OK, anyone who knows me knows I love cats. My cousin wrote me an e-mail and said, 'Knowing your fondness for the species...' That inspired a Corbin story. Just to introduce those of you who missed my great announcement - I acquired a Siamese kitten at the end of November 2007. He is now about 3 months old and as one of my friends said "He has character" - I would have to agreed he has that all right! In short, he is a naughty, naughty boy when awake but an angel when he sleeps.
OK, here goes. I am using sand for cat litter here - it is much cheaper and does the job just as well. Anyway, I have a bag of sand at the bottom of my stairs that was too heavy to haul up the stairs. Corbin's litter box (bowl actually) is upstairs in my store room. I came in from shopping yesterday and happened to notice there had been certain deposits in the bag of sand downstairs. I went down a little later to confirm this and to clean it out. Sure enough, my little guy had helped himself to what he correctly perceived to be clean sand. As I was taking care of his business, he was standing at the top of the stairs watching me. I could tell by the look on his face he knew he was in trouble. I used my best momma voice and said 'PESHU' - he turned and ran for the store room! I later informed him that if he continues to poop in odd places, then Momma will be most unhappy! I asked if he understood in four languages - capishe (Italian), comprehende (Spanish), understand (English) and po hey gum (Pushtu). He assured me in cat that he did indeed understand and this issue would not arise again. At this point, all I can do is take his word (in cat, of course) for it.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Another Good Day
Dear friends and family,
I have not blogged in almost a week - a little down at the mouth, sick one day and dragging the next. And quite frankly, life has not been too excited - other than the power going off about every 10 seconds!
Corbin is doing very well. He is growing like a weed and is a naughty naughty boy! He is an angel when he sleeps, though. Just a few minutes ago he figured out how to push open the living room door. It was slightly cracked on purpose - I want to him to learn to open doors so I will not have to let him in and out continually. Anyway, in typical Corbin fashion, he launched his whole little body at the door and voila! To his amazement, it opened! Good job, Corbin!
Today was an excellent day. I had quite a bit of activity and felt that I got some things accomplished. This morning I went to the American Bazaar with my language teacher and another one of the ex-pats. Just to clarify, the term 'American Bazaar' has nothing to do with the layout or the business owners - it is the goods that give it this label. This place is an amazing collection of shops that have goods that apparently were intended for the country right across the border. Well, apparently, these goods make a regular and tidy habit of 'falling off the truck.' Hence the name of the area 'Smuggler's Bazaar.' It is one of those places you never know what you will find. This is the first time I had been out there and I will go again because the prices are good and the variety is excellent. I found such things as Campbell's Mushroom soup, Lucky Leaf Pie filling, yams in an restaurant size can, McCormick's basil, and last but not least, tampons! Amazing! They do have quite a few 'P' products also but those I can get in town for the most part.
In the afternoon, I went with Geena (my house help) to look for furniture. We were supposed to go to Old City but did not get to do that. We went to a second hand bazaar some distance from my house.I was looking for a table and an amorey (armoire) to put in my 'office.' Nothing fancy - I just needed a table and a storage cabinet basically. Armories are very common here - most of the houses that I have seen do not have closets - they just use armories (amorey in the local language). Anyway, the last shop we came to was pay dirt. There was a table that was the right size and a good quality for a great price. I also found a second hand amorey - the shop owner is going re-paint it and we will pick it up on Monday. You know, when I count my blessings, I count Geena. She has helped me so much in the set-up of this household. She knows where to go to get the best deals in town - places that I would probably never go to by myself, not knowing the language and the area. She bargains for me and she is good at it. We are gradually working out a system where I indicate interest in something, maybe one of us asks the price and then we go from there. Sometimes I have a hard time reading her if it is a good price or not but I am getting better at this. I think she is also getting more comfortable at telling me yes or no. She can be assertive when she wants to be. She is her mid to late 20s with a husband and one daughter. They live, as most 'P's do, in a communal family setting - aunts, uncles, brothers, sisters, etc.
When I got home this afternoon, I had a surprise sitting in the middle of my kitchen floor. It was my stove, on order from a larger city to the east. Alleluia!!! It still needs to be installed but it is in my house and I am dancing on air! Cakes, pies, casseroles, anything that needs an oven - at the fingertips!
OK - enough excitement for one day. Is anyone out there really reading this?? (KB - I know you are - bless you!). In any event - have a blessed day and remember the One who made the moon and stars and makes His mercies shine new every day!
I have not blogged in almost a week - a little down at the mouth, sick one day and dragging the next. And quite frankly, life has not been too excited - other than the power going off about every 10 seconds!
Corbin is doing very well. He is growing like a weed and is a naughty naughty boy! He is an angel when he sleeps, though. Just a few minutes ago he figured out how to push open the living room door. It was slightly cracked on purpose - I want to him to learn to open doors so I will not have to let him in and out continually. Anyway, in typical Corbin fashion, he launched his whole little body at the door and voila! To his amazement, it opened! Good job, Corbin!
Today was an excellent day. I had quite a bit of activity and felt that I got some things accomplished. This morning I went to the American Bazaar with my language teacher and another one of the ex-pats. Just to clarify, the term 'American Bazaar' has nothing to do with the layout or the business owners - it is the goods that give it this label. This place is an amazing collection of shops that have goods that apparently were intended for the country right across the border. Well, apparently, these goods make a regular and tidy habit of 'falling off the truck.' Hence the name of the area 'Smuggler's Bazaar.' It is one of those places you never know what you will find. This is the first time I had been out there and I will go again because the prices are good and the variety is excellent. I found such things as Campbell's Mushroom soup, Lucky Leaf Pie filling, yams in an restaurant size can, McCormick's basil, and last but not least, tampons! Amazing! They do have quite a few 'P' products also but those I can get in town for the most part.
