Sunday, December 30, 2012

Grandma and Grandpa come to visit

After Christmas, Grandma and Grandpa drove down to Knoxville to visit us!

We ate at the Club the night they got there.





Uncle William, Aunt Allison, and Baby Liam were there, too!
















The next day, we hung out at B House (our house in Knoxville is B House for Benchich House.  My parents' house is A House for Ambrose House.  The Guest House is still called the Guest House, though.)  We opened presents and played outside some and were just together. 





That night, Everett and Lawrence got to spend the night in their hotel with them!  Everett was so excited that he said "I am so excited that I can't eat!"  (But he did a great job on his dinner despite his declaration.)


Headed inside to the hotel for a spend-the-night.  You can't tell, but it was snowing that night!!  (Only flurries, though - nothing to stick.) 

 They had a great time, and I hope we get to do that again the next time they visit.


Thanks for coming, Grandma and Grandpa!  We had a great visit!











Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Christmas In America!


We are back!  Hooray!  Here is a quick run-down of all the things we have been up to since we've been home. 

We went to go see Santa at the mall:

Waiting in line.



The boys were great, but Catherine had just woken up from her nap in my arms.  Lawrence wanted a candy cane so badly, and when he got it, he just clung to it!


 Lawrence planted his feet in front of Santa and declared, "I'm NICE!"



We made Christmas cookies.





We hung out at Gramama and Grapapa's house.







We went to the playground at Lakeshore.







We went to my dad's office party at the Club.  It was held during nap time.   Poor Buppy.



Apparently, the rolls at the club are pretty good.  




We went to the kids' Christmas party at the Club.  There was a real sleigh (below) and live reindeer, too!






Finally, on Christmas Eve, we hung our stockings, and Santa came to our house in Knoxville!



Everett had asked for only a Santa hat, and Lawrence only wanted a candy cane.  Santa did a bit more than that, though!  Everett declared, "We must have been really good!"




Santa also brought a joint present of a Gigaball.  It's a giant inflatable hollow ball that you can roll from the outside or the inside.  



Playing with the Santa toys.  The kids slept in until 7 am! 




Catherine in the Gigaball!




Catherine really loves her new play table.



After Santa presents, Gramama, Grapapa, Uncle William, Aunt Allison, and baby Liam came over to our house, and we had breakfast and presents.  It was a great day!


I'm so glad we had Christmas in America.  It was so much more fun and festive than what we could have generated by ourselves in Arabia.  Hooray for Christmas fun!




Sunday, December 16, 2012

Home Again!

We made it!  Again!  I am always amazed that we survive that trip.  It was SO MUCH EASIER with Mike with me.  We had a few notables on the way:

Everett only threw up once, on the first leg from Dammam to Amsterdam.  Poor kiddo, but much better than last time. 

Lawrence wore a pull-up the whole time, and never used it!  He did not have any accidents the entire trip!  I think we are golden, finally.  It's now been 2 weeks since his last accident.  It's official!  We're potty trained! 

Catherine was "infant in arms" this time....and wow, that was hard.  She did not like being held for 24 solid hours, and she did not sleep very much at all.  Lots of crying and fussing.  She did much better when we bought her a seat.  Is 24 hours of crying worth $1500?  Hmmm, we'll get back to you on that one.

Here are some pictures we took in the Detroit airport.  We didn't have the presence of mind to take pictures on the plane this time.  

Finally through passport control and customs, now we can go look at the really cool fountain!

Sissy had a snack while the boys and daddy rode the train. 

We let the boys take their own carry-ons this time. 

Riding the train in Detroit was really fun!


Now that we are home, please please come visit!  The doors are flung wide, and we hope to be able to lure at least a few of you to Knoxville!  And our Charlotte number is up and running, so give us a call so we can make plans! 

Thursday, December 6, 2012

No, no, *IN ADDITION TO*

OK, Powers-That-Be.  I want a word. 

When I said the other day that I wanted a new washing machine, I want to you note that I explicitly said that I wanted ANOTHER washing machine, as in *IN ADDITION TO* the one I already have.  An extra.  A second one.  Not a replacement.

