Friday, July 10, 2015

Playing Host: A Brother's Visit

I had the pleasure of hosting my brother last week. Whenever I attempt to get friends or family from the west to come visit me in far away South Korea I'm met with understandable reluctance, and I was admittedly skeptical when my brother announced he was intent on coming to see me. It wasn't until he had finally applied for and received his passport that I began to take him seriously, but by the time he got his plane tickets and departure date confirmed I'd already laid the groundwork for his arrival. It's not often I get to play host to people from my old life, and I treasure the few opportunities I'm given to introduce the people I care about to the country I've come to love.

I had a few friends out to see me prior to my brother's visit, one from back home and a few from Japan. Although I rolled out the red carpet for each of them, I never felt like I had truly shown them the best of what South Korea has to offer: my carefully laid plans would fall through, or we would run into hiccups while out and about, or in the case of my college roommate visiting me in January, it was just too insanely cold outside to be bothered with leaving my home! My friends assure me they had a good time while in Korea and I try to assure myself that I did my best, but I can't help from feeling a little guilty for not giving them the mind-blowing experiences I want them to have.

I didn't want to harbor the same regrets over my brother's visit, so I carefully planned what we should do together during his stay. Before he arrived, my brother sent me a list of places in Korea he had read about online that he wanted to visit. Most of his suggestions were out-of-the-way postcard landmarks that make for good photographs, but in my mind they didn't do much to convey what it really feels like to live in Korea. I wanted my brother to see Korea through my eyes, to live the kind of life that I've been living for the past four years. I knew that if I could successfully convey all of the things I love about being in Korea to him in a few action packed days, he would definitely fall in love with Korea as well.

That isn't to say my brother's seven day tour lacked sight-seeing. Absolutely Korea contains awe-inspiring historical architecture worth visiting and beautiful nature just begging to be explored, and I was sure to take my brother to as many must-visit locales as his short vacation afforded. However, what I was most excited to share with him are the little things that make being in Korea so much fun, the sort of experiences that get taken for granted by people who call Korea home but are an intrinsic part of living here.

I'm talking about knocking back soju shots with friends in a crowded Korean barbecue joint after a hard day's work, or strolling the packed streets of Hongdae on a hot summer night and taking in all of the street performances. I wanted my brother to enjoy the cleanliness and spaciousness of a Korean movie theater, the convenience and ease of riding the metro, the joys of having unlimited Gunpla at your fingertips. I wanted him to stuff his belly with as much local cuisine as possible, from pork barbecue and spicy rice cakes to giant bowls of noodle soup and fried cow intestine. We even toned it down and enjoyed the quiet simple pleasures of my countryside life, like hiking up the hill behind my house to the local temple or just standing on my roof and gazing out across the valley I call home.

When it was time for him to leave, I was happy to hear from my brother's own mouth that I’d achieved what I had set out to accomplish. He'd fallen under Korea's spell, and he would be returning to the west with longing in his heart (and soju in his suitcase). I don't know when or even if he'll be coming back to visit me again, but I'm satisfied in that I was able to make at least one person see the Korea I see.

And even though I never discussed the possibility with him, I like to think somewhere in his subconscious he's started wondering, "What if I got a job overseas, too?"