In the afternoon, I went with Geena (my house help) to look for furniture. We were supposed to go to Old City but did not get to do that. We went to a second hand bazaar some distance from my house.I was looking for a table and an amorey (armoire) to put in my 'office.' Nothing fancy - I just needed a table and a storage cabinet basically. Armories are very common here - most of the houses that I have seen do not have closets - they just use armories (amorey in the local language). Anyway, the last shop we came to was pay dirt. There was a table that was the right size and a good quality for a great price. I also found a second hand amorey - the shop owner is going re-paint it and we will pick it up on Monday. You know, when I count my blessings, I count Geena. She has helped me so much in the set-up of this household. She knows where to go to get the best deals in town - places that I would probably never go to by myself, not knowing the language and the area. She bargains for me and she is good at it. We are gradually working out a system where I indicate interest in something, maybe one of us asks the price and then we go from there. Sometimes I have a hard time reading her if it is a good price or not but I am getting better at this. I think she is also getting more comfortable at telling me yes or no. She can be assertive when she wants to be. She is her mid to late 20s with a husband and one daughter. They live, as most 'P's do, in a communal family setting - aunts, uncles, brothers, sisters, etc.
When I got home this afternoon, I had a surprise sitting in the middle of my kitchen floor. It was my stove, on order from a larger city to the east. Alleluia!!! It still needs to be installed but it is in my house and I am dancing on air! Cakes, pies, casseroles, anything that needs an oven - at the fingertips!
OK - enough excitement for one day. Is anyone out there really reading this?? (KB - I know you are - bless you!). In any event - have a blessed day and remember the One who made the moon and stars and makes His mercies shine new every day!
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Just An Ordinary Day
Today was just a rather ordinary day. But it was a good day and I want to tell you a little about it. It has been cold and rainy here and I have been in the house for about 3 days. Today was still cold but the sun was shining and I was able to get out a bit. I went first to one of the local bazaars with my house help to get groceries and other supplies for the week. Grocery shopping here is nothing like what I was used to in my place of orgin (I am really trying not to say 'at home' every time I turn around!) Grocery shopping involves an open air market - kind of like a strip mall with little stands of fruits and vegetables. For dry goods and such, there are little stores along the strip.
Later in the afternoon I went with one of my neighbors to one of the large bazaars in town. I was going specifically to find wall decorations and I hit pay dirt. We went into several shops that had 'antiques' - not as in furniture but as in arts and handiwork and such. I got several things that I think are really beautiful. One is a wheat rug. It is basically a heavy mat, dense and weighty. It is cream colored with a brown, almost southwestern looking pattern. I was told that it was a rug used in the villages to sift the chaff from the wheat. Once the wheat was sifted, then there are pockets in the rug so that it can be filled and loaded on a donkey. Apparently this type of thing is used in several countries in this region. I also purchased a wooden frame with two doors that open up. This is meant to be hung on the wall - it is a dark brown and appears to be hand carved. There are two flowers carved into two circles, one on each door. Another item was a brown wall hanging that is horizontal in design and measures about 12 feet. It is about 6 inches wide and has tassels along the bottom. It is a lovely brown color - it was a find because I am doing my living room in tones of brown.
After all this, a friend and her sister's sister-in-law came over for tea late this afternoon. The lights went off but we had a great time anyway.
I think I will mark this day in my memory as the first day that this strange place began to feel like home. Inch by inch and moment by moment, perhaps this place will seep into my heart until I want no other - until I can say with all my heart 'this is home'
Later in the afternoon I went with one of my neighbors to one of the large bazaars in town. I was going specifically to find wall decorations and I hit pay dirt. We went into several shops that had 'antiques' - not as in furniture but as in arts and handiwork and such. I got several things that I think are really beautiful. One is a wheat rug. It is basically a heavy mat, dense and weighty. It is cream colored with a brown, almost southwestern looking pattern. I was told that it was a rug used in the villages to sift the chaff from the wheat. Once the wheat was sifted, then there are pockets in the rug so that it can be filled and loaded on a donkey. Apparently this type of thing is used in several countries in this region. I also purchased a wooden frame with two doors that open up. This is meant to be hung on the wall - it is a dark brown and appears to be hand carved. There are two flowers carved into two circles, one on each door. Another item was a brown wall hanging that is horizontal in design and measures about 12 feet. It is about 6 inches wide and has tassels along the bottom. It is a lovely brown color - it was a find because I am doing my living room in tones of brown.
After all this, a friend and her sister's sister-in-law came over for tea late this afternoon. The lights went off but we had a great time anyway.
I think I will mark this day in my memory as the first day that this strange place began to feel like home. Inch by inch and moment by moment, perhaps this place will seep into my heart until I want no other - until I can say with all my heart 'this is home'
Monday, January 7, 2008
English Walnut Date Cake
Here is a recipe I tried for Christmas this year. The ingredients are readily available in my part of the world. When I made it, I pitted and chopped the dates by hand. This took a while but otherwise it is an easy cake to make. As a variation, I think this would lend itself nicely to some apricots stirred into the batter.
English Walnut Date Cake
2 pounds dates, pitted and chopped
2 pounds English walnuts, coarsely chopped
1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
4 egg yolks
4 egg whites
Preheat oven to 300 F/150 C. Grease and flour a ten inch tube pan or a bundt pan.
In a large bowl, combine dates, walnuts, sugar, baking powder, and flour. Stir in egg yolks. In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs until stiff peaks form. Fold the whites into the fruit/nut mixture until no streaks remain. Spoon into prepared pan.
Bake in the pre-heated oven for 90 minutes. Let cool in pan for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and cool completely.
16 servings
English Walnut Date Cake
2 pounds dates, pitted and chopped
2 pounds English walnuts, coarsely chopped
1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
4 egg yolks
4 egg whites
Preheat oven to 300 F/150 C. Grease and flour a ten inch tube pan or a bundt pan.
In a large bowl, combine dates, walnuts, sugar, baking powder, and flour. Stir in egg yolks. In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs until stiff peaks form. Fold the whites into the fruit/nut mixture until no streaks remain. Spoon into prepared pan.
Bake in the pre-heated oven for 90 minutes. Let cool in pan for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and cool completely.
