07 December 2013

Thanksgiving on LAS campus, tree with reindeer, percentiles

Thanksgiving was very big on the LAS campus- everyone in the school had lunch on the football pitch ("soccer field" for you Americans).  Below are some photos of  the campus, the girls with their classmates and our tree-decorating several evenings later. 
 
LAS follows a trimester in the elementary, so we also recently had parent conferences and received report cards.  Ms. Faiza says Anastasia has grown out of the shyness she displayed at the beginning of the year and is doing well and Mrs. Farah has been taken under Talula's spell.  The girls' report cards were good and included physical measurements.  Talula weighs 30 lbs (42nd percentile) and stands a mere 34 inches (4th percentile).  Anastasia's stats are both very near the 20th percentile: 41 1/2 inches tall, 37 pounds.
 
Thanksgiving on the football field @ LAS

view of some elementary classrooms and the playground

royal palms shade an alcove; the open-but-covered gym is in the background

Talula spots me at the elementary program in the auditorium

Anastasia among classmates watching a play (except to peek at mommy)

Anastasia sharing Thanksgiving with her classmates
(girl in photo is her best friend)

Talula is one of the last to leave the table; Mrs. Farrah is her teacher (black sweater)

Reindeer began to play after decorating the Christmas tree

Pulling the sleigh...this game went on for quite a while!

18 November 2013

Muharram break around the house

Both girls have a reason to wear hoodies for the first time:
Talula in her raccoon.

Anastasia is Rainbow Dash: mane, tail, wings and cutie mark!

Sick princess Talula fell asleep in a toy box.

Teepee complete!

Anastasia enjoying the flashlight, sheepskin and pillows inside.

Dressing up all her "friends."
(Each stuffed animal is wearing a scarf, necklace, hat, etc.)

02 November 2013

Spiderman and a Princess

Spiderman and a Princess...and Robin Hood, Phantom of the Opera,
a black eye, baby nun and medieval maiden. 
Our first Halloween in Lahore as part of the LAS (Lahore American School) community has been quite a treat for the girls.  [Literally- we have buckets full of candy.]

Halloween night involved bobbing for apples, crafts, cookie decorating, trick-or-treating, a scary walk and ended with a movie.  There were about 10 kids altogether- 8 more than our previous holidays.  The following day was the Halloween Carnival at school.  The morning started with a parade of the elementary students so everyone in the school could see their costumes.  The carnival involved several tents around the football field featuring a class or club's food and games, a bouncy house, a raffle and resulted in two very happy and tired girls by the end.

See for yourself...at the Halloween album

18 October 2013

Tour of Lahore

Badshahi Mosque during an Eid holiday/ belated birthday tour
Randy followed through on a birthday gift with a tour of some of Lahore's more interesting sites.  In one day we were promised the Lahore Fort and Badshahi (Royal) Mosque, Lahore Museum, Anarkali Bazaar, Shalimar Garden, Wahgah border show and ending with Gawal Mandi for dinner.  In our 10-hour tour we only accomplished the fort, mosque, old town, garden and border extravaganza.  Based on my exhaustion at the end of it all, I honestly think it would be impossible to do all of those activities in one day.

Our guide Imran was very personable.  His take on arranged marriage: if you and your wife fight, you can blame your parents.  Imran said he fell in love with his cousin but still married who his parents wanted and that his life is fine.  He also made a brief go at the Pakistan-USA political situation.  Imran and the driver together were quite the comedians and made many jokes about Randy's sweating abilities and the driver's eating ones- both being declared most healthy.  For me, the funniest parts of the day came each time Randy was asked for another picture with a group of guys; ten times is a conservative estimate for how often that happened.

WARNING: the following album does NOT feature Anastasia or Talula, does include some photos of Eid in all its gory (I'm mean, glory) and may want to make you visit Pakistan.

