Sunday, November 9, 2008

Put the lime in the coconut...





Our pantry, including a yummy favorite on the bottom right: chickoos.
These little brown fruits have a creamy inside that reminds me of a date. Mangosteens above.


Quick trip through the produce section today. Here are the fruits and vegetables that I didn't recognize:
Vellery
Ladies Finger (which looks an awful lot like okra)
Kokarol
Tindly
Langsat
Snake Fruit
Tamarillos
Chowchow
Pitahaya
Kiwano
Durian
Ralangal
Tinda
Ash Gourd
Butter Gourd
Sponge Gourd
Snake Gourd
Indian Drumstick
Egyptian Custard Apple
Curry Lemon
Bare (from India)


and my favorite, the super spiky scary looking jackfruit. We bought some mangosteens, (a purple fruit with a yummy bit in the center) the incredibly long Indian green beans, and also the mysterious Egyptian custard apple (a sort of bluish purple knobbly thing), which, when Mike looked it up, is described as "unbelievably tasty fruit with toxic seeds."


Good thing we looked it up! Cutting it open, I was surprised at the contents:




It tasted pretty good, kind of slippery like the inside of an apple turnover, sweet. None of us could get past the wierd factor this time around, though.

Obviously I could use some assistance in the distinguishing fruits and vegetables. I need a Produce Section Safari Guide, possibly a pith helmet too. I enlist Rani's help whenever I can to ask her about produce, and she is both willing and helpful.


All the produce has a sign with the name and the price and where it's from, which is facinating. Back in the US I only took passing notice, but here I love that the Saudi dates are next to US strawberries, and that we're eating apples from France and pineapples from the Phillipines. I also love that I can whack the top off the pineapple and stick in in the ground and voila! I have a pineapple plant. I am always on the lookout for attractive new kinds for the garden.





And the mangoes. Don't get me started on the mangoes. Mangoes as far as the eye can see, and the most beautiful papayas too. The mangoes are from all over the world, and I'm thoroughly enjoying getting to try out all sorts of varieties, from the common Alphonso to purple mangoes. With some research, I'm going to be posting a few of my newfound favorite mango recipes. I can't resist buying them, and some, like the one Thomas is holding, and the ones below, are huge! So we have to eat them, oh darn.



Fresh unpasturized fruit juices are de rigeur here, lemon juice with mint being my favorite, but everything from avocado to sweet melon and cucumber, to beet and pomegranite is easily available. Even at McDonalds the apple juice is pulpy and delicious. Watermelon juice is really popular too...do they have that in the US South? They should! Orange juice is easily the most popular, and the oranges on the trees surprised me by being green, though ripe and orange inside.

Maybe someday my little lemon tree on the balcony will give me a sour little present. In the meantime, we are overwhelmed and loving the sun warmed fruits just off the tree like the oranges above...in November.

Friday, November 7, 2008

To Market to Market...




The Dubai Flea Market is something I've been looking forward to. It's held once a month on the first Saturday in Safa park beneath palm trees in a huge gathering of color and people and stuff.

All sorts of stuff. Books, clothes, homemade jewelery, garage sale sorts of things, in other words, an utterly fun huntfest. The kids and I arrived about an hour after it started, armed with exactly 19 Dhs. ($5.17). Three of that went to pay the gate fee for the park (kids are free). I had raided our change coffee cup since our bank account was whimpering quietly, not sure when Mike would be paid next. I figured it'd be a challenge and part of the fun. Bethy brought her own little purse with separate funds, having saved up her 5 Dhs allowance several weeks in a row and done extra work around the house for the odd Dirham.






It was about 95 degrees midmorning, and the bustle of people swarming around the vendors represented a hodgepodge of every nationality imaginable. There was sharp bargaining going on for everything from brass to highchairs and television sets. Many of the vendors had signs describing which charity would benefit from their sales, though a few were people cleaning out their storage areas or artists and craftspeople. People brought huge bags, handcarts even, and many of these were overflowing. The kids dove right in and were quivering with excitement at all the neat stuff and the happy vibe.



Bethy immediately bought a small stuffed toy dog for 8 Dhs to benefit hungry canines. I bought each of them striped plastic balls from an overflowing giant black plastic bag (the kids agonized over the choice of color, finally settling for blue-striped and red-striped) at 2 for 1 Dhs for another local charity. There were large squishy cushions laid out on one end of the gathering for people to lounge upon and listen to a slightly hippie guitarist, and on the other end some poor woman sweltered in a true Minnie Mouse getup and hugged the kids multiple times. Minnie apparently is a Filipina here, or so her accent indicated.





