A vlog documenting the bus trip from my Peace Corps site to Mongolia's capital, Ulaanbaatar, a very decent 8-hour bus journey. Read more at www.jennifermyung.wordpress.com
As mongolian living in the united states...i found that mongolians are stubborn with their solid minds and it sounds rude for foreigners....we as a nation really have to open our eyes to explaining things in details and background meaning about things as a guides!!!!!
@ash_alk_fan1
7 жыл бұрын
Hi Jenni! My name is David, and I am currently a Ph.D student who is planning to withdraw from the Ph.D and possibly apply to Peace Corps. I've been reading your blog for a while (I'm interested in Mongolia specifically) and it's been super helpful, not to mention a joy to read. :) I'm still on the fence about if or when I will apply. Would it be okay if I asked you questions I had along the way here? Some I have in mind are: how did you cope with the cold? (I know you've talked about this in your blog, but just did you find it to be tolerable? I went to college in Chicago and the winters SUCKED). How fluent are you in Mongolian now? Was there ever any racism directed toward you? (I am of Chinese heritage, and heard that Mongolians sometimes don't like the Chinese...) How was the internet access on your service site? What were some of the things we took for granted in the U.S. that you didn't get access to in Mongolia? Thank you!!!
@Mongol1232
7 жыл бұрын
Im mongolian but i lived all of my life since age 6 in california. I wanna go back too so im curious. I know they drink a lot of milk tea and whenever i drink it i start sweating.
@myxjenni
6 жыл бұрын
Hey David! So sorry it's been six months. I don't get notifications for my KZitem comments. These are great questions. If you're still curious, feel free to write me via my blog! jennifermyung.wordpress.com/about/
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