THE ALBUM: click here to be wowed

13 October 2013

Talula's 3rd Birthday (zoo, ambulance, roof)

follow this link to see an album of the zoo and birthday

How to tell this story without it sounding ridiculous?
Saturday morning started off as many do: wake up by 5:30 (thanks, Anastasia!), pancakes and then Khalil arrives to take us somewhere.  Today it was going to be the Lahore Zoo as part of the festivities for Talula’s third birthday.
The first surprise of the day was that our driver’s quote for the zoo fee of 15 PKR was what we paid as well.  I had expected a “foreigner’s fee” but all four of us got in for less than 40 cents.  Adults were 15 PKR each; the girls cost a mere 5 PKR.  I guess they don’t get enough foreigners to make it worth their effort.
The visit started well.  Anastasia raced from one exhibit to another, there was a brief jumping-off-the-bench competition by the giraffes and Talula managed to touch a baby gazelle on the nose.  All the animals had plenty of space and appeared well-fed.  We saw hippos, rhinos, an elephant, various birds and ungulates, chimpanzees drinking tea, a camel, zebras, lions with cubs and the snake house.  It was as we went for a closer view of the lions, tiger, puma and other cats that we got in trouble.
The large cat-viewing space climbed up hill with a series of waves to make it easier to see the animals.  Anastasia and Talula immediately saw its potential and began running down it.  I warned them to be safe and they were being somewhat cautious.   Anastasia was wearing a zebra dress and Talula had a snake shirt on.  The bobcat actually started stalking Anastasia as she ran up and down the hill.  On one of the trips up, she looked to the side to see if he was following her and she fell flat on her face.
By the time I got to her, she had an egg-sized knot on her head.  We immediately started in the direction of the concessions to find some ice.  In place of words, I lifted up her hair to show the nearly golf ball-sized protrusion to vendors until I found one with ice.  I grabbed a pair of spare underwear from my purse (the girls’ underwear, not mine) and began holding the ice on her head.  I suggested to Randy that he should take this time to go to the restroom as the crisis was under control.  He hadn’t been feeling well in the morning and needed a break.
A few moments later, I see a commotion that draws my attention from the girls.  White man down: canteen workers and zoo guests race to try to catch Randy as he collapses on the ground.  I show Anastasia how to hold her own ice and go see Randy.  He looks like he’s about to barf so I get a trash can and dump water on his head.  Three men are massaging his shoulders, another finds him a juice and 20-30 others stand and gawk. 
I return to Anastasia and Talula.  One man tells me I should be holding a warm compress not a cold one and another is suggesting 1122 (the 911-equivalent).  I say no to the first, but yes to the second.  I borrow Randy’s phone to call Khalil, our driver, to come and collect us.  We had sent him home thinking we would be at the zoo most of the day.  I buy the girls some ice creams to distract them from all the drama and to show some appreciation to the guy that gave us the ice in the first place.  Upon my return from that, I see that expression on Randy’s that I saw on the plane ride from Morocco: he’s about to go down again.  I yell this to the men still rubbing him, they don’t understand, but manage to catch him anyways.
It’s about this time that the ambulance arrives.  Anastasia sees the uniforms and dives under the table, strongly refusing any assistance.  While I’m trying to drag her out, Randy disappears.  A stranger says “BP” which I translate to “the paramedics took Randy to the ambulance to check his blood pressure.”
While waiting outside an entrance to the zoo, I buy more junk to entertain the girls, repeatedly try to contact Khalil as we are now at a different gate than we were dropped and endure the ogles of a bus full of school boys.  I also assure the zoo administrator that we do not want to make any complaints; this fiasco was all our own doing.
I hadn’t told Khalil about what was going down at the zoo because I thought he would have trouble understanding and/or try to drive too quickly to save us.  Thus when a kind by-stander gave him a synopsis he was visibly upset.  Once in the car he told us that “I am responsible for you” and that in the future he will not leave us unattended in public places.
The afternoon was much less eventful.  Khalil presented Talula with a creepy, winged doll that had glowing eyes and sang the same Carpenter verse over and over:
“When I was young
I'd listen to the radio
Waitin' for my favorite songs

When they played I'd sing along
It made me smile.
Those were such happy times”
[Yesterday Once More (Reprise)]
Midafternoon we had Talula’s birthday cake and presents on one of the roof’s balconies.  While there we viewed a hoopoe (a favorite bird we recognized from Abu Dhabi), sneaked peaks at the Eid goats in our neighbor’s yard before they are slaughtered, colored with new markers, dressed and re-dressed a new Moxie doll and tried to sneak photos of Anastasia’s shocking forehead.

Anastasia and Talula carefully placed all their "friends" on the steps multiple times a few nights ago.  They said it was like how their teachers get them to sit at school.




