Saturday, January 29, 2011

Just don't harm the bananas

I was read a friend's blog and it reminded me of a similar course of events with my kids.

It was November 2008 in Cairo, Egypt. I was back in the family room puttering around. Grant comes running in at full speed.

"Mommy!" he yells, "Can I have a banana, too?"

"Sweetie, we don't have any bananas," I said, "Who has a banana?"

"Jaqui has one!" he responded. I asked Rere (my fantabulous housekeeper in Cairo) if she had given a banana to Jacqui.

Rere said, "No ma'am, we don't have any. Remember to put 'bananas' on your grocery list."

So the three of us are all puzzling about bananas and Jacqui come toddling around the corner with a peeled banana in her had. (she is all of 17 months old at this time)

I ask Jacqui, "Where did you get that banana?"

She said, "NANA!" and took a big bite. Where did she get that banana? It didn't look spoiled. Did she have her own stash of bananas somewhere? What else was she holding hostage in her secret hidey place? We never did solve the mystery. Maybe the next tenants of our apartment found that banana prison, freeing little black lumps of banana bread candidates, along with who knows what else. All of our left socks?

Thursday, January 20, 2011

YouTube Tuesday: Lavendars Blue

I know, I know, it's Thursday today, not Tuesday. But I have been having some real video uploading issues and power outages lately, so there, that's my excuse.



I caught Jacqueline singing this medley of bedtime songs to her dolly. Interesting fusion of 'Twinkle Twinkle' and 'Lavenders Blue'.

Never heard of Lavenders Blue? Shame on you.

Lavenders blue, diddle diddle, lavenders green.
When I am king, diddle diddle, you shall be queen. {'cept J. turned it around b/c she said she wouldn't be king, she's a girl, she'd be queen}
Call up your men, diddle diddle, set them to work.
Some to the plow, diddle diddle, some to the cart.
Some to make hay, diddle diddle, some to cut corn.
While you and I, diddle diddle, keep ourselves warm.

Well, that's the way it was in my nursery rhyme book. I actually did some reading on this little ditty and found it quite interesting. It's an old English nursery rhyme first printed around 1680. Now, from what I could find, this video below was the only offering of the tune & words familiar to me. This guy's a riot.




Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Musically Speaking

Music is integral to my life. I always have something playing. We have a couple little portable speakers that are stationed around the house so we can plug in an iPod anytime we want. I have my "favorite" speaker in the kitchen because I spend a lot of time there. Duh. I usually put a playlist on shuffle for the element of predictable surprise. Sometimes we get wild and I put it on 'all shuffle'. That mode brings out some wild mixes. Jumping from 'Nulla en Mundo Pax Sincera' * to Green Day's 'Welcome to Paradise' does tend to unhinge the atmosphere.

I *love* Pandora. It is a new luxury to me; Pandora didn't used to be accessible overseas. But the problem is, I'm not always within earshot of my computer**. I do have the Pandora iPhone app, but I listen to music all the time! I have a little radio and there are a few good stations here {surprisingly}; but if there's a boring string of songs & advertisements, I don't like to go fiddle with the station multiple times. So I have also created Mood Mixes. Here's one we've been listening to lately, during dinner & after-dinner clean-up.

Winding Down: Slower songs, some with more of a catchy beat than others, some mainstream & others off the beaten path, but mainly stuff that's not going to rile up the natives.

Somewhere over the Rainbow - by Israel Kamakawiwo'ole
Falling in love at a coffee shop - Landon Pigg
Hallelujah - Jeff Buckley
Landslide - Dixie Chicks
Mad World - Michael Andrews
Can you hear the prayer of the children? - Insideout a Cappella
I'm Yours - Jason Mraz
Hey there Delilah - Plain White T's
Lightning Crashes - Live {Throwing Copper album}
Remember When - Alan Jackson
Oh l'Amour - Erasure
Tempted - Squeeze
Look away - Chicago
Lullaby - Dixie Chicks
Celebrating the Light - Michael McLean
For the Beauty of the Earth - Mormon Tabernacle Choir {this is a unique arrangement}
Billy - James Blunt
JALS - Colors


A recent phone pic of Grant that I love.