16 servings
Saturday, January 5, 2008
13 Uses for a Chaddar
This a look at life in my new country - from a woman's point of view. In this area, women wear chaddars or saddars (chaddar is Urdu and saddar is Pushtu). Basically, a chuddar is a huge shawl that covers the head and about 3/4s of one's body. Women here wear them in a variety of ways but always to cover the head when going out. Some women cover their faces with them, pulling them across the nose and tucking behind the ears. When at home, it is acceptable to wrap the chaddar as a shaw around the shoulders. For the fashion conscious, they can be draped around one shoulder. If draped on the neck as a scarf with the two ends hanging down the back, it becomes a duppatta (usually a smaller piece of cloth). They come in a variety of colors, textures, and prices and can range from very beautiful to very plain.
Anyway, today I was pondering on the many uses of the chaddar - here some of my unconventional thoughts on this subject.
1) air pollution mask - when out riding around town, I have been known to pull my chuddar over my nose in order to avoid breathing dust laden air.
2)kitten blanket - my little kitten hates to be cold. He loves to curl up for a long nap under my chuddar when I am sitting down.
3) substitute jacket - I have yet to wear a coat since I got here. The chuddar serves as an extra layer of clothing in cold weather.
4) face mask - once, when in a taxi, the taxi driver kept staring at me in his side mirror. Having quickly tired of this, I pulled my chuddar across my face and kept it there for the duration of the ride.
5) Gifts - they made great gifts for female friends (please, none for the other gender!) and are always well received. Given the variety, you can find one to fit any budget and any style.
6) Quick dust catcher - I caught myself wiping off my computer screen with my chuddar today - that is what actually inspired this line of thought.
7) great kitten toy - Corbin loves to play with the tassels on my chuddar and anyone else's who comes within range. They can provide hours of kitten entertainment for a very reasonable price. No fancy toys for this cat!
8) Money talks - I have been known to wad up cash in my hand and hold it under my chuddar. Great place to hide your money!
9) Hand warmer - on cold days, a chuddar is a great thing to bury your hands in.
Ok - these next ones are purely speculative - I have to admit I have not yet tried them - maybe someday!
10) umbrella - it has only rained once in the two months I have been here. I look forward to the day when I can use my chuddar as an makeshift umbrella.
11) Impromptu cushion - self explanatory
12) Flame thrower - as chuddars are worn everywhere, even the kitchen, they can be a bit of a hazard when working around open flames. I would recommend this use when all other uses have been exhausted and you really need to, pardon the express, lighten up!
13) Oh, I forgot the most important use of all - they are great for hiding a bad hair day!!!!!!!!!! No one will ever know the difference, and yes, I have to admit I have tried this one more than once!
Anyway, today I was pondering on the many uses of the chaddar - here some of my unconventional thoughts on this subject.
1) air pollution mask - when out riding around town, I have been known to pull my chuddar over my nose in order to avoid breathing dust laden air.
2)kitten blanket - my little kitten hates to be cold. He loves to curl up for a long nap under my chuddar when I am sitting down.
3) substitute jacket - I have yet to wear a coat since I got here. The chuddar serves as an extra layer of clothing in cold weather.
4) face mask - once, when in a taxi, the taxi driver kept staring at me in his side mirror. Having quickly tired of this, I pulled my chuddar across my face and kept it there for the duration of the ride.
5) Gifts - they made great gifts for female friends (please, none for the other gender!) and are always well received. Given the variety, you can find one to fit any budget and any style.
6) Quick dust catcher - I caught myself wiping off my computer screen with my chuddar today - that is what actually inspired this line of thought.
7) great kitten toy - Corbin loves to play with the tassels on my chuddar and anyone else's who comes within range. They can provide hours of kitten entertainment for a very reasonable price. No fancy toys for this cat!
8) Money talks - I have been known to wad up cash in my hand and hold it under my chuddar. Great place to hide your money!
9) Hand warmer - on cold days, a chuddar is a great thing to bury your hands in.
Ok - these next ones are purely speculative - I have to admit I have not yet tried them - maybe someday!
10) umbrella - it has only rained once in the two months I have been here. I look forward to the day when I can use my chuddar as an makeshift umbrella.
11) Impromptu cushion - self explanatory
12) Flame thrower - as chuddars are worn everywhere, even the kitchen, they can be a bit of a hazard when working around open flames. I would recommend this use when all other uses have been exhausted and you really need to, pardon the express, lighten up!
13) Oh, I forgot the most important use of all - they are great for hiding a bad hair day!!!!!!!!!! No one will ever know the difference, and yes, I have to admit I have tried this one more than once!
Thursday, January 3, 2008
A Rickshaw Ride
Today I took a ride in a rickshaw to get a local store. While this may not sound earthshattering, it is a one small step for womankind - this woman at least! You see, this was my first use of public transporation by myself since I arrived here two months and two days ago. I have been out and about in the city frequently but never alone. I have always gone with someone else, usually my househelper. Today was the first time I secured public transporation for myself using what little I know of the local language. I was even able to bargin the driver down a bit - he held up 4 fingers (for 40 rupi) and I said no and held up 3 fingers (for 30 rupi). The great thing is that I was able to commicate and even get a better price than orginally expected. I deliberately picked a store that was easy to get to and was able to give directions in the local language. For me, this is a victory - kind of like learning to ride a bike for the first time. One small step but this means that I am becoming more independent and able to do things on my own.
Please stay tune to this blog for more developments on the public transporation scene!
Please stay tune to this blog for more developments on the public transporation scene!
Monday, December 31, 2007
Reflections
As I reflect on this last day of the year, it is hard to believe it is almost January again. Last January I began in earnest on the road that brought me to my new country. In March I learned that I would be going for sure. In May I started packing. This packing and unpacking was the most wearying part of the whole process and was to last until I moved into my final home a few weeks ago. In June I moved my furniture to my mother's house. In July I said good-bye to my apartment, my job, and my world in Houston. In August I went to another state to attend orientation. In September my beloved cat, Monday, died suddenly. In October I finished my orientation and returned to Texas. At the end of October, I said good-bye to my cat Tuesday and left him with my mother in America. On the first day of November, I set my foot for the first time on the soil of my new country. On the 29th of November, I aquired a new kitten. In December I moved into my new home.