"new" swing from Ramona and Ric.  It's in a nice shady spot to observe birds, squirrels, cats and plants.  The girls use it as a piece of playground equipment.


29 September 2013

September in Lahore

colorful trucks are daily sightings
 Click here to see more September

The pictures in the album above indicate most of what has been happening.  Here are a few things left un-photographed:

1.  We are working very hard.  Randy has 5 preps, I have 3 and we both have more kids than we have had anytime recently.  Such is life at a small school...

2.  We like our small school.  Lahore American School has a nice warm feel, a vibrant campus that is always busy with activities, and polite students.  Anastasia and Talula still get lots of mashallah's and attention.

3.  We have attended our first birthday party here- for Nashmia in Talula's class.  It was at Hardee's and included Bollywood-style karaoke by one of the employees.  Special :)

4.  Rains are less frequent now (monsoon season is coming to an end), but it's still hot.  Temperatures are supposed to start dropping later in October. 

5.  Also, later in October we have a one-week break for Eid Al Adha.  Thus all the sheep and goats currently lining the roadsides will be no more.  We have decided to check out some Lahore sites and relax in our now more fully-furnished house during that week off.

24 August 2013

The girls' view of Summer 2013

The girls got 2 kid cameras this summer- which actually worked out quite well.  Many pictures were blurry- they would push the button and then move on, while the actual photo is take about a second after pushing the button.  Some favorite subjects included pets, TV and computer screens, floors and the upper half of their own faces.  There were quite a few videos as well; my favorite is one where Anastasia draws all over Talula's hand and then I walk in a few seconds later and give Talula a talking to about drawing on her hands.

We'll have to turn them loose with the camera here to see what they are finding interesting.  Below are a few of the over 700 that they took...

 
some of the not-too-blurry ones

09 August 2013

Hello from Lahore

CLICK HERE for TOUR of 23/E-2 F.C.C., Gulberg, Lahore, Pakistan  (Be sure to read the captions for each picture if you want a clear idea of our new home.)

Hello from Lahore, Pakistan!

We arrived in Lahore with no trouble.  The flight between DC and Doha was long, but at just over 12 hours, it could have been worse.  It helped that the girls slept most of the time.  (Total flight time, of all four flights, was approximately 18 hours;  going back to the States will be closer to 20 hours, however).

The house is big.  On the ground floor, we have our kitchen, huge dining room, a den, a living room, and a bedroom with bathroom attached.  There's also a patio overlooking the back yard.  The second floor has three more bedrooms, each with bathroom, although only one tub.  The others are showers. There's a terrace on the second floor, with doors opening out from two of the three bedrooms.  There are some pretty cool vines/flowers growing along the terrace.  There's also a gecko that hangs around the girls' bathroom outside window.

We've seen various birds, including some green parrots, plus squirrels, cats, etc.  The yard is very green--lots of grass and shrubs and tropical plants.

We have a little carport where the car (a Honda) is parked.  I just call for our driver Khalil when we need him.  Aside from the driver, we have also hired a nanny, Shakeela, and a gardener, Amin.

The school is probably ten minutes away.  No pictures of it yet, but most of you have seen LAS' website, if you haven't yet, follow this link:  LINK to LAS.

We have our own security guard, provided by the school.  They work in twelve-hour shifts.  The weekday guard Khalid is the one we've seen the most.  He really likes to play with the girls (and it probably takes away some of the monotony of guarding a single-family dwelling on a quiet cul-des-sac in a residential neighborhood).

01 August 2013

in FL & SC (Summer 2013)

We leave tomorrow for Pakistan, but the last 3 weeks in Florida and Beaufort have been fun-filled.  Just look at the photos! click this link to see Google+ album of Summer 2013 FL & SC
Balls & Doggetts

18 July 2013

in IN (Summer 2013)

Link to 2013 Summer- IN.  This summer we are traveling all out of order- IN, FL, and then SC.  The Indiana leg of the trip was as busy or busier than usual.  Fun was had by all.  Hopefully the pictures will tell rest of the story.
Anastasia and Talula attempt to share cousin Reed

17 July 2013

Anastasia's 5th birthday x 3

The early birthday party at AISA

Aunts Amy and Lyndsie play at Brian & Hannah's dinosaur birthday party

Hannah and Lyndsie help open the birthday cupcakes

Godfather Brian and unwilling Godchild

On the actual day (11 July) at Holiday World

That evening surrounded by family (who also happened to be gathered for another birthday, a welcome home and a send off)

16 June 2013

These boxes were made for posing...