<Sigh> You guessed it, and I suppose I jinxed myself:  our washing machine broke two days ago.  Yes, right in the middle of everyone being sick.  And right before we are leaving to fly 8000 miles away for a month.  Hooray!

I am so sad.  I love that washing machine.  I bought it in 2002 with very dear pennies that I had saved while I was in graduate school in Texas.  I researched it and found just the one I wanted with all the features, and I even haggled with the guys in the appliance store.

It has broken once before - one of the three screws that holds on the transmission got sheared off in 2004 or 2005.  Mike and I were just married and really scraping, so we disassembled the thing and fixed it ourselves.  It took forever and was very messy, but we did it.  I seem to remember that we had to buy a new part for $100, but that was much better than a whole new machine.  And we figured that if it lasted a year, it was worth it because it would have cost us that much in laundromat money.

Well, here we are 8 years later, and it's making a horrible grinding noise and won't spin.  I'm ok with letting it go if we have to but - how ironic - now that we are in a better position to buy a new one, we are stuck over here in a 220 V country with a 110 V house.  There is one store,  a Sears near the waterfront, that supposedly sells 110V appliances, but we have not been there yet and supposedly it's *really* expensive. 

So (here's where it's nice to live here!) we called the Company and we will be renting one from them for a while.  An instant, temporary solution!  Thanks, Company!!  It's supposed to be delivered today - it can't come fast enough!  We have 14 loads waiting.  Not kidding. 


UPDATE:  Good news! They did come to deliver our rental today, and the guy who dropped it off - and who, incidentally, spoke the best English of ANY repair or delivery person I have ever spoken with here - took our washer apart and found the problem.  One of the plastic couplings broke and some other part too, that I did not quite catch.  He will cart it off and fix it for 300SR (about $75)  YEAH! I think the Powers-That-Be realized they made a mistake and are trying to fix it.  Yay!


First Word!!

Catherine has had an exciting two days! 

First, she pulled up to standing in her crib.  With ease, I might add!  She was very angry at the time, so I'm not sure she really appreciated what she was doing.  She was trying really hard to say "Don't leave me in here!" 

Since then, she pulls up all the time, and it's very fun.  Pull up and bounce, bounce, bounce, with big smiles.  So proud of herself!

Then the next day, Mike was carrying her away from me, and she looked right at me over his shoulder and said "Ma ma!"  HOORAY!!  I GET TOP BILLING!  Everett's first word was "Dada" and Lawrence's first word was "Doggie" (nothing like playing second fiddle to the dog), so I've been working with her for months to make sure she said my name first.  And she did! 

And I know it's not an accident because after I left the room, she continued to call for me.  And she did it again later on several occasions.  Talking at eight months!  So smart! 

Our talker!  (It's not really Thanksgiving; we just haven't put the Thanksgiving bib away yet.) 




Sick, Sick, Sick

We are all sick.  Sick, sick, sick!

Lawrence got it first.  I think either he brought it home from preschool, or he stuck his entire hand in his mouth (he's getting molars) after we went to the commissary one day.  He got away easy, though.  Twenty-four hours of decently high fever and then an extra day of coughing.  He missed a day of preschool.  His coughing still bugs him at night, but he is otherwise better now. 

Then it was Everett's turn.  Lawrence's ended, we had a free day, and then Everett got the fever.  He had it for two days and missed two days of preschool.  He is also still coughing, but otherwise better. 

Then it was Mike's turn.  This bug must have a long incubation period.  Mike got a fever and spent 24 hours solid in bed, completely unable to move or eat or drink or get up.  He missed one day of work and then did lug himself to the clinic, where he got antibiotics for a secondary sinus infection once the fever broke.  He's still not great, but better now.  He's been off work for three days.

You guessed it!  My turn next.  I am on day three, so I hope I will be much better tomorrow. 

Thank goodness the baby has not gotten it (yet?).  We are breastfeeeding like crazy to pump up her antibodies, and she is cheerful and happy as usual. 

All I can say is I AM SO GLAD WE GOT THIS NOW AND NOT ON THE PLANE.  Please let us all be back up to snuff when the boarding door closes. 