I let Bethy decide where we would go and what we would see. She wanted to see everything, and had a hard time not spending all the money from her pink satin Princess purse within moments of arrival. Even with the tiny amount of money I'd brought, I managed to find some wonderful treasures:




I thought these handcarved wooden toys were absolutely charming, and at 2 Dhs apiece, how could I go wrong? Thomas has played with them nonstop since. Animals with wheels are 2 for 2 on his "favorites" list. Of course, no savannah dwellers ever made the vroom vroom noises Thomas employs as he pushes them around, but that's the gift of being young with an imagination.

We walked down the aisles between the three long rows of tables, finding every sort of item imaginable. I also found a 5 Dhs bill on the ground, but kept it aside, figuring that was sort of cheating.




On addition to the doggie (about whom she announced "Her good name is Goldie and her family name is Allison" -see how she's picking up the local venacular?) and the striped ball Bethy ended up with a bright pink sequined mask (1 Dhs) and a perfect fairy lunchbox (4.5o Dhs). Not a bad haul for a little girl!

We ran into a few people we knew from work and running...Dubai may be a big city, but it's also a very small town. We were getting pretty pink and sweat was beginning to puddle, so after 2 hours of fun we called it a day.



I cannot wait for the next Dubai Flea Market...and next time, the kids and I will be there the minute it opens and I'm bringing some real cash for an entirely different experience...

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

I'll be there for you...


Ross, Joey, and Chandler?


Amidst all the excitement of the US presidential elections and Obama's win, I went out with Thomas to Umm Sequim to meet Cathy, a fellow expat blogger from Pennsylvania at the coffee shop above, which may seem...rather familiar to many of you.


Cathy stumbled across our blog one day and actually decided she wanted to meet me! (Who would have guessed?) Apparently we have very similar opinions on things and are also going through similar experiences of the UAE. This is unusual enough that she sought me out. Just to drive home the point as to how nutty this lovely woman is, she would also like to get back into running, and is going to try out the Predictor with me Saturday.


If you'd like to read a blog that says a lot of the same things as mine, but far, far more succinctly, here it is: http://theogurs.blogspot.com/


In the coffee shop we sat in cush velvety chairs, breathed in the amazing aromas of some darned good coffee and exchanged life stories and chat. Thomas climbed, gambolled, ran around laughing, visiting other patrons, and generally demonstrated what happens when you give a good but active toddler hot cocoa and a chocolate muffin for lunch.

Cathy, a mother of two little boys, and my new friend, was quite understanding. (She had seen my post on culture shock and wanted to offer her empathy on that front as well.) She was the first of the Americans I talked with yesterday who used the phrase "proud to be an American," but each and every one said exactly the same thing. Proud, and holding our heads a little bit higher. The Brits I talked with said we should be feeling proud. What a wonderful day, no matter who you voted for.

On the radio in the car I listened to Arabic news, not understanding it of course, but loving hearing the states listed one by one by the announcer with distinctly Arabic pronounciation, each state and then either "Obama" or "Senatoor eh-McCain-ah".


Cathy said that a friend of hers was in an airport in Kenya and that it was a serious party there.

I can believe it.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Yes I'm proud to be an American...


I am so proud of the voter turnout in the USA.

Well done to both the fine gentlemen candidates.

Here's to our country, to our citizens, to a historical moment, and to our 44th President Elect:

today, from our backyard, in the UAE

All in all you're just another brick in the wall... (part 2)

A quick addendum (as I sit here mentally gnawing my fingernails ever the elections going on in the US) to the HR story. Mike came home last night shaking his head. An HR rep had called him all in a tizzy about getting some papers re-signed immediately (please keep in mind that it has been a good three weeks since the kids and my visas expired).


She said that "they" had "had a problem with his signatures."

"What does that mean?" Mike asked.


"I don't know", she replied, "they had a problem with your signatures." (Personal opinion here: I think this translates to we lost the paperwork again, though I could be mistaken.)


So as Mike is going through the papers, signing everything (again), he said to the HR rep, "I see some here for my wife, and my son. What about the paperwork for my daughter?"


"You have a daughter?" she asked.


You remember when Charlie Brown would go "AAAUGH!"?


That pretty much sums it up for me.

Monday, November 3, 2008

All in all it's just another brick in the wall...

To mitigate any chance this blog entry mught be construed as negative overall, I have interspersed it with photos of gorgeous flora from a little walk around our neighborhood Thomas and I took yesterday.