...and that's just what Anastasia did upon coming home to boxes in every room;
Talula couldn't believe the closets were empty and made use of those.

15 June 2013

2013 Dance Recital: Wonderful World of Disney

Anastasia's tap-ballet-jazz class performed "I wanna be like you" from the Jungle Book in some pretty cute outfits.  Her performance was 18th of 22, but the Disney theme kept the girls' attention a bit better than last years' "In the Garden" show.  Talula is taking Baby Ballet but her class was considered too young to perform; Talula definitely disagreed.  She seemed eager to get up on stage and loudly said "good bye" to every group as they finished their performance.
Talula and Randy reading the program
Anastasia stood to see us while all the dancers waited for their awards 
showing us her award at the end

06 June 2013

Leaving Abu Dhabi and Noy

We have been discarding unnecessary items since signing the employment contracts for Lahore American School in Pakistan.  Movers will come to pack up our remaining belongings next Sunday, 16 June and then we live out of our summer suitcases until we fly out on Thursday night the same week (after which we live out of them more legitimately for the 6 weeks we're home visiting family in the USA).  We have tried to prepare the girls for the move by talking about Paxitan (as Anastasia calls our next home), promising a bike and kitty cat shortly after arrival and sharing the shocking information that even Talula will get to go to school there.  

We have today off for Israa and Miaraj Night (an Islamic holiday) and I decided to spend it by focusing on Noy, our nanny of three years.  We started by photographing Anastasia, Talula and Noy frolicking at the Khalidiya Park and then after a quick and necessary bath for the girls, Noy videotaped herself reading 3 new books on Zoodles with one of the girls on her lap for each.  I'm very happy to know we have good photos and a couple of videos that the girls will be able to look at when they miss Noy. We may all need those photos and books :(
 link to album to view photos

Favorite photo of the morning

03 May 2013

April in Abu Dhabi

Noy took the girls to Sparkey's (play center at mall) to visit a bored friend who worked in a salon.  We got back two very different, older-looking girls.  They both wanted lots of pictures with their "new" hair.

straight-haired girls
Silly straight-haired girls
It's a good thing Talula likes her older sister
Back to being nice
Anastasia's fake, early "Happy Birthday" at AISA
They tend to put on a show of great affection for each other in public:
Talula kissing Anastasia
Anastasia cleaning Talula's mouth
Mrs. Surinder (classroom aid) and Ms. Mairi (KG-1 teacher)
Ms. Mairi is leaving for maternity leave  in a few days' time and we're really not sure who Anastasia is going to tell everything to now.

