29 August 2008

Misrak, Super Nanny

We're fine here, just tired with school up and running (the kids are pretty good so far...who am I kidding? Right now, they're great. The trick is to make them stay that way all year long). With Anastasia added to the equation, we are two exhausted parents. Misrak is doing well with her, though.

For those who are wondering, Misrak is 24 and comes from Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia. She has been in Abu Dhabi for about nine months now, and she lives with three other Ethiopian girls in a flat a block away from us. Thus, she's nearby in case of a babysitting emergency (or in case we lock our keys inside our flat, something that happens all too often to people here).

Misrak came highly recommended by a few teaching couples who employed her services last year, and she was one of Christine's first visitors at the hospital (others who visited Christine early on were Heidi, Ryley and Roar, Allana, and Zakaia, or one Canadian, one American, one Norwegian, one Trinidadian, and one New Zealander--it's a multicultural city! The second "wave of visitors" brought an Irishman, a Spaniard, an Englishman, an Australian, an Egyptian...well, you get the idea. It's like having the United Nations in our house).

Misrak even brought flowers to the hospital for the new mother, and a few days later she gave Anastasia a big stuffed bunny (look for it in pictures!). Misrak looked after Anastasia throughout the summer, coming in for a few hours three times a week and giving Anastasia's parents a little break. It also gave baby and nanny some time to get to know one another. Misrak has even accompanied us on trips; when Christine's youngest brother Brian (the godfather) visited us, Misrak went with us to Dubai and to Al Ain.

Misrak has a quiet, calming personality, and we are lucky to have her.

23 August 2008

The end of another summer (by Christine)

It's almost that time again :( Returning teachers report on the 25th and students resume classes on the 31st. This fall we start on the Ramadan calendar right away. Consequently, school only runs from 8:30 to 1:10 and is a perfect way to return to work post-baby. This also means Eid is just a month away and that the one-week plus break we get for that holiday is within sight!

Anastasia will be staying at home with Misrak (our next entry will be all about her) from about 8-2 each day. We've had her coming in 3 times a week for a few hours this summer. So she and Anastasia are well acquainted, they seem to truly enjoy each other, and Randy and I have complete confidence in her. Sometimes, I feel like I should be looking to her to see how to do some things, she's that good!

This Friday, our little family did the Abu Dhabi "Trifecta": we hit three malls in one day! First it was off to Khalidiya to have coffee with a colleague that returned from Canada, then to Marina Mall to go to Ikea, and finally Abu Dhabi Mall because Randy's tutoring job is near there. Three malls sound ridiculous (especially considering I could easily go a year in the US without visiting one)- but does going to 3 different places running errands sound unusual? I don't think so, it's just that here everything is in malls. (Do you hear my rationalizations?!) Anastasia was in her Baby Bjorn most of the time and did a great job- she slept :)

While Randy tutored, I visited with his tutoree's Egyptian family. The youngest girl was amazed that everything Anastasia had was smaller than hers, that she couldn't walk or hold things, and wanted to give her several of her toys. Very cute!! All three sisters and mom fought to hold her, once I was finally done breatfeeding in their parlor. It was really nice to just sit and visit with a non-Western woman: we discussed wedding bands, hair and eye color, American cities vs towns, pharmacy schools, Alexandria and family guests. It ended with an invite for dinner once her huband returns from a trip abroad.

As we have taken Anastasia out and around, we've found her to be a real barrier-breaker. Randy even had coffee with a covered woman- she approached him, and then proceeded to comfort and feed Anastasia as they sat and chatted. Babies always get attention, but people really stare when she's in the Baby Bjorn. Women's looks express thoughts that lead Randy to think he's the best dad ever and onlooking men seem to be shocked and/or mocking him.

Other (old) news: as of her one month visit, Anastasia had gained 2.5 pounds, 3 cm in length and 3 cm in head circumference. This means she's in the 60th percentile for weight, but in about the 10th for length. Short, chunky, but the brain sure is growing!

Here are some of Anastasia's favorite places to stare around the house. She visits them several times daily and they usually quiet her crying for a bit. They seem goofy choices to me, but most do have some pretty strong color contrasts.




