there to farmers' markets and 
rural parades celebrating the farmer, the daily appreciation of the faces he saw, and the 
monotonous sounds of "Hello" from children and high school students who knew of him. 
Those students always made him seem retarded when he couldn't communicate to their 
Korean rambling but when he spoke to them in English with the same stream of words 
they became giddy and the outcome was usually a positive one from his perspective. That 
was before he decided to sue his boss for the 10 million won that was owed to him. At 
that time he lost faith in the man's decency and began to find the countryside monotonous 
even though the continual exposure to greenery and remoteness had been healing to his 
soul. 
He left the bus in Chongju (where he was more or less residing) and walked to the 
bathhouse called a mokotong. The day was fiercely hot and he wondered if it would be 
better to jump on a city bus since he had experienced heat exhaustion a week earlier and 
had to be put on an IV to replenish his system. He pulled out some bottled water and 
crackers for countering any remaining potassium deficiency. He needed a walk and was 
not willing to be impeded by a weakly cowardice in broken manhood that was contrary to 
his muscular form. He passed coffee shops, Samsung stores, a convenience store called 
Lawsons, and one called Best Store. Even though he could read some of the signs in 
Hangul he did not know what he was reading for the most part. He wished that his family 
had taught him his native language. Here he often felt like a handicapped moron. If he 
were an Anglo-Saxon, a blue-eyed Miguk sarem English teacher, spending 6 months in 
the host country without learning much of anything about the Korean language, it
wouldn't have been even a minor offense. To most he was a retarded Hanguk sarem. He 
chuckled and then smiled at the faces he took in. 
He waited at a red light with other pedestrians. He sifted out bodies and faces. For a few 
seconds he appreciated the old and the young whom he saw. It was an unselfish sensation. 
It was spiritual and he liked it. Then he lusted after the young men. He had hardly looked 
at them lustfully while in America. Occasionally Korean women also got his attention but 
not as much as American women. He had trouble believing that such predilections were a 
summary of a man. In fact they seemed to him a cathartic release of energy that blocked 
manhood if manhood was gaining equilibrium when coming up from the punches or 
finding a positive expression of himself and the world, and even a pride in both, within 
adversities. Since he quit his job following the suit and the loss of Sung Ki from his life 
he went to Seoul often more for sex than anything else. How easy it was. All he had to do 
was put his eyes on someone at a bar called "Trance," around Pagoda Park, or at the 
movie theatre behind it and off they went to his hotel room. What was it? A strong 
yearning for his native land and the man he might have been had he not been replanted in 
America, an over-identification with his own sex, or fragmentation from violence that 
had disgorged a close family and made him distrustful of those bindings and obligations 
that could go awry. He did not know. He did not know that it mattered. Anyhow, here his 
lusts were pursued cathartically in part and lovingly in that addictive clinging in part but 
always he was falling free and naked into their pools of sensation. 
He did not think that he was all that bored. He had around fifteen hours of classes a week 
and was able, with that, to gain a salary commensurate to what he should have received 
monthly from his former employer. It turned out to be perfectly legal. After all, he was a 
Korean citizen, albeit one on a traveler's visa, and so he did not have to work for anyone 
but himself. He didn't have to do all that much but be able to speak English. He went to 
museums in Seoul on his free time even though the experience was a bit redundant since 
there weren't enough temporary exhibitions to entertain and enlighten him for long. The 
period after sex cloyed empty into the night like a finished game of solitaire. He knew 
that reality whenever he chose to engage in it and yet he did it nonetheless. He wanted an 
exchange of higher and lower energies (or at least thought he did), but men throughout 
the world were afraid of anything    
    
		
	
	
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