As I reflect on the changes, it seems too much to pack into one small paragraph. But I am nothing if not concise! Each of these changes alone would have been huge. But so many in so short a time? Well, sufficent to say that I have seen my Father's graciouness in each step of the way. Always in the back of my mind, the thought hovers that He is for my good. He is often a bit mysterious and He does things His own way but He is always in my corner. In the midst of a year of change, He is still Abba and that will never change.
As I reflect on the changes, it seems too much to pack into one small paragraph. But I am nothing if not concise! Each of these changes alone would have been huge. But so many in so short a time? Well, sufficent to say that I have seen my Father's graciouness in each step of the way. Always in the back of my mind, the thought hovers that He is for my good. He is often a bit mysterious and He does things His own way but He is always in my corner. In the midst of a year of change, He is still Abba and that will never change.
Recent Events
All,
I wanted to give everyone a quick rundown on recent events in my country. As most of you probably watch the news, you know it has been turbulent for the last several days. As reassurance, I am doing fine. There was some violence in other parts of the city on Thursday evening but my neighborhood is very safe and I experienced no problems. On Friday and on the weekend, most of the shops in the city were shut down due to the situation. I have mostly stayed at home during that time. I did attend a wedding yesterday. Today is Monday afternoon and the city seems to be coming alive again. I took a walk earlier today and observed the mood of the city. Businesses were open, public transportation was running, and people were up and moving about. All this is good - it means things have settled down.
I wanted to give everyone a quick rundown on recent events in my country. As most of you probably watch the news, you know it has been turbulent for the last several days. As reassurance, I am doing fine. There was some violence in other parts of the city on Thursday evening but my neighborhood is very safe and I experienced no problems. On Friday and on the weekend, most of the shops in the city were shut down due to the situation. I have mostly stayed at home during that time. I did attend a wedding yesterday. Today is Monday afternoon and the city seems to be coming alive again. I took a walk earlier today and observed the mood of the city. Businesses were open, public transportation was running, and people were up and moving about. All this is good - it means things have settled down.
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Za Cor
Ok - the house is coming together. After weeks of worrying - no, let's be honest - obsessing about this - it finally beginning to look like a home. I got carpets yesterday. My language teacher and I went to a bazaar on the outskirts of town. This bazaar is locally called the Smugglers' Bazaar because apparently there are lot of things there that are intended for other places and just miraculously appear here. Anyway, it is a great place to go to get higher end things at good prices. I got one room of wall to wall carpeting and two large beautiful Turkish rugs. One of the rugs is shot with browns and creams. There is a large cream flower design in the center of it. I put this one in my dining room. The other carpet is cream with a dark red pattern. It also has touches of green in it. It is a beautiful rug and something I plan to keep for years and years - Enshallah. It is in the bedroom. The rugs have also made the house much warmer as some of the floors are marble...
Sunday, December 16, 2007
First Edition Poor
Zama Cor - in the language that I am learning that means 'my house.' After weeks of saying that phrase for a variety of situations, we have finally arrived. I moved into my new place on Saturday. Me and peshu (that is 'cat' in my new language). By the way, I figured out that the cat speaks the local language and not English. When I say 'Peshu, Peshu' he comes running. When I say 'Here kitty kitty' I get a blank cat look!
Well, back to the house. I had a mattress delivered on Saturday. The only problem was it did not fit going up the stairs! So I slept on a toshak last night (they truly are multi-purpose). A toshak is a large cushion that is used for sitting and also at times for sleeping. Kind of like a sofa but more portable. We finally got the mattress up the stairs tonight. I have very little furniture right but have ordered a bedroom suite, a kitchen table, a china cabinet, and a dining room table. The furniture is being made so that will be several weeks before I get it.
I feel like I am 25 again and setting up housekeeping - for those of you who were single for longer than 5 minutes, perhaps you remember your first place. If it was anything like mine, it came with carpet that had seen better days - a lot better days! My first carpet was orange shag that had lost the shag a long time ago but not the funky orange color! The furniture was whatever could be begged or borrowed from family, friends, and people who I just happened to meet on the street and who felt sorry for me. My first couch had orange flowers - vintage 1950s! It had been left in the apartment and the manager was going to put it out on the curb. I said 'No, I'll take it' - I had no couch and frankly, no prospects of getting one. I used that couch for 4 years and my mother had it for another 10 years. She just recently gave it away - it is still in service. My first kitchen utensils came from a relative's house who had a reputation for stopping on the street on trash days and going through whatever was sitting on the curb. Lest you think I was ungrateful, I was not. The set of silverware that came from that relative - well, I used it for 12 years, always with gratitude that she cared enough to give. As I replace all the things I left behind, I find myself missing the stories behind them. For those of you who, like me, have cobbled your life together, possessions become a way to remember, recollections of people we have known and places we have been. For me, I left behind the depression glass bowel that my sister got me for Christmas during a lean year, the cross stitch from Lois in CA, the candelabra that came from a co-worker - the list could go on and on. It is not the possessions that I miss - it is the stories and connections behind them that I long for, I think. One of my friends from those early years (she was equally single and equally poor) used to say that we were furnished in 'first edition poor' Well, poor it certainly was but somehow, the stories made for a fabric of untold richness.
Well, back to the house. I had a mattress delivered on Saturday. The only problem was it did not fit going up the stairs! So I slept on a toshak last night (they truly are multi-purpose). A toshak is a large cushion that is used for sitting and also at times for sleeping. Kind of like a sofa but more portable. We finally got the mattress up the stairs tonight. I have very little furniture right but have ordered a bedroom suite, a kitchen table, a china cabinet, and a dining room table. The furniture is being made so that will be several weeks before I get it.