Monday, December 3, 2012

Swimming Against the Current

A Question:
Would you pay a Mexican immigrant who speaks some broken English six bucks an hour to watch your children for 12 hours a day, 5 or 6 days a week? 

Now An Unrelated Story:
(I have really agonized over whether or not I should post this story.  At first, I really wanted to, to get it off my chest, but the more I delayed, the less I felt like it was necessary.  But still, it hung over my head.  I have thought and thought about the experience, and turns out I am going to post it, but not just for the sake of the story - rather, because it was really a big learning experience about the culture here and about myself that I'd like to share.)

A fourth grader who was riding his bike home from school was hit by a car right in front of our house the other day.  I heard it.  I did not see it because I was not looking in the right direction, but I was outside, and I heard it.  It sounded like a metallic pop.  I knew the sound as the sound of two cars colliding; when I lived in my second apartment in Austin, a car flipped over right outside my balcony, and it made the same metallic popping noise as it rolled over and over down the street.  So when I heard the noise, I knew it was a bad sound, but I assumed it was two cars hitting. 

I had just pulled into our driveway, and I was getting the kids out of the car.  This is a long process for us.  Everett can get into his seat belt by himself, but he still needs help to get out, and Lawrence and Catherine are not self-reliant at all yet.  So getting out takes 10 minutes.  I got out, walked around to Lawrence's side, unbuckled him and while he was sliding out, I walked back around to Catherine's side, reached in to the very back to let Everett out, and then I was standing next to the car lifting Catherine out of her seat when I heard the pop. 

"Oh no," I thought.  "A wreck.  That's not a good sound.  I know that sound.  Maybe it was something else." 

I walked back around to make sure Lawrence had headed toward the garage, and I looked over into the road.  There, in the middle of the road, was something that looked like a pile of rags. 

"What is that?" I thought.  "I looks like somebody dumped a bunch of clothes or rags into the street."

Then I remembered the gardener who walked just behind our car as I was getting Catherine out.  I had nodded to him and said hi because I wanted him to know that I saw him and he was too close to us.  (Mama bear instincts kick in when these eastern people do not give enough personal space.) 

My internal monologue went something like this:  "Oh my gosh, is that the gardener?!  What happened?  I see a head!  That is not a pile of rags, it is a person!  Did that person get hit by a car?  Is that what the noise was?  Wait, it is a little person!  A child!  Is that a child?  No.  There are three adults standing in the road.  It must not be a person because nobody is doing anything.  Surely if it was a person, someone would be helping him!  But I see a head!  It IS a child!  There is a child in the road!  Face down, a child in the road!  That child got hit by a car!  That was the pop!  Oh my God!"

At this point, I am standing by my car with Catherine on one hip and a boy on either side.  Thank goodness Mike was already home for lunch.  I ran inside and threw open the door and shouted out, "HONEY!  A boy has been hit by a car!  He's face down in the road!  A boy was hit!  Not ours!  Call 110 (that's our 911) and go see if he's breathing!  No one is helping him!  Go make sure he's breathing!" 

Mike immediately dove for the phone and ran outside.  He got the operator on the line and was talking to 110, but he, like me, saw the other adults there and assumed that he wasn't needed at first.  I mean, how many adults do you know that would witness a child getting injured and not help?  But Mike did check anyway, and he was breathing but unconscious (I did not find this out until later).  There was no blood.  He was just limp on the road.  It was awful. 

The boys had followed me inside.  I didn't know what to do with them.  Do we go outside and watch like spectators, or do I protect them from the potentially grizzly scene?  I didn't know what the situation might bring, so I wasn't sure what I would be exposing them to.  Maybe to not see would be worse than to see, because they could imagine something worse than the reality.  After a moment's thought, I gave them the choice:  stay inside or go watch.  Both wanted to watch.  So we went back outside and sat down next to the car. 

After a few minutes, the boy started to move his hands.  That was very good to see.  But he didn't move anything else.  Mike alternated between walking near him and squatting down with him, but I couldn't tell if he was talking.  Lots of adults had gathered by now, but no one offered any more help.  Everyone was just looking.  Cars who encountered the scene just pulled to the side and drove right on by - buses, too.  Buses. 

