many ways for foreigners to exist there for longer than a holiday-term. i mean day-to-day things like bureaucracy, medical care, even being able to withdraw cash and pay for things in shops ... japan is basically still in the 1980s for its services, for some reason. plus, japan has been super closed off during covid and not interested in giving out visas.
china: just no. we're covered that extensively here before. taiwan would be a maybe but i figure a place to stay for 3 months on a tourist visa. based on scant research onto the topic over the last 12 months, it seems that most advice trends towards avoiding china. it has become a far more hostile environment towards gweilo foreigners in the last few years since xi started upping the ante.
the rest of indochina looks very good and is always highly recommended in the 'digital nomad' subculture but it seems more of a tourist/backpacking/travelling style thing. i don't really imagine myself in an apartment in saigon or bangkok, working remotely.
one of my best friends did the TEFL thing after we finished university, segueing into working in offices in china and generally travelling the region. he said whilst places like japan have their more unique stand-out attractions, by far the most liveable city was seoul. public transport links are everywhere, open spaces and mountains/hiking are always near, world-class coffee shops litter almost every other street, etc. it just seems very, very amenable to the sort of remote/freelance working lifestyle that i want to lead. you can basically get 100Mbps mobile internet using a dongle anywhere in the city.
there's a large english-language publishing industry, predominantly educational and business writing, for obvious reasons, in places like south korea and japan, so who knows, it'll be good to make some contacts out there and see what it's all about. if i had any expectation of being there for longer than a working holiday visa stay, of course i'd look into language classes, etc.
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I'm in the same boat. I'm already used to working with remote, cross-functional teams in different time zones and across multiple languages so the frustration around the lack of in-person meetings has already left a long time ago, but the meetings themselves are just less effective when remote. More distraction, less ability for break outs and parking lot type follow ups. I'm more comfortable talking to a room of people than I am into a computer screen, regardless of technological advances that have made these meetings seemingly more fluid.Larssen wrote:
Personally I hate 100% work from home. Meetings on my goddamn mobile or laptop are so tedious, sometimes awkward and above all ineffective. A lot of my job is people management and stakeholder engagement and presentations, it's immeasurably better if those meetings esp. the important ones could be in person. Seeing people's faces, body language or reactions are really important cues for me, missing the in-between small talk is no good either. Worst is that I personally feel less confident, prepared or comfortable in my message when talking to people from behind a tiny screen.
Not to say that I would be overjoyed going back to the office full time, but a healthy/flexible balance would be nice. 2 days at home or so, 3 days flexibly in the office and most necessary meetings in person.