07 April 2013

Spring Break Morocco: Casablanca, Rabat, Meknes, Fez and Marrakech

 
Spring Break in Morocco
By
Randall D. Ball
We called our driver “Mr. Personality.”  He may or may not have given us his name when he picked us up at the airport near Casablanca after our long but direct nine-hour red-eye flight from Abu Dhabi.  We were pretty tired, after all.  He would be our driver for most of the week, and there comes a time when it’s too late to ask someone’s name:  “Oh, by the way, it’s been several days now, but what’s your name?”  So we called him Mr. Personality:  by far the least sociable, least knowledgeable, and frankly most dull driver we’ve ever had on an escorted tour.
We arrived early on a Saturday morning, yet the hotel in Casablanca was good enough to check us in before 10:00 am.  Christine and Talula were tired and slept for three hours, but Anastasia and I went out to explore our surroundings.  The hotel was just outside Casablanca’s medina, near the Place des Nations Unies, where Anastasia ran around, garnered lots of friendly attention from the locals, and marveled at all the trams whizzing by.  She also danced while a musician played his saxophone just inside the medina.  Then we picked up some bread, cheese, and ham at a little market and returned to the hotel for a late lunch on our spacious balcony. 
I was awakened the next morning, Easter Sunday, with Talula sitting up in bed, staring at a lamp shade in the darkness:  “It’s a spicy ghost!” she called out.  Some kids see the Easter Bunny;  ours sees spicy ghosts.  I have no idea what makes a phantasm pungent, but we had our catch phrase for the trip.
Mr. Personality gave us a quick tour of Casablanca, beginning with a stop at Place Mohammed V (or Mohammed V Square, named after the late leader who oversaw Morocco’s independence from France in 1956), where the girls had a blast chasing pigeons.  Unlike their experience at Place de l’Etoile in Beirut, though, these pigeons didn’t fly away.  They were much tamer—and well-fed in the square.  We also visited the largest mosque in the country (number seven in the world, but with the world’s tallest minaret), Hassan II Mosque, situated right on the coast overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.  Mr. Personality drove by a few other places of interest, including the Corniche (waterfront) and the President’s Palace (his primary residence, however, is in the capital Rabat.  It became a source of humor—the one time our driver actually intended something amusing—that in each city we visited, our driver would point out the President’s Palace).
Then we drove to Rabat, stopping for another late lunch (dinner was usually late, too—around 7:30, typically—a schedule that interrupted the girls’ eating routine.  They’d get hungry and have a snack in the middle of the afternoon, not be hungry for dinner, wake up too early in the morning wanting food, then not being hungry for breakfast, and the vicious cycle is born).  It was our first taste of tajine—potatoes and vegetables with meat or chicken roasted in a clay pot with a conical lid.  It was good, but it was served to us way too often in Morocco.
In Rabat, Mr. Personality took us to the Mausoleum of Mohammed V (we would see many tombs in Morocco), the resting place of both Mohammed V and his late son, Hassan II (the grandson is now king).  Historic Hassan Tower rises above the mausoleum;  the “tower” is a minaret, intended to be the tallest in the world when construction began in 1195.  The project was abandoned before completion, but the tower is still impressive with the intricate designs so common in this part of the Muslim world.  Then our driver dropped us off at Rabat’s medina, although he didn’t tell us anything about it.  We had to figure it out for ourselves.  The Kasbah des Oudajas (the medina) is home to some attractive Andalusian Gardens, as we learned from a local.
That night, the girls worked on their “insults” (I’m assuming Anastasia is picking this up at school).  Anastasia would say something such as, “You have a butt on your face,” or on your elbow, your ear, wherever.  Talula chimed in with her own attempt:  “You have a butt like a face.”  Maybe that’s what makes a ghost spicy.
Monday morning, we left Rabat, heading for Fes.  We made a few stops along the way, including Meknes, where we saw Bab el-Mansour, an impressive gateway into the city, and more tombs—the Mausoleum of Moulay Ismail (a sultan from the 1600s).  We had a nice lunch at a rooftop restaurant overlooking the city;  the girls ate some couscous while I enjoyed a tasty pigeon pie (shredded pigeon cooked in a curry-like sauce, served in a light, flaky pastry topped with honey.  It really was delicious, and it wasn’t tajine).  Then we drove through the holy city of Moulay Idriss (named after the first sultan of Morocco, a great-grandson of the Prophet Mohammed) and stopped at the Roman ruins of Volubilis, a well-preserved UNESCO World Heritage Site.  It had been raining, however, so we were fairly muddy after about an hour of exploring the archaeological site.
Mr. Personality then took us to Fes.  Our hotel—or riad—was inside the ancient medina, the world’s largest car-free urban development.  Mr. Personality had no idea where our riad was, though, and so we picked up his “friend” Khaled, who would be our tour guide the next day (supplied by the tour company).  Khaled had to phone the hotel, and someone from the hotel came out to guide us from the parking lot, through the walls of the medina, and to the riad.  We liked Fes right away, with its labyrinth of narrow, pedestrian-only (well, donkeys and small motorcycles too) streets.  The riad where we stayed inside the medina was beautifully decorated and very, very friendly.  The proprietor, Mohammed, served us a wonderful  dinner (the tajine was good here, with dates and apricots cooked in with the potatoes and meat, and the mezze was especially delectable as well) and played with the girls, who of course ate up the attention just as Christine and I ate up his food.
Khaled provided our tour of Fes the following day.  We started outside the medina, with a visit to a pottery where we saw how the clay (“yucky mud,” as the girls called it) is transformed into beautiful but often gaudy pottery and ceramics.  Then Khaled took us inside the winding pathways of the medieval medina, where we would follow him closely the rest of the day.  It would be bad to get lost here, especially when you’re unsure of the name of your hotel.  We made the obligatory stop at a carpet shop, enjoying some refreshments with the shopkeeper before breaking his heart by not buying anything, as well as a leather-goods store overlooking the tanneries (a great view of the vast tanning pits).  Aside from all the souqs, however, we also saw (but were not allowed inside) Africa’s largest mosque, Kairaouine Mosque (the name was familiar to us, and sure enough, it was named by refugees from Tunisia who built it in 859), as well as two madrasas, or religious schools:  Madrasa Bou Inania and Madrasa el-Attarine.  Both featured elaborate woodcarvings, tiles, and stucco work—excellent examples of Marinid architecture.