About this time, an SUV pulled up and his mom leaped out of the car.  I still don't know if she knew in advance that he was hurt, or if she just happened upon it on her way home for lunch.  She was nearly hysterical.  I was very sympathetic.  She had the presence of mind to yell at the driver who hit him, which I don't think I would have thought of.  She knelt down beside him and stayed with him the whole rest of the time (finally, somebody did that!) and I was so glad she was there.  And after she came, and the nanny walked up with the little brother, I finally realized that this pile of rags was our neighbor down the street!  It took me that long to recognize him.  He is a cheerful and friendly 9 year old boy who has always been kind and inclusive to our boys, and his younger brother is on our T-ball team.  Knowing who it was made it SO much worse. 

It took FOREVER for help to arrive.  We got two security guards in pickup trucks after about 10 minutes, and the ambulance arrived after about 25 minutes.  (HONEST TO GOD, people, this place is TINY!  Exactly how long did you spend picking your teeth before you decided to mosey on over?)  We finally got the first-responder firetruck after 30 minutes (I can almost see the fire station from our house).  Needless to say, Lawrence was THRILLED.  They put him on the backboard and loaded him up in the ambulance with his mom.  Mike drove her car back to their house for her.  And then we had to all come back inside and eat a normal lunch. 

I spent most of the rest of the day feeling like I was about to throw up or burst into tears.  "What if he's not ok?  I'm thinking brain, spine, broken bones, etc, etc, since there was no blood.  The medical care here is less than ideal.  What if that had been *my* kid?  Did I do the right things when I was initially responding?  Did I get him help as fast as I could have?"  Around and around my brain went.
Thankfully, the news was not too long in coming:  by the evening, we knew that miraculously he WAS ok, and he was discharged from the hospital and resting at home.  I don't know if he had a concussion or what, but he was ONE LUCKY KID.  His bike was in front of our across-the-street-neighbor's house.  He landed in the middle of the intersection.    His shoes were 50 feet further up the road.  Somebody found his glasses somewhere, since they were knocked off, too.  He was not wearing a helmet.  Not wearing a helmet!  He is alive.  I am amazed. 

It took me days to recover.  Well, I still think I am recovering.  About two days later  I was chatting with a friend and telling her about it, and she told me that people here are instructed NOT to help in an emergency.  First aid?  No.  CPR or rescue breathing?  Forget it.  If you see a car accident, you are supposed to drive on by.  If you are walking down the street and you see somebody clutch their chest and fall to the ground, you just step over them and keep going.  WHY?  How can people do this? 

It's because you are liable if something happens.  So let's say you do see somebody clutch their chest and collapse - you do CPR, and the person dies anyway.  YOU are now culpable for the person's death.  And the penalty for death is...death.  Yes, you can and will be executed for trying to save someone's life.  There are no Good Samaritan laws here.  Apparently, the US is VERY unique in this regard - most (all?) other places in the world are like Saudi. 

That explains why none of the people standing around were helping the boy.  It's ok to stand there and stare, but apparently it's not ok to get involved. 

This philosophy was even further proven that very same evening when our dear neighbors were out at the park.  The little boy of the family had a bike wreck and cut his face very badly - so badly that his skull was showing.  His mother shouted repeatedly for help, but all the other adults in the park, who are all Filipino nannies,  just looked at her.  No one came over to help her.  Can you believe that?  No one!  She had to carry him home with her younger daughter in tow and call the ambulance from home. 

So through all this, I learned that it is not wise to expect help in an emergency.  Instead, expect that you will be the only person willing to help.  Depend only on yourself.  Not how I would have it if it was to be my way, but good to know for future reference. 

I also learned that even knowing all this, I still could not stand by and watch a person be hurt or die when I know I could do something to help.  Especially a child.  I couldn't live with myself.  I guess I would just help them and then jump on the next flight out and never come back. 

So back to my initial question: 
Would you pay a Mexican immigrant who speaks some broken English six bucks an hour to watch your children for 12 hours a day, 5 or 6 days a week? 

My answer is "Um, how about....nooooo." 