I feel like I am 25 again and setting up housekeeping - for those of you who were single for longer than 5 minutes, perhaps you remember your first place. If it was anything like mine, it came with carpet that had seen better days - a lot better days! My first carpet was orange shag that had lost the shag a long time ago but not the funky orange color! The furniture was whatever could be begged or borrowed from family, friends, and people who I just happened to meet on the street and who felt sorry for me. My first couch had orange flowers - vintage 1950s! It had been left in the apartment and the manager was going to put it out on the curb. I said 'No, I'll take it' - I had no couch and frankly, no prospects of getting one. I used that couch for 4 years and my mother had it for another 10 years. She just recently gave it away - it is still in service. My first kitchen utensils came from a relative's house who had a reputation for stopping on the street on trash days and going through whatever was sitting on the curb. Lest you think I was ungrateful, I was not. The set of silverware that came from that relative - well, I used it for 12 years, always with gratitude that she cared enough to give. As I replace all the things I left behind, I find myself missing the stories behind them. For those of you who, like me, have cobbled your life together, possessions become a way to remember, recollections of people we have known and places we have been. For me, I left behind the depression glass bowel that my sister got me for Christmas during a lean year, the cross stitch from Lois in CA, the candelabra that came from a co-worker - the list could go on and on. It is not the possessions that I miss - it is the stories and connections behind them that I long for, I think. One of my friends from those early years (she was equally single and equally poor) used to say that we were furnished in 'first edition poor' Well, poor it certainly was but somehow, the stories made for a fabric of untold richness.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Paper People II
Here is a poem I wrote a couple of months ago.
Paper People
I dreamt of paper people
People who were once real
Flesh and blood and weeping bone
As real as you and I
All they have left is me
You have colored my eyes
And framed my smile
And my strong will
I long for a letter, a sound, a sigh
a glimpse of your ordinary days
I have your DNA
But you are enigma
And I am left to beg for crumbs
Of distant stories and
Half remembered legends
You left me kin
My cousins
And distant cousins
And more distant cousins
They are my blood and my tie
Yet I barely know their names
I whisper with longing to know
My paper people
I shout with triumph
To read of your beginnings and your ending
I hunt with frantic uncertainty
Through dusty files and courthouse records
I stare at pictures so faded
I wonder about your cycles and
how you felt to know that
You were pregnant again –
Did you know that you were carrying
my great grandfather in your womb?
Did you feel him turning and spinning and dancing madly
in your belly
did you know that this was the most important thing
you would ever do?
I long to know the year that the crops failed
And why did you sell the wagon in 1863?
How did you feel about the black
And the gray and the blue?
At twelve, did you huddle under your bed in old Johnsonville
And listen to the cannons pound their fury in your backyard
Did you walk among the dead and look for your kin
Did you come to hate the color blue?
Why did you leave your daughter and your daughter’s daughter
To face an uncertain future in a foreign land called Texas?
How did you feel to ship into Galveston
While the salt air mussed your hair
And stand on the wharf and know no one?
Not a dollar in your pocket or a word
of my language on your tongue
Did you rejoice,
did you grieve,
For the shores you left behind?
I am your legacy
I am the future
Made from dust and sweat
and a thousand days of your
ceaseless toiling on small farms
I am the reason for your rising in
the early morning hours before the dawn
And the cornbread cooking in the wood stove
I am ten thousand prayers
Whispered on wooden church pews in
long abandoned churches
I am your blood.
rrw
summer 2007
Paper People
I dreamt of paper people
People who were once real
Flesh and blood and weeping bone
As real as you and I
All they have left is me
You have colored my eyes
And framed my smile
And my strong will
I long for a letter, a sound, a sigh
a glimpse of your ordinary days
I have your DNA
But you are enigma
And I am left to beg for crumbs
Of distant stories and
Half remembered legends
You left me kin
My cousins
And distant cousins
And more distant cousins
They are my blood and my tie
Yet I barely know their names
I whisper with longing to know
My paper people
I shout with triumph
To read of your beginnings and your ending
I hunt with frantic uncertainty
Through dusty files and courthouse records
I stare at pictures so faded
I wonder about your cycles and
how you felt to know that
You were pregnant again –
Did you know that you were carrying
my great grandfather in your womb?
Did you feel him turning and spinning and dancing madly
in your belly
did you know that this was the most important thing
you would ever do?
I long to know the year that the crops failed
And why did you sell the wagon in 1863?
How did you feel about the black
And the gray and the blue?
At twelve, did you huddle under your bed in old Johnsonville
And listen to the cannons pound their fury in your backyard
Did you walk among the dead and look for your kin
Did you come to hate the color blue?
Why did you leave your daughter and your daughter’s daughter
To face an uncertain future in a foreign land called Texas?
How did you feel to ship into Galveston
While the salt air mussed your hair
And stand on the wharf and know no one?
Not a dollar in your pocket or a word
of my language on your tongue
Did you rejoice,
did you grieve,
For the shores you left behind?
I am your legacy
I am the future
Made from dust and sweat
and a thousand days of your
ceaseless toiling on small farms
I am the reason for your rising in
the early morning hours before the dawn
And the cornbread cooking in the wood stove
I am ten thousand prayers
Whispered on wooden church pews in
long abandoned churches
I am your blood.
rrw
summer 2007
Monday, December 10, 2007
Birthday
Hello all,
Today is my birthday. I am not going to say how old I am - that would be telling. For the record, 21 and holding. I have said for years 21 is the perfect age. You can take it as a compliment if people think you are younger and as flattery if they think you are older. However, when I look back, I would not return to 21 for anything. My life has been a rich tapestry. It has not been any easy life or even, at times, a settled life. However, I thank God for these years I have been given. For those of you who know me well, you know the birthday memories are not always the best. However, on this day, let me give thanks for the weaving that my life has become. I have been so richly blessed with family and friends, with purpose, with education, even with possessions.
Most of all, I have been blessed with an Abba who loves me. It has crossed my mind many times that He let me born on this particular day. He could have picked the day before, the day after... Yet, He picked this day to be the first day that my eyes would see light, the first day that I would cry as a tiny infant for nourishment, the first day of the rest of my life. He knows the length and breath of my days and He holds my times in His hand. May this life be a drink offering poured out to Him.
Today is my birthday. I am not going to say how old I am - that would be telling. For the record, 21 and holding. I have said for years 21 is the perfect age. You can take it as a compliment if people think you are younger and as flattery if they think you are older. However, when I look back, I would not return to 21 for anything. My life has been a rich tapestry. It has not been any easy life or even, at times, a settled life. However, I thank God for these years I have been given. For those of you who know me well, you know the birthday memories are not always the best. However, on this day, let me give thanks for the weaving that my life has become. I have been so richly blessed with family and friends, with purpose, with education, even with possessions.
