June 30, 2010

Homesick for Kazakhstan


Our travel partners and friends Maureen and Sean are currently back in Kazakhstan adopting a little brother for James. Every morning I log onto their site, keeping my fingers crossed for an update. I love reading each entry, and not just because I'm thrilled for them as they bond with Michael. I love looking at each picture posted, and not just because it's wonderful to see them all smiling. Although of course I am, and it is.

You see, their journey tugs at my heart and makes me long for Kokshetau. Don't get me wrong, there were parts of the six and a half weeks we spent in country that were downright tough; and Bob and I were both happy to get back to Maryland. But there is something about the whole experience that grabs you and never completely lets go. A huge part of it was the emotional thrill of meeting Owen and making our dreams finally come true, but there was so much more.

It was the novelty of being somewhere new - and literally foreign. I found it (mostly) exhilarating to have to try a little harder to choose groceries or get places. It was fun to visit the Tsum department store vs. the local mall, the Green Market vs. the Safeway.

It was learning that it is freeing to live with less - a smaller household space, fewer choices at the store, a limited and oft-repeated wardrobe (although by the end I was wearing a pajama top during the day because I was so tired of my other options), and no time saving appliances. On second thought, that last one never did get easier. I liked the size of our apartment (if not the bathroom) and having to walk everywhere because we had no car.

It was interesting being somewhere that we didn't act, speak or look like the majority of folks. I found it deeply humanizing to reach across the language and cultural divide to share a laugh with a new acquaintance, or wave to the clerk at our neighborhood market when we saw her at a restaurant for dinner.

It was the way we had to roll with the punches ... our daily schedule often depended on what some faceless official or hospital administrator decided; many times we had to trust Rada our translator for meal choices; we happily ate raisin pie for dinner with Sean and Maureen when the cooking gas ran out and couldn't be refilled until the next day. I think it was liberating to learn to let go - especially for someone like me who prefers to be in control.

It was being somewhere where our evenings together weren't interrupted by work phone calls, emails, or even TV reruns. We spent every day - all day - together, and we had to work as a team to finish what we had set out to accomplish. I found that was a good thing for our marriage.

In Sean and Maureen's words and pictures I remember the sights and smells and sounds that will always be within me. Bright blue paint, worn but serviceable furniture, plates of rotisserie chicken and mayonnaise and dill, glossy dark hair and gorgeous faces, ornate ironwork and crumbling cement, car horns and techno music. It all takes me back to the biggest decision Bob and I ever made, the most rewarding journey of my life. I will forever treasure Kazakhstan for giving me the greatest gift, our Owen, and I suppose part of me will always be homesick, but in a good, good way.

I won't publicly post pictures of Michael yet, nor say what city they are in, as the legal process is not yet complete. But if you would like to read Sean and Maureen's journey, leave me a comment and I'll send you a link and the password.

June 14, 2010

6 Berkshire Drive






It's walls and floors and brick and siding. It's a basement that often took on water and a rolling yard that squashed my dreams of a swimming pool. It's just a house, but ...

It's Christmas mornings in pajamas and family birthday parties with Carvel ice cream cakes.

It's sitting in the limbs of apple trees and picking the fruit right from our perch; kick the can and four-square and trick-or-treating where everyone knew us.

It's where I met my first life-long friend.

It's waking up to cows on a jaunt from the farm up the road.

It's baking chocolate chip cookies from scratch while listening to James Taylor and making cranberry relish with the old metal grinder.

It's the zydeco and 50's records of my parents and dancing to "My Sharon" in the living room.

It's sneaking peeks around the staircase at cocktail parties and where I had my first drink.

It's musical recitals with cousins and my dad coming home from the train station with flowers for my mom.

It's where I learned to drive, studied for the SAT's, and opened my acceptance letter from Penn State.

It's a rabbit named Toby, curling up with Hobo in the bathroom when it thundered, and mourning the death of my first pet.

It's where I got grounded, where I was celebrated, where I learned not to give up.

It's where I climbed onto the roof to nurse a broken heart and where I returned when I had no where else to go.

It's where I best remember my Nana and Pop-pop.

It's where my family all gathered to welcome Owen.

It's 33 years of firsts and lasts, of tears and laughter. It's love.


It's nothing more than drywall and yet it's everything. It was a good, good place to grow up. And it will always be home in my heart.

June 1, 2010

It's Always Sunny in SoCal

Dear Family,

I am aware that as a group we have lived for generations on the East Coast, and for the most part are happy to do so. In fact, I believe we may think those that venture from the comfort of the mid-Atlantic states are a bit, um, unsettled. However, I now have a proposition for you all:


OK, I'll back up a bit.

There are a few places that I've greatly enjoyed visiting - Chicago, San Antonio, Jackson Hole, and New Orleans to name a few. But when a plane lands in San Diego and I step off and drive across that soaring, slender bridge to Coronado, my soul goes "ahhhhhh".

I'm not even sure why I love it so, but oh, I do. Maybe it's the drama of cliff meeting ocean, the Piscean dream of water everywhere you turn. The riot of bright pink flowers and shops filled with treasures. I know without a doubt the (almost) unreal perfection of the weather is a big draw - how are you ever unhappy when it's 70 and sunny?

Sure, real estate, and most everything else, is expensive; we'd need to learn Spanish; I've been told the locals can be a little snobby; and there's that pesky earthquake thing (no fear - the one inexpensive item in California is alcohol, so we're good there). But I think if we all agree to a move we can pool our money and buy this 9,200 square foot house for $17.5 million. And as we'll all be together we won't care if the locals are less than welcoming!



So who's in?

Not sold yet? I'll give you more time and a few pictures from our recent jaunt.


Owen and puppy, ready for take-off.


See, there are Penn Staters and fellow former East Coasters there already!


We were thrilled to be able to spend a day at the San Diego Zoo with the Coles - Susan and Scott were with us in Kokshetau on our first trip and have been wonderful friends ever since; Jack and Brooke are their beautiful kiddos.




The Kokshetau kids. Fast friends and rock climbing/(fake) ant hill exploring buddies.


Don't we look happy?


A little giraffe tongue slime never hurt anyone.


Love the zoo; love these two.

On Saturday we made the short trip to La Jolla and spent a few blissful hours on the clean sandy beach of one of the many coves dotting the coast.


It's really hard not to smile here.



Owen loves digging in the sand and splashing in the waves. Check out Bob's face though - the water was cold!


See all the little seal heads bobbing up from the water? They are looking at the beach waiting for a chance to come ashore and rest on the sand. Seals, especially the babies, need to rest out of the water for at least 1/3 of the day in order to build up their strength. To be blunt - no rest, early death. But people like the blond woman and her child who ignore the posted signs asking visitors to please stay off the beach make the seals too nervous to come in (I took this picture from the sea wall adjacent to the beach, and you get a great view from there). When we move to SoCal you can join me in becoming an on-the-scene seal activist; in the meantime, check out www.SaveSanDiegoSeals.com.

Back to our sales pitch (er, vacation pics) ...

We stayed with our longtime friends Audrey and Walt who have lived on Coronado for a year courtesy of Walt's job with the shipyard. As always we shared many laughs, a few debates, and a great time in their company.


Dinner tastes better on a deck with a view of San Diego harbor.


Owen thinks so too. Are you ready yet?


Sunday was Jenna's first communion. She did a wonderful job.


Even more beautiful than Coronado.


Bye to San Diego ... for now.