But substitute "Filipino" for "Mexican" and you've got a resounding YES from nearly all the families with small children here.  YES!  Can you believe it?  My dear next door neighbor and I are ROUTINELY the only parents at the playground.  And the playground is routinely packed with all nationalities of kids.  But who's watching them?  Their Filipino nannies!  This has been a major source of loneliness for me and for her in living here - there is hardly any camaraderie amongst the moms because everybody's got their nannies being the mom.   But that's another issue.  What's important here is that these people have put their precious children in the care of someone who barely speaks English and someone who they know WILL NOT HELP in the event of an emergency. 

I'm not kidding.  Hello, parents?  Hello?

It's hard to know if the problem is me or them.  Either I am not flexible enough in my morals and philosophies in raising my children (or equivalently, you have to be more lax of a parent than me to make it over here), or the people over here have forgotten what it's like to raise a kid in America.

Same goes for car seats.  I *insist* that my kids are always in car seats in 5 point harnesses, even just to drive down the road.  But lots of people over here just let their kids loose in the car (not even in a seat - not even in an adult seat - just sitting on the console or jumping around or where ever) because camp is small and nobody goes very fast, say 45 mph at best. 

Social pressure to be a lax parent is strong, and I think about these issues a lot.  I wish there was a way I could fit in better, and so be happier, AND have my kids be safe.   But when I get the, "Lawrence is two - can't he just ride in the low-back booster?"  and  "Why don't you have a nanny, again?"  I guess I know where I really stand. 

To heck with fitting in - I'm going to stick to my guns.  At least then I know that I've given my kids the best shot at being safe if anything ever happens.  I'm willing to swim against the current for that. 










Saturday, December 1, 2012

Crackerphone

Funny Lawrence!  He decided to make a call on the cracker today.




He called both grandmothers and had extended conversations.  He is such a riot!

Mike says this is a phone that's only for white people.

The apple does not fall far from the tree.




The Joys of Motherhood

Ah, bodily fluids.  Don't read this if you're squeamish. 

Oh when, oh when will I no longer be soaked up to the elbows?  Ha ha!  Not for a long, long time! 

So Lawrence has been potty training.  For a month.  A MONTH!  He CAN do it, it's just that sometimes he chooses not to.  Well, he can do wee wees, anyway.  We've had a harder time with poops.  The upshot is that some days, and sometimes for several days in a row, he is dry, dry, dry!  Even for naps, and even overnight!  Hooray!  So I get encouraged.  Then the next day, he has accidents all day long.  So I've been washing undies, shorts, shirts, overalls, sleeping bags, sleeps sacks, sheets, blankets, and stuffed animals multiple times a day for a month.  Argh, how much longer can I hold on? 

Then Lawrence got sick.  He spiked a fever of 102 the other day, and then proceeded to throw up all over me, his sleeping bag, all his clothes, and the rug upstairs.  Poor kiddo.  He is much better now, but I am just now catching up on his laundry.  After the vomiting part, then there was the diarrhea part.  But he is so excited about his undies that he won't readily wear a diaper anymore.  So more laundry, and one instance of poop trail through the house as he got carried to the potty.  Fun. 

Not to be outdone, Everett got sick about two days after Lawrence.  Exact same symptoms, except when he threw up, he told me in advance.  I got him to the bathroom (hooray!!), but not quite to the toilet, so my nightgown and the bathroom rug were the big casualties.  Then he had a wee wee accident this morning, and we're bracing for the diarrhea part. 

Then the cat has been refusing to use the litter box. She likes to use the bath mat, or the hallway rug, or any other clothes that happen to be on the floor in the bathroom instead (there are lots of clothes on the floor because Lawrence strips down every time he uses the potty).  

Phew!  Thank God for Clorox! 

Not to mention that both boys have runny noses, and both Lawrence and Catherine are getting teeth, so they drool all the time.  Then there's typically breastmilk or formula on just about anything that goes with the baby (not to mention spit up), and Lawrence bled all over his sheets and comforter the other night when he scratched his bug bites in his sleep.  Have I forgotten anything?