*p.s. about the album Shine. It is a movie soundtrack from Shine. Wonderful movie & equally wonderful soundtrack. And it is a steal on Amazon! $9.49 for 34 arrangements. Just my two cents, but sadly, those cents can't be used to purchase the album. ;)

**p.p.s there is a solution to the 'want to listen to music on my computer but i'm not always right by it' problem. The Bose SoundLink wireless music system. It wireless-ly relays you your digital media & internet radio from the computer to a speaker you put *anywhere* in your house. And it doesn't plug in, so you just move it wherever & whenever you feel like it w/o stopping the music. {bonus for me b/c i hate the 220v/110v plug problem.} But . . . . it's super expensive; almost $500. *sigh* Someday.

Monday, January 17, 2011

If . . .


. . . you give a girl your iPhone.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Trippin'

Who doesn't dream? Whether it happens during the day or after consciousness has left our mind, it's bound to happen. I don't always dream. I'll go through cycles of dreams that range from purely inspired imagination to downright crazy nonsense. Last night was one of the latter.

And it was one of those dreams where you find yourself in the middle of it, without knowing how you got there.

I'm walking down the sidewalk of some non-descript town. My sister, Katelyn & her husband are there; along with Pablo, Jill, Talia & Dave, Callie & Reed. Spencer & I are dressed very formally. He's in a tux & I'm a wedding dress. Everyone else is very casual. But no one seems to think we are out of place. We all go to a generic cafe/diner and order up breakfast at midnight. (That, I'm ok with. Breakfast food is ok any time of day) After the needed noshing, we find ourselves back out on the sidewalk looking for a Baskin Robbins. I'm growing a little more uncomfortable, trying to maneuver the street in wedding dress. A really great dress, but a formal frock nonetheless. We find the ice cream and thoroughly enjoy. When everyone starts talking what movie we're going to see, I have to protest. I'm not comfortable anymore and I want to change! I don't want to sit in a movie theater in a wedding dress!!

That's when I find myself in the middle of another situation.

Spencer & I are sitting on the couch in our living room, Skyping with Katelyn. We're watching baby Taylor do not-so-baby-Taylor things like walking. I say, "Oh I just want to hug her!" and so Spence says something very 'Princess Bride-ish' like "As you wish." and begins typing furiously. "Ok, now you can hug her." I lean over the computer screen and fall through the camera all Alice in Wonderland style and find myself in my sister's living room. Chris is in the corner, tying fishing flies. Sagey (the dog) runs over with a stick for me to throw. Katelyn and Taylor come around the corner, all ready to hug! When it's time to go home, I wake up in my dream (Inception, yes, I know) and realize it was just a dream. Then I wake up *for real* and need some Chapstick. 'Cause my lips hurt real bad!


How's that for trippy?

Monday, January 10, 2011

Sandy, not the girl

It's not easy to get a good picture of a sandstorm. Usually, pictures don't do them justice and video sometimes doesn't even define the essence that is blowing sand. The picture below is the sun. At 2 pm. And yes, those are the street lights that are on. If this were Cairo, 'on' streetlights during daylight hours would not be something out of the ordinary. Here in Bahrain, the lights are all fancy-like with them new-fangled sensors that flick the light on at dusk & flick 'em off when the sun comes out.


This was a particularly mild one, lasting just the duration of the day. I like to be inside and pretend that it's a cloudy, overcast, thunderstorm-y day. And really, two out of three isn't bad! The aftermath of a sandstorm; little piles of sand by all the crevices in the house, isn't the greatest, either. I could do without them. But hey, what 'cha gonna do when you live in a sandbox?

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Happy Birthday!


I know each parent says it every single year, but here it goes, "I can't believe how old my child is!" Then they turn around & say the same thing about us; so, s'all good. Birthdays bring a reality check that I really don't want to cash. It marks a passage of time and sometimes, I'm not good with that.