Khaled then led us back to our riad and we said our goodbyes.  Before he left, Khaled told me about tomorrow’s drive.  “It’s a long day, a nine-hour drive.  I used to do tours all around Morocco, and that Fes-to-Marrakech route is hard.  I dreaded it.  Very long drive.  Good luck to you, my friend.”
Wednesday morning, we left at 9:00 am, and although an earlier start for such a long day might have been a good idea, our riad didn’t even start serving breakfast until 8:30.  So we rushed through breakfast, and soon we were on our way.  Our trek took us up into the Middle Atlas Mountains, but the roads were not switchbacks and our driver was so slow that there really wasn’t much chance of the girls getting car sick.  Nevertheless, we drugged up Talula (who is most inclined to get sick, as we learned the hard way in Sri Lanka), which knocked her out for the first ninety minutes or so.  We drove through the beautiful ski resort of Ifrane and the less charming, more industrial-feeling city of Beni Mellal.  We arrived in Marrakech, Mr. Personality’s home town, around 7:30 that night.  Our riad was once again inside the walls of the city’s medina, and it was also elaborately decorated, friendly, and comfortable.  While our hostess prepared a late dinner for us, I worked at keeping Anastasia and Talula awake long enough to eat.  My efforts paid off;  everyone slept through the night.
In the morning we had a new driver.  Mr. Personality wanted to spend some time with his family in Marrakech, but he would return the next day to drive us back to Casablanca.  Our new driver, the Moroccan Jeff Goldblum, and another tour guide—whose name we also forgot—took us around the city.  First, we visited (outside only) the Koutoubia Mosque, whose tall minaret can be seen all over town, making it a good reference point.  Then it was off to see more tombs:  Marrakech’s famed Saadian tombs, which until recently were closed to the public.  Our guide then walked us, ever so slowly, as if he were trying desperately to turn a half-day tour into a full one, to Bahia Palace, with its intricately-designed walls and numerous rooms.  Our tour guide steered us away from the shops in the souqs, telling us that the sales people were “too aggressive” and warning us that he could not be held responsible if one lured us into a shop.  My guess, then, is that he wasn’t getting a commission from anyone.  He did lead us to Djemaa El-Fna Square, another UNESCO World Heritage Site.  Aside from the usual tourist trinkets and food, this famous square is home to performers (it’s like Key West’s Mallory Square at sunset, but all day long):  musicians, fire eaters, jugglers, acrobats, snake charmers, men with monkeys…It’s quite a spectacle;  however, these performers want money and are just as aggressive as any shopkeeper.  Christine wanted a few photos of the girls with the snake charmers.  At the first grouping of charmers (charming their snakes, maybe, but certainly not people), she took a photo of Anastasia and Talula but not with the snakes.  The men insisted on a tip, but Christine counter-insisted that she didn’t take any pictures of their snakes, just her children.  Our guide ended up reporting these snake charmers to the police.  We moved on to another set of snake charmers, who were happy with us until they found out how little I tipped them (about $1.00, nowhere near the $10 or $20 they wanted for two minutes of photographs around a few dormant snakes).
Our guide then walked us back to our driver and his SUV, and then he disappeared for good.  He didn’t say goodbye or hang around for a tip;  he just mysteriously disappeared.  “Jeff Goldblum” then drove us to Majorelle Gardens, an eclectic garden full of bamboo, cactus, flowers, ponds, and Art Deco buildings, as well as a small but informative Berber museum.  It was a nice respite from the chaos and din of the city, a good way to end our tour of Marrakech on a more positive note.
The next morning was a lazy one.  Christine and I read while the girls played quietly (for the most part).  It rained much of the morning, so we stayed inside the riad, dividing our time between our room and the common area that it opened up to.  Our hostess made us hot mint tea (again) and gave the girls some attention, as well as two little bracelets.  Mr. Personality returned in the early afternoon to take us back to Casablanca, an uneventful three-hour drive.  We had a pretty splendid suite for our final night in Morocco:  two floors, a large living room with a wraparound couch on one floor, the bedroom above, and a great view of the city and the Atlantic Ocean in the distance.  We enjoyed a buffet dinner that night at the hotel and turned in after watching a Drew Barrymore movie on cable.  Little did I know what the night and the next day had in store for me.
I was up several times after midnight with stomach cramps, doing the two main things you might expect with such a symptom.  Of course I suspected food poisoning.  It happens.
By 6:00 in the morning, we were awake and everyone else was ready for breakfast.  I drank a small cup of coffee and somehow kept it down.  By 9:00 am, our taxi was ready to take us to the airport.  I was feeling a little queasy but figured the worst was over.  While the plane was on the tarmac, I felt lightheaded and retched in one of those convenient barf bags.  They do hold a lot of liquid—solid construction, that.  The next thing I knew, several flight attendants were surrounding me, waking me up.  I had passed out.  So I spent take-off holding an oxygen container and breathing—deeply—into my little yellow mask.  The safety demonstration is accurate;  the bag of oxygen may not be fully inflated, but oxygen is flowing.  About ninety minutes into the flight, after sipping half a cup of ginger ale, I had one more violent venture into vile vomiting.  Then I started feeling better.  That is, until we began our descent into Abu Dhabi.  The Emirates was experiencing huge storms of lightning, wind, rain, and sand.  We had some pretty rough turbulence (Anastasia said that the plane was “jumping on clouds,” which makes me think there’s a soul of a poet in that girl), and while I survived, the passenger next to me succumbed to motion sickness.  Poor little Talula barfed all over herself, splattering Christine and me in the process.  We were definitely ready to get home.
 I wonder if Etihad will remember 22F and 22G, the Dazzling, Dueling Duo of Dry Heaving and Disgorging. 