In the last post I mentioned my pity, perhaps even with a whiff of superiority, for the expats who don't enjoy their time here because they're bogged down by anger and even disgust at the seemingly unfathomable behavior and customs of another group of people.



Here, however, I must confess. I too have fallen prey to wishing to throttle a group of individuals, a group that frankly I cannot imagine could be more infuriating. A group of people unlike any others (and thank God for that!) that sadly, my social group is in unanimous and verbose agreement against:



The HR department at Mike's work. Troglodytes.


You may remember the trouble we had back in July coming out here, not knowing when we would leave, not knowing if we would be able to stay?



Would you believe it's still going on?



I am reticent to even write this, but the kids and I are, unless I am greatly mistaken, illegal aliens in this country. Now, we shouldn't be. We have done everything we were supposed to. More than, actually.


Unfortunately those HR um, persons (teeth gritting here) can't seem to get their act together for anyone in the company. I have yet to hear anything positive about their performance. That can't be good. In our case, they delayed and delayed (despite Mike emailing them daily) filing the paperwork so the kids and I could become residents. Then they had to pay fines because we're not residents, and to get the money to pay the fines they had to submit forms and then get the money which took time away from actually filing the paperwork, resulting in...you got it....more fines. And more delays.


Now, even thousands of miles away, I can hear you making assumptions about the cultural background of these persons (now I am grinding my teeth to prevent using less-than-family-friendly language). Let me just flat-out tell you, to save you embarassing speculation: they are, for the most part, Canadian.


Being practically Canadian myself (what is Seattle if not Vancouver BC South, and what is Vancouver if not Seattle, North Branch?), I can say that the Canadian factor has little or nothing to do with the complete and utter incompetance. (Though they are Quebec Canadians, which, as I understand it, is another country entirely.) I am starting to believe, as have many before me, if one reads Dilbert on even a sporatic basis, that this is an HR thing.

It really worries me that these people have (and have had for months!) our passports.



One of the things you have to do to become a resident here is to get a Residence Health Exam. When the HR representative perkily anounced to Mike that my Residence was nearly completeted since I'd had the Health Exam, he realised afresh the lack of mental comprehension we're dealing with here, since it hadn't even been scheduled yet.


The HR rep looked confused and tried to argue the point, so Mike took it upon himself to get the thing scheduled and arranged for John (of the H3)'s wife Shuko to go at the same time. A company driver, Mustafa (some days it seems as if everyone here is either Mohammad, Mustafa, or Ali---makes it easy) would come to pick us up and escort us to Abu Dhabi.

On the scheduled morning, back in mid-October, a taxi pulled up in front of our house just as Shuko was getting out of her (what else?) Hummer and a Muslim woman and her small son got out of the taxi and said hello to us. We said hello back, and went into the house.



Watching for our driver, I saw that the woman and her little boy were waiting outside on the sidewalk. Figuring that she was there to view the villa for lease immediately next door, I didn't worry about it much, but when I looked out later she was still there. So I went outside and invited her and her little son to come inside to wait since they would be much more comfortable there in the air conditioning.



She agreed, and followed me inside as I explained that a driver was coming for us, but that she was welcome to stay until then. I offered them water, and asked them to sit down with Shuko, then went upstairs to finish packing Thomas' diaper bag, who was going to stay with Rani for the day. Coming back down I heard Shuko exclaim with her wonderful Japanese accent "Oh, so you are coming with us then?"



Unbeknownst to either of us or our husbands, a third SNC wife had been instructed (by who else? The HR Department of course!) to ride with Shuko and me to Abu Dhabi, and here I had left her waiting outside. I was mortified, and apologized profusely for not knowing; she graciously observed that I was very kind to those I thought were strangers.



Our driver showed up eventually (the Springs can be very confusing, as the numbers are in no particular order). Poor man, I sat in the front seat and kept asking him questions, most of which he didn't understand, until finally I took pity on him and left him to drive in peace.




At the hospital, nearly 2 hours away, after hopscotching through the weaving traffic and blasting horns of the parking lot we were met by a vibrant young man with a clipboard and already filled out paperwork. All we had to do was to follow him, sit where instructed (in the ladies waiting area, of course) and sign on the dotted line. This guy was provided by the company as well, but he was quite good at his job.



Besides the particularly creative and exciting driving and parking techniques of Abu Dhabi drivers, the lively population of cockroaches scuttling across the hospital's walls and floors, and the equally lively shouting match our company male escort/way smoother had with a male patient who cut in line in front of us, the visit was quick, merely a blood draw for HIV and a chest X-ray. I noted that the very thorough results for my chest X-ray had already been documented and signed by a doctor before the Xray was taken, quite expediting the process, I am sure.