You know how some people have two refrigerators?  One for regular food and another for drinks or whatever else?   Forget that - I want another washing machine!  A big fancy one that will hold an entire queen size comforter!  Maybe I should just start living at the Dhahran Laundromat.

P.S.  Although it's annoying, I don't really mind all this clean up - I guess it's comes with the Mom territory.  And really, I've been really, really happy that we are getting the vomiting bug out of the way BEFORE we get on the plane - so bring it on!  I can take it!






Friday, November 30, 2012

Madrigal Dinner

The Madrigal Dinner performances were the last two nights, and the results are in:  it was fun, but we are not all that great.  But hey, it was fun!  Here are a couple of pictures:





It was really hard to take pictures in the dark room, but maybe you can get an idea.

I actually had a real part, too - I was the Lovely Amaryllis.  The plot was that the King had recently disposed of his Queen, and needed a new consort, so we sang through several madrigals about ladies like Fair Phyllis, but in the end, he courted Lovely Amaryllis, who left him for a knight.  It was all very lighthearted and fun.  And the cast party at the end was fun, too.  Ask me about it when we get home.  I hope we get to do it again next year.



Thursday, November 29, 2012

Helicopter Visit!

Wow!  We were on our way to Khobar this morning, and on the way out of our little neighborhood, we saw a Company helicopter parked in the big empty paved area across the street.  We drove over to investigate, and it was open for looking and sitting! They were having some sort of model airplane show on another nearby soccer field, and the helicopter was part of the fun.


Lawrence was simultaneously fascinated and horrified.  He REALLY wanted to see it, but he was SO scared of it.  Everett was in the cockpit in this photo. 



He's got the headset on and everything!  Everett really ate it up.  Speaking of eating, Catherine was hungry, so she's getting a bottle for a snack during the festivities. 


 It was a big helicopter!  How fun!


What a neat way to start our Thursday morning errands!  Wish they would do stuff like this more often!



Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Getting ready for Christmas in Saudi

Today we got all the Christmas decorations out!  Here is a picture of our tree.


We are not supposed to have any Christmas decorations at all, but we sneaked in a bunch of stuff with our shipment.  Our tree was in a box marked "Ornamental Patio Plants" and all of the rest was stuck one piece at a time with clothes, dishes, linens, and toys.  I don't think they took anything out at customs.  At least, I can't think of anything we are missing.


One problem was that we had stockings, but no fireplace!  So I took a big piece of butcher paper, taped it to the sliding glass door, and drew a fireplace.  Everett colored it in with paints and crayons.  Voila!

We are listening to Christmas music all the time already, and it's about as festive as I can make it feel.  I am trying to think of it as Christmas in Florida - it feels weird that it is so warm, but we'll just wrap some lights around a palm tree and call it a day.  Like in the Corona commercial.  Merry Christmas!



Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Grits at the Commissary

Hey, they had grits at the commissary today!  Yeah!  Must be a sign that it's about time for us to go home.  Eggnog, cream of wheat, chicken nuggets, ranch dressing, nutmeg, and ziploc bags, here we come!

Another sign that it's time for us to go home is that I was talking with the boys about cold weather.  Well, not really talking with them as much as warning them. 

"It's going to be really cold when we get off the plane, boys.  We will have to wear long pants and long sleeves and coats." 

Then Lawrence said, to my astonishment, "What's a coat?" 

OK, time to go home. 

It has also occurred to me that this will be Catherine's first experience with cold weather.  I think the coldest she has ever experienced outside is about 68 degrees.  I only have one pair of pants for her.  All the rest of her clothes are sundresses or daygowns.  Gramama, would you please bring the big blue bunting to the airport?  We are going to need it. 


Monday, November 26, 2012

Christmas Plans

It is with a heavy heart that Mike and I would like to tell all of our Charlotte friends that we will not be coming to visit this Christmas.  We will be staying at our rental home in Knoxville for the duration of our visit, and we would like to invite any and all of you to come visit us at any time while we are Stateside. 

We thought long and hard before making this decision, and in making our travel plans, we realized that coming to Charlotte for even just a few days was simply too hard on us and on the children.  After traveling a zillion miles and 8 time zones, we just didn't have the heart to force the children to miss any more naps or be living out of a suitcase for any longer.  We really need to be in once place.