15 March 2013

Talula's dancing and Sting

click here to see Talula at dance class...Talula joined dance class in the second term once she was finally old enough for the 2-3 year olds' ballet class.  Noy takes her every Wednesday while we are at work. I don't know who enjoys it more: Talula loves the dancing and costume; Noy loves having something special to do with her as their relationship is in its last few months.  Noy would always give us updates- Talula is one of the fuller-bodied young ladies there, that all the other mothers appreciated her independence, and that Talula could really just shake her bootie.  So I decided to take some time off and go see it myself.  She was a bit reluctant to join in the class in the beginning since I was there, but she eventually did and would turn around and give me wry little expressions to see if I was paying attention.  Anastasia and Talula both have the same instructor, Miss Allison, a surfer from California.

The following day, Pi Day, I attended the Sting concert at Du Arena on Yas Island with my Pakistani colleague and her husband.  Sting put on a solid, traditional performance with about 75% blasts from the past and 25% newer or jam session.  Roxanne, Fields of Gold, SOS, Shape of my Heart, Englishman in New York, and several others were played.  Desert Rose was the first encore and featured some pretty intense belly-dancing.

Not much else is going on...just trying to survive "Death March" (as Randy calls this long stretch between Christmas and spring break).  But in just two more weeks, we're headed west to Morocco.  The girls have been asking about the next airplane ride for a while and I think we'll all be ready to hop on and go somewhere else for a bit.
 
 

02 March 2013

Passport photo attempts

Anastasia has an appointment with the Embassy on Monday


Talula thought it looked fun


 

24 January 2013

"Pulling 39"

Randy turned 40 on 23 January 2013. In honor of this minor occasion:
  • we stayed at Qasr Al Sarab in the apricot-colored dunes of Liwa the weekend before (sans kids- THANK YOU, Noy)
  • everyone (who loves or wants to mock him) at work wore black on the actual day
  • he cooked up some scallops
  • the girls enhaled some cake
  • and he received 2 paintings that I really like. 
For those of you concerned about his mental health during such a low point, he seems to be taking it rather well.

Liwa photos and paintings