And lastly, to celebrate becoming a mother, my approaching 32nd birthday, and to rally myself to get into the back-to-school spirit, I treated myself to a morning at a nearby spa. I had a Morrocan bath, haircut, facial, mani and pedi. The Moroccan bath included getting rubbed down with something slimy to facilitate exfoliation, a good steaming, a brutal rubbing down and finally a massage. Surprisingly to me and the lady abusing me, little dead skin was removed. This resulted in the Phillipino lady saying that my husband was lucky and complimenting me on my cleanliness, but lamenting that unless there's major results, I may not come back.

Although we didn't travel far this summer, it was a big one for us. One that included late mornings, walks to induce labor, books and box sets of TV series to avoid the sweltering heat BA(before Anastasia) and AA early mornings, walks to calm baby, books and box sets of TV series to avoid the sweltering heat. Now only 3 months until we head back to the States for an extended winter holiday with family!!

12 August 2008

Brian's visit to UAE

Brian's visit to UAE

(Click on the photograph to view a web album)


“Anastasia’s Godfather Visits the United Arab Emirates”

By Randall D. Ball

We waited at the airport for nearly two hours, and he never came. Someone, and by someone I mean not me, had misread her brother’s itinerary, so we were one day early to greet Brian at the airport. The next day, same place, same time, Brian did arrive and greeted his goddaughter, his niece, the first in the family to see Anastasia, who was only three weeks old.
Anastasia was going to have a busy week.

Brian’s first day, however, was relaxed. We picked him up at the airport in the morning, fed him a full English breakfast at one of our favorite restaurants, and took him to Emirates Palace, our seven-star hotel here in Abu Dhabi, to see spectacular grandeur and over-the-top elegance that oil money can buy. They also had a temporary Picasso art exhibit there, and we showed Brian the Saadiyat Island exhibit, although he slept through that part. I would have to take him back there later in the week.
Brian slept through his first afternoon here, arising for what would become his dinner of choice: Lebanese mixed grill (grilled chicken, beef, and lamb) with humus at our neighborhood spot, Al Fawar. The men who work there recognized me and complimented us on Anastasia, a personal touch that impressed Brian almost as much as the food. It’s a lot of meat—so naturally, we guys liked it. Christine ate salad, humus, and a few bites of my chicken.

The next day, Brian, Christine, Anastasia, our nanny Misrak, and I all traveled two hours up the coast to Dubai, so that we could show Brian (a civil engineer) all the construction there. After all, at least twenty-five percent of the world’s cranes are located in Dubai. He also had a close-up view of the Burj Dubai (tallest building in the world and it’s still under construction) and the Burj Al-Arab (world’s tallest hotel and the OTHER seven-star hotel in the world). We spent the afternoon at the Mall of the Emirates so Brian could get frost bite in the desert; he went snowboarding at Ski Dubai.
I had baby duty for about an hour (we gave Misrak a break so she could do some shopping on her own). Anastasia and I were in a coffee shop in the Mall of the Emirates when she started crying, and before I knew it, a local Emirati woman, completely covered in her abaya and sheyla, approached me, offered to hold her, and soon she was sitting next to me and we were talking in the coffee shop. Normally, this would be practically taboo, but Anastasia is a gateway to the locals. The woman was a natural, fawning over the infant while she told me about her own five children and gave me home remedies for colic. In all fairness, we were in Dubai, which is a bit more liberal than Abu Dhabi—but still.

On Brian’s third day in the United Arab Emirates, we took him to the Abu Dhabi Falcon Hospital on the mainland, just past the airport. Falconry is a treasured Bedouin tradition, part of hunting in Arabia, and these days such falcons can cost tens of thousands of U.S. dollars. Even the UAE President, His Highness Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al-Nayhan, had a falcon at the hospital during our visit. We had the opportunity to hold the powerful birds (no, not the president’s), their immense talons digging into the heavy-duty gloves we were given, and Brian and I even fed them—raw quail. I think their beaks are stronger than their talons! The falcon hospital cares for such avian ailments as broken wings, parasites, injured claws, even bird tuberculosis! Unfortunately, “Anastasia” and “anesthesia” sound alike with some accents, so I’m certain at least one avian doctor there is wondering why Christine and I named our daughter “Anesthesia.”