We would still love to see you all, though, so please consider staying with us in Knoxville!  We have our own house, at which you are welcome to stay, and my parents' Guest House (quite lovely) is also right next door.  Everyone was so gracious and accommodating to us this summer; please let us reciprocate by throwing open the doors for you at Christmastime!  And remember, we are last-minute planners by nature, so no worries if you just call us up and tell us that you are on the way!





Elvis - er, Priscilla - Has Left the Country

Here is an interesting article from CNN.  And while this is (of course) bad for women, it also includes dependent workers; people who come here from other countries to be houseboys or nannies must be sponsored by a resident in order to come into the country.  They cannot move a muscle without the permission of their sponsor.  As an example, one of my friends has an Ethiopian babysitter who is sponsored by a Saudi.  All her family is still in Ethiopia, and her mother, who is caring for her (four?) children, is quite ill.  She would like to go back home to care for her mother and see her children.  Unfortunately, her Saudi sponsor has disappeared; the sponsor lives in Riyadh and cannot be contacted.  She needs the sponsor's permission to leave the country, so - guess what - she can't leave.  It's like slavery.

I do hope that this fuels some sort of change, but I am not all that optimistic.  Many (most?) of the women here defend these types of practices.  They say that they need their guardian to make decisions for them, rather like they say that they need to wear the abaya.  At what point does an accepted cultural practice become brainwashing?

Also, after reading this, all you red-blooded Americans should be asking "How does the government know the husband's cell phone number?"  The answer is that in order to buy a cell phone, you have to register it with the government!  (Which means that if Mike gets a text when I leave the country, it might come in on my cell phone, since it's registered under his name.  How ironic!) 

 Saudi Arabia's unsolicited monitoring of women's travels draws activists' outrage

By Mohammed Jamjoom, CNN
updated 5:46 AM EST, Mon November 26, 2012
A fully veiled Saudi woman walks into a mall in Riyadh. Women's
A fully veiled Saudi woman walks into a mall in Riyadh. Women's "guardians" are notified whenever one leaves the country.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • In Saudi Arabia, every women of any age has a male "guardian"
  • The government set up an electronic monitoring program in 2010 for women's travel abroad
  • The guardian could request to be notified if his dependent left the country
  • But now, men are being notified -- even if they never asked for the information
(CNN) -- When word started spreading last week that Saudi women -- already some of the most oppressed and restricted in the world -- were being monitored electronically as they left the country, activists were quick to express their outrage.

"It's very shameful," said Manal Al-Sharif, who became an icon of female empowerment in 2011 after defying the conservative kingdom's driving ban and encouraging other Saudi women to do the same.

Al-Sharif was one of the first prominent Saudis to start tweeting about the electronic monitoring issue -- describing the shock experienced by a couple she knew after the husband received a text message alerting him his wife had left Saudi Arabia, even though they were traveling out of the country together.

What surprised and disturbed them most, Al-Sharif told CNN, was the fact that the husband had not registered with the Interior Ministry to begin receiving such notifications.


A Saudi city exclusively for women

Saudi Arabia: Paving the way for change 
 
"It shows how women are still being treated as minors," added Al-Sharif. She went on to explain how, even though a notification system has actually been in place since 2010, before last week, a male guardian would have had to specifically request the service from the country's Interior Ministry before receiving such messages.

In recent years, much has been made of the fact that Saudi Arabia is the sole remaining country in which women still have not been given the right to drive. But restrictions experienced by Saudi females extend to far more than just getting behind the wheel. In the deeply conservative kingdom, a woman is not allowed to go to school, get a job, or even travel outside the country without first obtaining the permission of her male "guardian," or mahram.

In Saudi Arabia, every woman has a male guardian -- traditionally her father, husband or brother.
But the country's guardianship system doesn't just apply to women -- underage children, as well as foreign workers, also must be granted permission before being allowed outside the country's borders.
In the past few years, the country's Interior Ministry has been introducing "e-government" initiatives to simplify tracking of dependents with technology and to make it easier for guardians to allow their dependents to leave the country.

