12/20/2014: Sunday -- Very comfortable flight to Seoul --
It was an Airbus 380, so the whole upper level was business class. All
cream interior with light green seats, and a bevy of young, gorgeous flight
attendants in cream and light green. They had the most adorable
uniform--little scarves around their neck whose corners stick up at
jaunty angles, and loops of ribbon as a hairpiece. I thought I'd died and
gone to heaven.
they
were serving a v. nice Medoc (French, red) in tiny glasses, but I drank way too
many of them. There were the usual elegant meals in tiny portions (I
chose the Korean options, and practiced saying thankyou).
I
was in an interior seat, and the shades were closed a lot of the time, so couldn't
see outside. I took 1/2 an Ambien, and napped for a few hours. Also
read a Stephanie Baron (mysteries w/ Jane Austen as protagonist) and
(ironically) Hand to Mouth, a screed on what it's like to be poor.
They
had arranged for a car to pick me up -- v. luxurious-- but there's a bus from
the hotel I'll take back to the airport.
Had
dinner at a nearby Korean BBQ place -- v. tasty, but T, my boss, and I really didn't know what
to do with all the condiments and salads--there were 3 salads to share, a huge
bowl of soup with what looked like chunks of liver floating in it, and a bowl
of pickle-y things. Tony got a beer that was way bigger than he expected,
so we shared it.
so
life is good, so far.
Monday: We don't leave for the office (we being T & me) for an hour, so I can continue this breathless account of The
Delights of Seoul. The breakfast buffet is incl. in our room charge (good
thing -- it's $40), but I've never seen such a spread. I guess because so
many nationalities stay here -- there's traditional breakfast from India,
Korea, Japan, Europe (so vg smoked salmon) -- one could sit and contemplate it
all day. Pity we're have to tear ourselves away & go to the office.
The
NY Times has a piteous tale of a 4 yr old Ebola orphan -- I wanted to swoop
over, sweep her up in my arms, & take her home -- I and thousands of
others, I'm sure.
I
slept till 4 something, so not bad, went & did the treadmills for 1/2 hour
(I need to work the conversions to metric for my weight & habitual 4.5
mi/hr). Life is good.
Did
I relate our file transfer woes? The FTP site we were using got closed --
it didn't meet standards -- but no one told us, and a new one isn't opened yet.
So the files we need to send Korea traveled out on my hard drive, but to
get them of has to wait until I'm approved to use a flash drive, data loss
being strictly controlled. When I last looked, it hadn't gone through.
Wednesday: some struggles w/ jet lag -- wake up @ 3:30
or 4, and then get terribly sleepy in the afternoon. Koreans seem to like
their rooms toasty-warm--the conf room we were in the other day was heated to
28 C, which doesn't help.
It's
10F out right now, going to a high of 29F today, but tomorrow's a bit warmer,
high of 39. That's nippy, though, to my mind. People are bundled up
in winter jackets, but most don't wear hats. T (my boss) forgot his
hat & gloves on this trip, and is bald -- and he has a lined raincoat
rather than a winter jacket, so gets cold.
He's pretty well read, e.g. was talking about Moby Dick at lunch
(which he'd read a few years ago) and contrasting it w/ the movie w/ Gregory
Peck. He's also read Mansfield Park, by Jane Austen -- only man I've ever
met who has.
First
lunch, on Monday, JS (the chief actuary) and the Controller took us out to
lunch -- a seemingly infinite procession of salads and soups and then, when I
thought they were done, the main course, which we were too stuffed to eat much
of.
Interstellar
is a hit movie here -- everyone's talking about it. I had only a vague
recollection of NPR pieces on wormholes, and A's review of it w/ Steve.
The
first couple days were mostly T talking to Mi (the Korean E&Y actuary),
and I must admit hard to stay awake through. Mi is maybe late 30's or
early 40's -- she's from Korea but her husband isn't -- they live in HK.
Has daughters 3 & 6, who have Philippine nannies (two) and go to
Chinese school, so the daughters speak Cantonese & Mandarin. Her
husband (also an actuary? not clear) travels a lot, and has morning phone
calls w/ Europe & evening phone calls w/ the US. So the little girls
tell the parents "Shhh, I'm on a phone call" at times. The only
time everyone's together is mostly breakfast.
They
speak English, not Korean, at home -- her husb not Korean--
She
was in Vietnam last week, and Seoul this week, so tropical heat to sub-arctic
chill.
Below
the Chief Actuary (JS), all the actuaries I've been dealing w/ are women--they
said women tend to gravitate to multinationals, because English is important
there, and maybe also employment practices fairer?
The
default lunch place is "katsu" -- japanese style fried pork
cutlet. I've been able to avoid pork so far, but have ingested a bunch of
shellfish w/o realizing -- I haven't been asking because it seemed intrusive at
the first lunch, when we were being treated, and eating Korean food was a plus.
Several of the dishes at the lunch place come on little
burning-stove stands -- the staff is very casual about rushing through the
restaurant with a tray in each hand, stoves flaming away.
