I know, I know. A whole month! I have an excuse. So many big aspects of international school life happen
early. Exams and report cards were something I was ready to do. Ordering for next year, and being involved in the hiring process for next year, I was not! I still need to go in for a couple of hours today or tomorrow to finish the math department ordering. SSIS has hired a new upper school principal this week. I was invited to facilitate the faculty part of the interview process, and pull together faculty feedback. It was an interesting process.
It is amazing to me how early the "Where will you work next year?" conversation starts. Friends assure me it is how it works in the international school world. If I think about it, I knew that I was moving here in February of last year. I have thrown my hat in the ring to make a move to the comfortable land of elementary school. (Whose principal is also departing and a new assistant principal job is is open.) We'll see what happens.
It is our third day of a three week break, and I have started to feel the connections between my brain synapses again. But I have to back up...
We had a lovely Thanksgiving with our friends the Perkins.
The dinner was awesome - the turkey some of the best I have had in years. We celebrated on Sunday because we all worked on Thanksgiving Day! It was a little strange. I am proud to say I made a pecan pie, as I have for my southern husband every year since we have been married. Here, it was a challenge to top all others. The pie pan? My neighbors. Baked? In the Perkins' oven. Pecans? After sharing my astonishment of the $20 price tag for the right amount of pecans to a wonderful SSIS parent at the check out line at our local western gourmet food shop, she sent her stash to school for me. I am finding out that expat life is about sharing and helping others out in new ways.
The morning of our Thanksgiving celebration, our school hosted the Terry Fox Run for cancer research in HCMC. Charles ran the 5K in honor of Nancy Riley, my sister in law. It was a wonderful community event on a beautiful day.
We could tell the Christmas season had officially started when we saw the beautiful lights outside of our balcony.
Charles wonders whether or not there is a translation issue involved in the story of Christmas in Vietnam. Did they think that Jesus was born in a cave? I laughed it off at first, but after seeing many "cave" creches around the city, I wonder if he is on to something... (By the way, this one has a rush of water that runs over the top and back of the tarp. ??? Fabulous, eh? The cotton snow is so realistic.)
The Christmas season also brought familiar kinds of celebrations like a fantastic dinner and dancing party at The Duxton (a fancy hotel downtown) hosted by SSIS. It was great fun. We had roast beef and other wonderful foods that were a rare treat. How fun it was to dance and party with colleagues. I think we have found a great baby sitter to boot.
Maeve went on a school field trip connected to her study of seasons. They went to Dem Sen park, an amusement park. They went into the "ice cave". Yes - the thrill of an amusement park event that involves putting on heavy winter coats and being in the cold! (I can hear my sisters in New England giggling.) A very nice mom who supervised Maeve on the trip sent pictures to us.
Maeve has had her first season of performances. She excelled in her solo in the dance recital. The most fun for her, I think, is her new fancy dance outfit, complete with wings and halo. Maeve had a solo for the jingle bells number. Very exciting.
Her school Christmas concert was fun too. I took my whole sixth grade science class to watch. Maeve was asked to be the narrator. She did a splendid job. No fear whatsoever of the microphone. (OK, maybe one very public nose pick...)
Aside from the holiday preparations, our lives have been busy and full, with all of the events all homes with kids enjoy. Maeve is proud to annouce her first loose tooth! It is now very wiggly wobbly. Will the tooth fairy and santa come on the same night?
This same kindergartener is also reading like a pro. Learning to read is a process I have spent so much time thinking about, as I took doctoral courses in language and literacy, but it still feels like magic when you are in the midst of it!
Sophie "reads" too. Each story shared, Maeve reads first and then Sophie. She is quickly learning her letters and numbers. We just got an old huge chalkboard from school like the one we have on Trenholm. Let the learning begin!
We found the Vietnamese version of playdough and had a wonderful day creating.
We still swim at least four times a week!
You would be impressed with how well Santa has done with absolutely no Christmas wrapping paper to be found. (Brightly colored bags from the store, bulletin board paper - shhh.... don't tell school, regifted gift bags...) I have done two things that I said I would never do this Christmas. #1 - buy a fake tree. Voila!
It could be the most atrocious Christmas tree I have even laid eyes on. " It's beautiful!" is all Maeve and Sophie have to offer. Enough said. :) We found some stockings for Santa to stuff too. Right now we are playing "Christmas morning", taking turns wrapping "gifts" in blankets to pretend that Santa has come and unwrap.
#2, I bought a Barbie doll. The things you do for your children...
We are counting down the days to Christmas with our paper chain of dates.
I realized, as we put up the tree, that it was the first year that the girls were able to decorate the entire tree by themselves together. Wow they are growing.
I got the best Christmas present early, straight from Kindergarten.
We are off to a matinee of Madagascar 2 at the NEW MOVIE THEATER TEN MINUTES AWAY!!!!! It is amazing, in this last week alone, the new one stop Lotte mart grocery store, bookstore, movie theatre, and bowling alley opened, as well as a new children's book and toy store which is slotted to open elsewhere today. Walking into the Lotte Mart two days ago brought tears to my commercial American eyes. We will no longer have to go to a million different stores to do our weekly shopping. Phu My Hung and Ho Chi Minh City have changed exponentially even since our arrival five months ago. People talk about how ten years ago there were not stores in Vietnam that were anything like grocery stores. (Actually, this entire part of the city was a rice field ten years ago.)
(We have just returned from the brilliant new stadium seating movie theater with only 8 people in it for the movie. We paid $10 for all of us to see it. We returned to greet our housekeeper who just cleaned the entire apartment. Sometimes I like living in Vietnam. : )
We are fine, and realize that this international life wears well on us for now. I know that there will be moments during our holiday season when we will miss people, family especially, terribly. It won't be long before we see them again.
I promise it won't be a month before my next entry so check in. And drop us a line, we'd love to hear from you! jsriley@aol.com
We wish you peace, love, and joy for this holiday season.
We miss you all.
Love, the Waughs