One such program was introduced in 2010 -- guardians could sign up for a service that would notify them electronically once any of their dependents, be they, wives, children or workers, had left the country. The information would be sent out once any of these dependents had their passports scanned and crossed any of the country's borders.

It was only over the course of the last week, however, that text messages started getting sent even to men who hadn't signed up for this service.

Eman Al Nafjan, a Saudi writer and blogger, told CNN that the electronic monitoring controversy is a complicated issue that has been somewhat misunderstood -- that this is simply the latest iteration of an antiquated guardianship system Saudi women have had to live with for far too long.

"Why is it being technologically implemented and being updated?" asked Al Nafjan. "Why is it not being phased out? That's the real question."

And it's a question that's been asked more and more in the last several years by activists who say Saudi Arabia's strict guardianship laws only serve to infantilize women and strip them of any freedoms.

For Al Nafjan, the electronic monitoring is a serious matter, but one that has overshadowed something far more important:

"This (male guardianship) system enables exploitation of women -- it's government-sanctioned exploitation," said Al Nafjan, adding how Saudi laws enable men to exert complete control over their female dependents.

"It's a power that's being used over women," explained Al Nafjan, who strongly advocates ending the guardianship system. "Women are not free. No matter how old you are, you're always a minor. It's almost like slavery. Guardianship is practically ownership."

Al-Sharif, for her part, wondered why there aren't e-government services in place in Saudi Arabia to assist women who are in trouble, "to help women go file complaints against their abusers if their actual guardians won't go with them."

"Women should use this to make some noise," added Al-Sharif, "rock the boat, and say enough is enough."

Sunday, November 25, 2012

MORE Rain!

It rained again!  It rained all morning.  It was lovely and gray and dreary.  Hooray, something different!  It was fabulous. 

I was smarter this time, and I went out right when it started with a cup from the kitchen.  I put it out in a clear spot to measure how much rain we got.  Here is the harvest after a whole morning of rain:

The rainwater is in the very bottom of the cup.  Maybe 1/8 of an inch? 
So I think I must have overestimated how much rain we got a few days ago.  Apparently, a lot of time of rain does not translate into a lot of volume of rain. 

But who cares how much volume?  It was cloudy!  It was rainy!  It was different!  Yay!



Thursday, November 22, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!

Hope everyone is having a good Thanksgiving Day!  We have just finished our day over here, and we not only survived, but we had a pretty good day. 

Of course, there is no family to visit over here, so we made plans a long time ago to have Thanksgiving with several other families.  More families were added and the venue was changed to a new house (we were originally supposed to host), but it all worked out in the end. 



All the moms made lots of food to bring, and here was my committment:

a 20 lb turkey
sweet potato souffle (E-side recipe)
cheesy potatoes (M-side recipe)
creamed spinach (my own recipe)
baked apples (my own recipe)
creamed corn (my own recipe)
cranberry relish (E-side recipe)
rolls
drinks for the five of us

Whew!  I had to have somebody else pick up the rolls, but the rest of it all got done.  IN ADVANCE.  Oh yeah.  I baked and froze most of this stuff last week.  All I did this morning was cook the turkey and heat the rest of everything else. 


Believe it or not, I have never actually cooked the turkey.  I am always at either of the grandparents' houses, so I've never flown solo on that one.  But I think I did a pretty good job!  We were very lucky to actually GET a turkey, too.  A 17-pounder from Iowa.  A very expensive 17-pounder from Iowa.  But very-expensive-turkeys are much better than no-turkeys! 




 Everett and I mad the cranberry relish together last week.  He was very excited to make sure it got in the car to take to the gathering. 




One weird thing about Thanksgiving here is that it's on the weekend.  For once, a US holiday works out with the Saudi schedule!  So Mike was home all day.  Admittedly, it was kind of weird that it wasn't a holiday, as in an extra day off, but I'm happy that's not a regular work day like Easter or Christmas.  And also I'm watching the Macy's parade at 9:37 at night.  Crazy. 

Speaking of Christmas, onward!  We are getting out our Christmas decorations tomorrow because we only have about 2 weeks before we leave for the US.  Hooray!