Most of all, I have been blessed with an Abba who loves me. It has crossed my mind many times that He let me born on this particular day. He could have picked the day before, the day after... Yet, He picked this day to be the first day that my eyes would see light, the first day that I would cry as a tiny infant for nourishment, the first day of the rest of my life. He knows the length and breath of my days and He holds my times in His hand. May this life be a drink offering poured out to Him.
Friday, November 30, 2007
Corban
Yesterday I was given a precious gift - a tiny little Siamese kitten. This event started with a phone call about 2:00 in the afternoon. My friend that I am staying with called from a city about two hours a away. She said she was at the vet's office and they had cats there to give away. There were several options but I wanted a kitten and they had a Siamese male kitten there. He came home about 6:00 yesterday evening. He is seven weeks old and is a tiny little thing. I had big cats in America and though I know they were once this small, I don't remember them at this size. This afternoon we took a nap and he fit perfectly on my chest, his tail curled around himself, feeling my heartbeat. He has blue eyes and may end up being a seal point Siamese, which I am told is a rich chocolate brown color.
I have played with several names for him but I think I am going to go with Corban. It means 'sacrifice' or loosely, something dedicated to God. I have felt my Father's pleasure over this. In less than 24 hours God has reached deep and healed some of the pain of leaving behind everything familiar, including a beloved cat in America. There have been tears in this but they are tears of release, of finally beginning to accept this place as home. I am awed at Abba, who so beautifully meets my needs, even those I did not know I had.
I have played with several names for him but I think I am going to go with Corban. It means 'sacrifice' or loosely, something dedicated to God. I have felt my Father's pleasure over this. In less than 24 hours God has reached deep and healed some of the pain of leaving behind everything familiar, including a beloved cat in America. There have been tears in this but they are tears of release, of finally beginning to accept this place as home. I am awed at Abba, who so beautifully meets my needs, even those I did not know I had.
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Thanksgiving
Today is Thanksgiving. For most of my family and friends in America, it is probably about 3:00 am. My day is mostly done but just for a momemt, let me ponder and be grateful for the priceless gift of ordinary days. Days filled with family and friends, days of good smells (like cloves and cinnamon), days of being able to follow the same routine every morning. Those kinds of things are the things we miss most when our lives are disrupted. I thank God this Thanksgiving that so far my transition to this new life has been relatively smooth. Today I especially thank God for pumpkin bread. I got in the kitchen this afternoon and made pumpkin bread - an old Amish recipe with roots deep in the life of simplicity that the Amish live. This is one of my fall traditions - something that I do every year. A simple thing - making pumpkin bread - but one that brings normalacy in this year of change. Frankly, the pumpkin bread didn't even turn out that great. But for me, it was the simple fact of doing something common and ordinary. For that, I give thanks.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Home
I finally got to see the place that my friends here have been talking about for a while - the place that they had picked for me to live before I even arrived in Central Asia. By the standards here, it is very nice - also by American standards too! The flat is above a local family There are five adult daughters and one son, plus father and mother in this family. They live on the bottom floor and I would have the second story.
It has its own separate staircase so I would have my own entrance in and out. There is a room coming up the stairs that could serve as a parlor. Actually, I think I would use it as a sitting room for me. It has a bathroom attached with a squatty potty - this is the traditional 'toilet' here. Next there is a large open area that would lend itself to toshaks and perhaps a dining table. I think I would keep this room for entertaining. It is a rectangular room with crown modeling on the ceiling and painted a nice yellow color. The windows are also trimmed with wood - almost European in its look. There are two bedrooms but one of them is being used for storage by the landlord. The other bedroom has a bathroom with a western style toilet. The bedroom is spacious and already has a wardrobe built into the wall. The kitchen is a little separate - it is just a few steps off the patio area. The kitchen has black marble counter tops, glass fronted cabinets, and some pretty tile work on the counter top backsplash. Here they do not supply the appliances so I would have to get a stove, refrigerator, and washing machine. I would also have to get heaters and window units. One neat thing about this place is that in every room there are triangular insets in the walls for gas heaters. There is an enclosed area on the roof where I can put the washing machine and a few chairs.
The thought of setting up a household from scratch is daunting. Fun but daunting. I will enjoy shopping and I have a generous setup allowance. However, there is no Wal-Mart here (don't laugh!) so it will require many trips to different places to make this an inviting home. And, that in the long run, is my goal. To make this an inviting and peaceful place to call home.
It has its own separate staircase so I would have my own entrance in and out. There is a room coming up the stairs that could serve as a parlor. Actually, I think I would use it as a sitting room for me. It has a bathroom attached with a squatty potty - this is the traditional 'toilet' here. Next there is a large open area that would lend itself to toshaks and perhaps a dining table. I think I would keep this room for entertaining. It is a rectangular room with crown modeling on the ceiling and painted a nice yellow color. The windows are also trimmed with wood - almost European in its look. There are two bedrooms but one of them is being used for storage by the landlord. The other bedroom has a bathroom with a western style toilet. The bedroom is spacious and already has a wardrobe built into the wall. The kitchen is a little separate - it is just a few steps off the patio area. The kitchen has black marble counter tops, glass fronted cabinets, and some pretty tile work on the counter top backsplash. Here they do not supply the appliances so I would have to get a stove, refrigerator, and washing machine. I would also have to get heaters and window units. One neat thing about this place is that in every room there are triangular insets in the walls for gas heaters. There is an enclosed area on the roof where I can put the washing machine and a few chairs.
The thought of setting up a household from scratch is daunting. Fun but daunting. I will enjoy shopping and I have a generous setup allowance. However, there is no Wal-Mart here (don't laugh!) so it will require many trips to different places to make this an inviting home. And, that in the long run, is my goal. To make this an inviting and peaceful place to call home.