Eliza is 11 today. She is my shining star! I could gush about her forever, which I'm sure everyone is *not* interested in hearing about. Eliza is a thoughtful, patient, caring, loving girl that is my sunshine.

We have a bedtime ritual that originated with Eliza. Yes, many things begin when the oldest child was born. It's just a fact of life. (being first born isn't easy, either) The bedtime ritual. Well, Eliza was about 18 months old and sleeping in a 'real bed', not a crib. She wouldn't stay in the crib; kept crawling out & landing on her head. We figured that wasn't good for her, so she moved into a bed at about 12 months old. The transition went wonderfully. For about a month. Since she was so short, she couldn't open her bedroom door on her own. We'd leave it open a crack. She took that crack and widened it to all the way open & discovered a new world of freedom. Where little girls don't have to go to bed when they were put down, making bedtime more of a nuisance to her nighttime partying ways than anything. However, one night, she wandered into our bedroom right before our bedtime and saw that we were already in bed.

"Sleepy?" she said.
"Yes," we both agreed, "We're very sleepy, we're going to bed."
"Oh, I go bed." and she walked back to her bed for the rest of the night.

Spencer & I looked at each other, could it be as easy as that? The next night, I put her to bed {which was obviously far earlier that we would actually be in bed}. I sang her a song and then added new preamble to the 'don't let the bedbugs bite' farewell. It goes something like this.

Mommy: "I love you, a bushel and a . ."
Eliza: "Peck!"
Mommy: "A bushel and a . . "
Eliza: "Peck!"
Mommy: "And a hug around the . . ."
Eliza: "Neck!"

I hug her then pretend to fall asleep on her neck. She was a bit puzzled and said, "Wake up, Mommy!" I said, "Oh, I'm so tired!" She asked if I was going to bed because I was so tired. Yes, I would be. {just not right now, but she didn't need to know that} She seemed satisfied with that answer, I reminded her to not let the bedbugs bite, bite, bite and I left the room. She stayed in her bed the rest of the evening & through the night. I repeated the altered routine the next night, and by golly, it was magic!

She eventually learned to just stay in bed, but it became part of "The Routine". And I say it the same way for the other chili beans. And she still asks for it every night. They asked about why I pretend to fall asleep on them, and this story comes out. The alteration that is sometimes made is trying to beat me to saying, "I'm so tired!" They say, "Wake up, Mommy!" and try to beat me to the punchline and say, "You're so tired!" I think it was Grant that began that.

So a 'Happy Birthday' to my 11 year old girl that isn't so little anymore! {she's 4'9"!}

Monday, January 3, 2011

Night Lights

Manama really went all out in the New Year decoration department. Their downtown lights were splendid! And it felt Christmas-y because Bahrain's national colors are red and white. Pictures only came out as a blur, so this video will have to do. Oh, and the kids went back to school today. Alham'dula-freakin'-llah! Sadly, it may take a while for the house to recover from 3 weeks of vacation. *sigh*




Sunday, January 2, 2011

New Year, New Something

It's a new year. For some reason, everything has to be about renewal. It usually takes me a bit longer to warm up to the idea of a different set of numerals. I mourn the last year, a bit. I just got used to 2010. Though I suppose we have a whole new decade to get used to the prefix '201' changing the caboose every 12 months. I cling to the last year for familiarity, comfort in the face of unknown. Not much can be said about our 2010. Well, that's not true, but 2010 was quite a transitory year for us, not really defined as "The Year of ______ " anything. The first 7 months were spent apart, us in Idaho & Spencer in Iraq. Once he got home, there was that short window of about 5 weeks where our house was all packed up, we got on planes & shifted across the world to Bahrain. And the remaining 4 1/2 months of 2010 felt like a whole extra year squished into that space of time. The transition to Bahrain was smooth, extraordinarily so. I love the new life we're finding here. I'm just not thrilled about the passage of time, whether it be because of the New Year or any other event.

Over this holiday vacation, we did manage to have some fun. We made Christmas cottages. They're made out of graham crackers. So very easy & quick. I'll do gingerbread someday. Maybe.




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