The following day, I drove our posse to Al Ain, a popular date-palm oasis near the Oman border. The drive took us from the blindingly-white salt flats (sabka) of coastal Abu Dhabi into the romantic, rolling red dunes of Arabia. Al Ain is the birthplace of the UAE’s founding father, the late Sheikh Zayed Al-Nayhan, the current president’s father. We saw his palace, the oasis itself, and the Al Ain National Museum, and then we (err, I) drove up Jebel Hafeet, the tallest mountain in the UAE (“Jebel” means mountain), for a magnificent view of Al Ain and the surrounding desert. Jebel Hafeet is hard to miss in Al Ain; it’s that massive rocky mountain interrupting a relatively flat horizon.

The day after our Al Ain adventure, we visited Sheikh Zayed’s Mosque in Abu Dhabi, the world’s second largest mosque (after Mecca, of course) and home to the world’s largest dome, which is above the world’s largest chandelier, which is above the world’s largest carpet. Christine and Misrak—but not Anastasia, of course—had to cover up in abayas for this visit. The mosque, which is expected to cost $545 million once it’s completed, is also the final resting place of the late Sheikh Zayed Al Nayhan.

The next morning, we took Brian to the camel race track, once again on the mainland outside the city of Abu Dhabi. The camel races don’t take place in the middle of the summer, but there are still a few groups practicing. Brian, using pantomime and broken English to communicate with a camel tender (camel shepherd? Camel nanny?), at length persuaded him to let Brian sit on a camel. This spectacle drew a little crowd as everyone laughed at the American trying to get on—and off—a camel. We all had a good laugh, but Brian got the much-desired photographs of him on a camel. Don’t be fooled by the one photograph where he appears to be slapping a camel’s backside. What he is actually doing is falling off the animal, arms flailing helplessly—and humorously.
After a morning of camels, we returned to the city, where I showed Brian the deep-sea port at Mina and Heritage Village, an informative but touristy locale on the breakwater that celebrates the Bedouin lifestyle. Here, Brian learned three things:
1. Just because a souvenir market is open and on display doesn’t mean that there will be anyone there to actually take your money;
2. at the exhibit where the ox draws water from the well, don’t try to pull water from the well yourself. There’s a ten-minute lecture in Arabic for you if you do; and
3. those ducks weren’t fighting. Two of them were violently crushing a third against the ground while others pecked at the victim, but Christine insists it was just duck sex.

On his last day in Abu Dhabi, we took Brian to the beach for some photo-ops with Anastasia. She did well, by the way, allowing the gentle waves of the Persian Gulf to wash over her without crying. She pleased her coastal-born and raised father, certainly.
We also returned to Emirates Palace so Brian could see the exhibit on Saadiyat Island, or Island of Happiness. Saadiyat Island, located a kilometer from downtown, will be the cultural hub of Abu Dhabi, featuring a maritime museum, the Louvre, the Guggenheim, a national museum, and an opera house. All these structures are amazing architectural feats (once completed), and in the eyes of an engineer like Brian, impractical abominations that people like him must make happen when architects go wild. Actually, Brian liked my favorite exhibit there, the maritime museum, where the walkway seemingly dives into the water and comes out underneath. The island will be an incredible achievement, a valid reason to return to Abu Dhabi in a few years to see the finished product.

Brian saw much during his visit, from the history and culture presented at the Al Ain Museum, Heritage Village, and the falcon hospital to the present attractions of Ski Dubai and fancy hotels to the promise of tomorrow in the Burj Dubai and Saadiyat Island. It’s a good time to be in the United Arab Emirates.

02 August 2008

Anastasia at Three Weeks: A Profile in Colic

Here she is being cute and cuddly.

Things can change in a hurry:
















I promise we aren't doing anything bad to her.

This is what colic looks like.