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Liminal Spaces
Liminal spaces. I first heard this term a few months ago and it stuck. What is a liminal space, you ask? It is an between place - like when you walk into a restaurant off the street and there is a sign that says 'please wait to be seated' You are not where you were (on the street) but not where you will be either (at your table). Profound concept in something so simple - a waiting place. In C.S. Lewis's 'The Magician's Nephew' the world between the woods is a liminal space. I found this quote that seemed to express it best:
"Psychologists call 'liminal space' "a place where boundaries dissolve a little and we stand there, on the threshold, getting ourselves ready to move across the limits of what we were into what we are to be."
That really describes where I am at in my life. In some ways, my whole life has been liminal space - waiting to get to the moment that I am now. Now that I am here, I am still waiting. Waiting to learn language, waiting to learn how act and dress, waiting (really waiting!) to get my own place. Perhaps for a few minutes, a few days, a few years, I felt the lessening liminal spaces and called a place home.
Today I am just really missing my apartment in Houston. For those of you that never visited me there, indulge me for a moment. My apartment was in a ordinary part of town - neither to rich or too poor. It was brick and second story. The neighborhood was quiet and safe and I never hesitated to walk there, even at night. I lived upstairs and a thousand times I climbed those stairs. I really miss my stairs. My stairs were another kind of liminal space - they meant I was almost home. When I reached my door, the key meant the liminal space had ended and I was where I was meant to be. Peace. And cats. My cats were always at home to greet me. Seeing my cats meant I was back in my space. I miss Tuesday so much. There was peace and order in that place and I thrived on that. There was an oak tree right outside my window and in the mornings the sun came through the front window and danced with light and shadow. The morning that I left my home forever, it was about about noon and the sun was peaking through my oak tree. I thanked God for a thousand days of splendor in this place... I like to think that no matter who lives there after me will feel the remnants of a lingering peace in that place.
As followers of the Way, our lives here in on Earth are liminal spaces. We are not what we were but we are not yet what we will become. We are waiting for that perfect home - a place with no sun because the Father's face is so bright. A place where the healing of the nations is found in the fruit of the tree of life. A place of no sorrow and no night. How I long for that place...what has come before are only the Shadowlands compared to what will be.
"Psychologists call 'liminal space' "a place where boundaries dissolve a little and we stand there, on the threshold, getting ourselves ready to move across the limits of what we were into what we are to be."
That really describes where I am at in my life. In some ways, my whole life has been liminal space - waiting to get to the moment that I am now. Now that I am here, I am still waiting. Waiting to learn language, waiting to learn how act and dress, waiting (really waiting!) to get my own place. Perhaps for a few minutes, a few days, a few years, I felt the lessening liminal spaces and called a place home.
Today I am just really missing my apartment in Houston. For those of you that never visited me there, indulge me for a moment. My apartment was in a ordinary part of town - neither to rich or too poor. It was brick and second story. The neighborhood was quiet and safe and I never hesitated to walk there, even at night. I lived upstairs and a thousand times I climbed those stairs. I really miss my stairs. My stairs were another kind of liminal space - they meant I was almost home. When I reached my door, the key meant the liminal space had ended and I was where I was meant to be. Peace. And cats. My cats were always at home to greet me. Seeing my cats meant I was back in my space. I miss Tuesday so much. There was peace and order in that place and I thrived on that. There was an oak tree right outside my window and in the mornings the sun came through the front window and danced with light and shadow. The morning that I left my home forever, it was about about noon and the sun was peaking through my oak tree. I thanked God for a thousand days of splendor in this place... I like to think that no matter who lives there after me will feel the remnants of a lingering peace in that place.
As followers of the Way, our lives here in on Earth are liminal spaces. We are not what we were but we are not yet what we will become. We are waiting for that perfect home - a place with no sun because the Father's face is so bright. A place where the healing of the nations is found in the fruit of the tree of life. A place of no sorrow and no night. How I long for that place...what has come before are only the Shadowlands compared to what will be.
Thursday, November 8, 2007
The Market
I got to go to the local grocery store today with our housekeeper, Zebba. She invited me - sort of an impulse on her part (and one I trust she didn't regret!). Anyway, we went in a rickshaw in one of the local markets. This was my first trip in a rickshaw. This is one of the very common ways to get around here. It is fairly cheap and many women choose this as public transportation. It is a little like riding in a very colorful golf cart. It has a driver front and two seats behind the driver. It has two small doors and a roof on either side but otherwise is open air. It has an advantage in that it is small and can maneuver easily in the crowded streets. I noticed was a small section in front of our seat with a mirror - about the size and width of a two by four. I was advised by my companion that the old(er) men were better drivers. Zebba had passed up a young man with a rickshaw and chosen one where the driver was probably 55 or 60 (it is hard to tell ages here as life is so hard).
When we arrived at Zebba's market of choice, we went first to a vegetable and fruit stand. The city is strewn with these. The produce at this one seemed fresh and well-displayed. After we finished the purchases at this place, we proceeded to a grocery store. This place was really no larger than an average size room in America. It, however, seemed to have everything one could need as far as dry goods. There were also a few fresh food items, including eggs. Eggs here are not boxed as a dozen like we have in the States. The eggs today were on a large square egg crate. You pick the number of eggs you want and then they put them in a thin plastic bag. This seems to work as I have not yet seen the eggs get broken.
There were shelves stacked with goods all the way to the ceiling. Several times the shopkeeper's helper pulled a bamboo ladder around and climbed to the top shelves to pull down items that were needed. There was an old fashioned counter that the shop keeper stood behind and that divided the store. There were three freezers in this small space. The shop keeper was an old friend of Zebba's and said he had known her for 20 years. It took about 30 minutes to complete the transactions as the shop keeper and his helper collected the items needed one by one and placed them on the counter. They also sent out for several items they apparently did not have in the store. All during the shopping, the shop keeper carefully wrote down the items we were buying and then the price. At the end he totaled them up with a simple hand calculator.
We returned home in rickshaw with our bundles around our feet, having purchased food and dry goods - enough to take us through at least the next few days.
When we arrived at Zebba's market of choice, we went first to a vegetable and fruit stand. The city is strewn with these. The produce at this one seemed fresh and well-displayed. After we finished the purchases at this place, we proceeded to a grocery store. This place was really no larger than an average size room in America. It, however, seemed to have everything one could need as far as dry goods. There were also a few fresh food items, including eggs. Eggs here are not boxed as a dozen like we have in the States. The eggs today were on a large square egg crate. You pick the number of eggs you want and then they put them in a thin plastic bag. This seems to work as I have not yet seen the eggs get broken.