I
did some worksheets that tried to replicate calculations out of their models
(and didn't come terribly close) and there's been a certain amount of back and
forth -- the back and forth considerably hampered by our inability to exchange
large files, because MetLife's IT people cut off the FTP site we were using,
and hasn't yet set up another.
The
files I downloaded to my hard drive before leaving work last Friday I have been
able to give to the Korean actuaries, (that is, I have been included now in the
group allowed to copy files to a flash drive, and the help desk walked me
through how to answer the screens that appear when you copy to the hard drive
-- I called the help desk at 3 AM one morning to do that) but the way we get
access to the Wilmington servers when out of the office doesn't permit
downloading files. Or, rather, there is a way to set up a VPN, but I'm
told the drives aren't mapped correctly. V. frustrating.
Aren't
you fascinated?
I'll
be glad to get home. Keep thinking that no one's lit Hanukkah
candles, which makes me sad. Want to do latkes and pot roast one night
while L's home.
Thursday: to continue this breathless travel-log, the
elevators in the MetLife bldg don't talk to each other -- you press the down
button on one, and the others don't notice. On the other hand, they have
fancy Japanese style toilet-seats (heated, with all kinds of unmentionable
options).
Had
lunch with Mi and Brian, at a place that served huge bowls of soup. Mi's
older daughter has 8 activities: swimming, ballet, Korean lessons,
Mandarin, and English--I'm forgetting the other 3.
The
three year old speaks Mandarin, Cantonese, and English, but sometimes she gets
upset and won't speak (as 3 year olds are wont to do).
I
skyped Steve this morning, and was too late to the gym to get one of the good
treadmills. The one I got, once I entered 64 as my age, wouldn't go
faster than a walk. I tried entering 50, 40, etc, but it saw right
through my efforts. I gave up in disgust.
Did
I say that at the Korean place T & I ate in on Wed, the waitress mixed
my bibimbap for me with one of the long-handled spoons Koreans use for rice,
and then I thought she was going to tell me to open my mouth & spoon feed
me.
My
Korean is limited -- I can say hello, thank you, and I don't speak Korean and
excuse me (as in getting someone's attention). I can't say please, or I'm sorry
but apparently they're not used much -- people bump into each other w/o
apologizing, and saying "please" sounds like you're desperate.
Tonight's
Korean place was v. nice -- the waitress cooked our bbq for us & showed us
how to wrap the pieces of meat in a nice green leaf, but didn't seem to think
we needed to be hand-fed.
Friday: It's 5 PM & I'm back in my hotel room.
not a whole lot to add to the preceding. Today's lunch was with the
strategic actuarial team, which consists of 4 women and 2 men (Lena is my main
contact there). I asked Lena about the preponderance of women & she
opined women were better at numbers than men.
They were shocked at the lack of Japanese female actuaries. Maybe Japanese women aren't as good at math as Chinese & Korean?
Lunch was many, many salads (really enough to have been lunch), followed by spicy vermicelli. I waddled out, and a couple hours later Lena appeared w/ cake & a persimmon smoothie, since the group was having treats in honor of Xmas I guess.
gym was much emptier this morning -- I got up at 5 but could have slept till 6--there were plenty of good treadmills.
I felt bad -- Lena & company stayed till 9 PM last night trying to answer why one calculation didn't match another, and what did I do today but toss more questions her way.
that's my supply of babble. I'll be glad to get home.
They were shocked at the lack of Japanese female actuaries. Maybe Japanese women aren't as good at math as Chinese & Korean?
Lunch was many, many salads (really enough to have been lunch), followed by spicy vermicelli. I waddled out, and a couple hours later Lena appeared w/ cake & a persimmon smoothie, since the group was having treats in honor of Xmas I guess.
gym was much emptier this morning -- I got up at 5 but could have slept till 6--there were plenty of good treadmills.
I felt bad -- Lena & company stayed till 9 PM last night trying to answer why one calculation didn't match another, and what did I do today but toss more questions her way.
that's my supply of babble. I'll be glad to get home.
Saturday: Got up at 5 (I’d set the hotel alarm, my
Galaxy 5 alarm and my blackberry alarm); the airport bus stops on the street
outside the hotel and it had snowed overnight, so we had to make our way down a
few slippery, slushy steps, which I was having trouble with, when the bellboy
came over & grasped my arm and propelled me to the bus (I felt like such an
old lady). I was nervous on the bus –
suppose we skidded? Suppose I was on the
wrong bus bound for the wrong airport? I
felt very far from home.
Of
course, all was fine. KAL business class
lounge wasn’t that elegant, but I learned how to make up the spicy instant
ramen that is v. popular (all the Koreans were wolfing it down), and felt much
better once I’d had it and some coffee.
Flight
home was fine – I wasn’t as agog at the bevy of beautiful flight attendants as
before. Read an imitation Mapp & Lucia, a Sister Frevisse, part of Castle Richmond by
Trollope (I have most of him & most of Dickens on my iPad in case of
emergency), watched part of the 100 foot journey (every plot turn seemed
obvious) and slept some.
INS
has automatic passport reader machines – I thought they were fun—and the trip
back from JFK was fine.