I was interested in how the technicians worked, since that's what I do in the USA. For the chest posterior-anterior view X-ray there was no gowning up, measuring, lead aprons or even a deep breath. For the blood draw the RN didn't wash her hands between patients, but she did change her gloves, and the actual stick was well done.



We were rather happy to go back out on the street away from the spectacle of the other patients who passed the time by smooshing the cockroaches with hand and foot. Our escort had done everything administratively for us, and apologized for the man who tried to get in front of us, though we had certainly cut in front of him, and everybody else, for that matter. he showed us how, moments before he had met with us, he had typed "1030" across our paperwork as the time for our exams, and indeed had shoved that paper with the time in the other patient's face to get him to back down.



Paperwork in general has been rather an adventure all in itself. I am making sure to vote in the US Presidential election, of course, and this requires faxes sent back and forth between here, the Snohomish County Auditor, and the Federal Government. I can vote for my candidate as late as November 24th, I believe it is, but that really wouldn't be any fun, now, would it?



Documents here are written in Arabic, and then in English. I am told that sometimes there are...problems in translation. Fortunately for us, we're just a step above tourists, so that doesn't cause us undue concern. Mike's work visa says that he's an Archives Clerk (well, I suppose that's kind of close to Chemical and Mechanical Engineer) and that's he's unmarried with no children. (Not exactly close). Mine states without hesitation that I'm a housewife. Damn, I was hoping to be an astronaut or something.



My favorite document thus far has been the one we had to get from the States when Bethy's birth certificate, which she needed to be registered for school. among other things, was misplaced by (who else?) the company's HR department in the USA, just days before we were supposed to fly out. So, to fix this little error, we received a fax with, first, a copy if the original birth certificate from and signed by the Seatttle-King County Department of Health Director Alonzo L Plough.


Then an affidavit from the Washington Secretary of State Sam Reed, avowing that Alonzo L Plough is the Director of the Seattle-King County Department of Health, and then, to round it out, a third signed affidavit, this one signed and sealed by our good pal Condoleezza Rice, as well as the US Department of State Assistant Authentication Officer. (Yo Condi! What up, girlfren? How's Dubyah doin?) that all the documents are authentic and "entitled to full faith and credit".


Lastly, this whole slew was stamped and certified by the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates in the Washington Consular Section. Pretty sure they're in the capitol, not the state.


Now, is that cool documentation or what? We feel so official!


One last word: please, please folks, vote Tuesday.


The world is watching.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

If there's a bustle in your hedgerow don't be alarmed now...

Today, a photographic vignette of Bethy and Thomas wending their way through a hedge maze at Safa Park. Today I feel happy and a bit lazy, because yesterday I had culture shock. Right on schedule. There is no doubt about it. I was feeling isolated, completely overwhelmed and helplessly weepy. In other words, completely out of character, and for no particular reason. I was prickly the day before, and annoyed with myself about it, then ker-wham, sobsville. Yuck. It was like being sideswiped by bad pregnancy hormones. I was crying in front of the kids(!), to Mike on the phone(!!!), just wanted to crawl into a hole. I wasn't homesick per se, I just didn't want to be anywhere. Fortunately I had already arranged for a friend to come over and watch the kids for me while I went out for a 20 minute run in the sun in the afternoon, and that's all it took to pull me back out. (Let's hope I'm done with it!) Reading up on culture shock, and what wives in particular go through, I'd say I was lucky. Very lucky. I wasn't hating the country or the people for being different, which I hear is very common. I credit Dubai and its openness and beauty for that. One of Graham's sons was visiting from the UK on school break, (I believe he attends University) and I asked him about growing up in Dubai. "Oh, it was hard," he said. Really? What was hard about it? I asked. "Moving back to England!" he grinned. There certainly are expats here who I'm afraid will never be happy. They are stuck in racist and angry attitudes and can't seem to get to acceptance that this place is different. I hear bitter comments about "those people" or "this place" now and then. Interestingly, I have yet to hear a word against Emiratis. Against Brits, Indians, Filipinos, or Americans, you betcha. The traffic, the heat, the cost of living, and so forth. Not normal kibitzing. Real anger. Which is too bad, because Dubai is one heck of a ride! Interestingly, the friend who came over said "Oh, how you're feeling, that must be from me, that's my fault, I am feeling the same way." She's boarding a plane for home this morning.