There were shelves stacked with goods all the way to the ceiling. Several times the shopkeeper's helper pulled a bamboo ladder around and climbed to the top shelves to pull down items that were needed. There was an old fashioned counter that the shop keeper stood behind and that divided the store. There were three freezers in this small space. The shop keeper was an old friend of Zebba's and said he had known her for 20 years. It took about 30 minutes to complete the transactions as the shop keeper and his helper collected the items needed one by one and placed them on the counter. They also sent out for several items they apparently did not have in the store. All during the shopping, the shop keeper carefully wrote down the items we were buying and then the price. At the end he totaled them up with a simple hand calculator.
We returned home in rickshaw with our bundles around our feet, having purchased food and dry goods - enough to take us through at least the next few days.
Monday, November 5, 2007
The Baazar
I had my first trip to the bazaar yesterday. The bazaar is the local marketplace. You can obtain anything and everything there. There are several bazaars in my city and I went to one of the larger ones. I am told that most bazaars specialize in certain items - IE... household goods, etc. The one that I went to yesterday was called the Sutter Bazaar. There were tons and tons of fabric shops (and of course accessories to match). It was a little like being in New York but with men in turbans and women in all states of covering - some in full burkas, some veiled so only the eyes show, and others with only the hair covered. There were small narrow streets packed with people and little shops lining the streets. There were also street vendors and of course, the inevitable beggars.
The only problem I encountered was selecting fabric. There were tons of shops and endless choices. Once you have your fabric, elastic,and trim, then you go to a tailor. I got material for three outfits. One is a satiny orange that will have gold, black, and copper trim, another is an Irish green with gold weavings, and the third is a fallish looking brown paisley that will be matched with tan pants (shalwars). I also purchased three chuddars (head coverings). They are like huge scarfs - I am still fighting to learn how to wear one appropriately. I can put it on but it keeps slipping off. As a woman's hair is considered sexy here, this is not a good thing if your chaddar falls off out in public. One of the chuddars was a cream fabric with little gold rind stones, another was black with copper butterflies trimming, and the third was a more winter type of chuddar of paisley - black and reddish orange. I will post pictures once I have the outfits made up if I can figure out how to do that! I want to get a burka with full face covering and wear it to the bazaar. This may seem weird but I want to see the world from a woman's point of view at least once - through the mesh. I also think that it will allow me to observe the world around me in a broader way.
The sights and sounds in this place are incredible. The smells and dust are not so great! I am adjusting but missing the cleanliness of America. For most of my adult life I have taken cleanliness for granted - I walk down the street and the trash is picked up. The sideswalks are paved and sewer is only a word. I take it for granted that toilets flush and don't smell. I have had more dust on my hands and the bottoms of my feet in the last few days than I have had in years.
The only problem I encountered was selecting fabric. There were tons of shops and endless choices. Once you have your fabric, elastic,and trim, then you go to a tailor. I got material for three outfits. One is a satiny orange that will have gold, black, and copper trim, another is an Irish green with gold weavings, and the third is a fallish looking brown paisley that will be matched with tan pants (shalwars). I also purchased three chuddars (head coverings). They are like huge scarfs - I am still fighting to learn how to wear one appropriately. I can put it on but it keeps slipping off. As a woman's hair is considered sexy here, this is not a good thing if your chaddar falls off out in public. One of the chuddars was a cream fabric with little gold rind stones, another was black with copper butterflies trimming, and the third was a more winter type of chuddar of paisley - black and reddish orange. I will post pictures once I have the outfits made up if I can figure out how to do that! I want to get a burka with full face covering and wear it to the bazaar. This may seem weird but I want to see the world from a woman's point of view at least once - through the mesh. I also think that it will allow me to observe the world around me in a broader way.
The sights and sounds in this place are incredible. The smells and dust are not so great! I am adjusting but missing the cleanliness of America. For most of my adult life I have taken cleanliness for granted - I walk down the street and the trash is picked up. The sideswalks are paved and sewer is only a word. I take it for granted that toilets flush and don't smell. I have had more dust on my hands and the bottoms of my feet in the last few days than I have had in years.
Friday, November 2, 2007
I'm Here
All,
I have arrived safely in Central Asia, minus 3 pieces of luggage. Only one of my three pieces of checked luggage arrived. I will have to wait until Tuesday to find out if it comes in because the airline only flys to my city twice a week - Tuesday and Thursdays. Hopefully the luggage will arrive on Tuesday. So far I have gotten to see a little of the city. I did not bring the cat as I found the day before I left that it would be $3,000 (yes, in American money!). I will write more later. I am off to a barbecue to meet some of the other ex-pats here in my city.
I have arrived safely in Central Asia, minus 3 pieces of luggage. Only one of my three pieces of checked luggage arrived. I will have to wait until Tuesday to find out if it comes in because the airline only flys to my city twice a week - Tuesday and Thursdays. Hopefully the luggage will arrive on Tuesday. So far I have gotten to see a little of the city. I did not bring the cat as I found the day before I left that it would be $3,000 (yes, in American money!). I will write more later. I am off to a barbecue to meet some of the other ex-pats here in my city.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Starbucks Anyone??
I spend several hours packing today. It is an interesting perspective to see your worldly goods condensed down to 3 duffel bags and one large suitcase. I have been preparing for this moment for months - sorting, re-sorting, constantly weighing sentimental attachment and practicality. In the end, a lot of what I chose to take were things that I believe I cannot find in Central Asia. Some of these things may seem silly but right now they are important to me. Some of these things include an extra tube of my favorite lipstick, some Bath and Body Works products(Fresh Vanilla scent!), and, lest you think that all I packed was make-up, a box of Tazo Passion Tea (you know, the Starbucks kind). Humm...I wonder if they have Starbucks in Central Asia. Well, stay tuned for the next episode of 'As Central Asia Turns' - we will have the answer about Starbucks very shortly.
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