our lives in small town, East Africa

Monday, December 31, 2007

christmas activites

I'm posting these a bit late for the holiday, but, hey, it's the holidays. What can I be if not a little lazy?

Juma decorated Christmas cookies with his cousins Rylee and Tristan and uncle Cameron. Afterward, they brought a few to the neighborhood kids.






Juma performed Christmas songs in a kindergarten extravaganza.




And we took the tradition picture in front of the tree. A week after Christmas.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

because I'm the mom

No, I've never used that excuse with Juma. No, never, uh-uh...


Tuesday, December 25, 2007

christmas gift!

Merry Christmas!

Sunday, December 23, 2007

toffee tradition

Justin's mom, Vicki, has a holiday tradition of making 2.4 tons of toffee, so she invited Juma to help out this year.







Merry Christmas!

Happy Solstice!

Horrible Festivus for the Rest of Us!

Happy Kwanzaa!

I hope your holidays are wonderful.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

GPS, a museum, and a Chinese-German restaurant

On Saturday, we needed to drive to Oakland to pick up Justin's brother Cameron from the airport. We decided to make a day of it and find a museum to play at before his flight got in. So we opened our Christmas present early, a GPS system called the Garmin nüvi (Thanks!).


We asked for this for Christmas as a Marriage Saving Device, because every time we drive anywhere unfamiliar, we end up fighting as the Worst Driving-Navigation Team Ever. Evidence: our two trips to San Francisco earlier this year. And that San Francisco trip when we were newlyweds. [Shudder] You don't want to know. This is why we always take the train into New York City instead of driving our car. And let's just say it was a very good thing that the directions from Connecticut to Utah were "drive west on I-80 2500 miles."

Anyway, we fired up the GPS unit and searched for Oakland area attractions. We found the Lawrence Hall of Science at Berkeley, and it got us right there without incident. Hallelujah.

We had a lot of fun there, a hands-on science museum targeting children, but also great fun for adults. We pet a chinchilla, a tortoise, and a snake in the Biology Lab. Disaster almost ensued when Juma tried to let the chinchilla out of its corral. And I felt a little thrill as the snake wound powerfully up my arm.



We also spent a while in a building-blocks room. This one was just as popular with the grown-ups as kids.





Outside the museum, Juma climbed the entire way through a sculpture of a section of the α-amylase gene, 1.2 billion times larger than the actual DNA.





There were also a planteterium, a music room, puzzles, a puppet show, a earthquake display, and a life-size whale statue. Four hours later, Juma still wasn't bored, and we still hadn't seen the whole museum, but we had to leave to pick up Cameron.

The GPS unit easily got us to the airport, and after getting Cameron and his momentarily lost luggage, we had the nüvi find us a restaurant on the way home.
Excited that the list included German restaurants, we had it direct us to one called Noah's Hofbrau in Modesto. We walked in, excited about Rotkohl and other yummies we haven't had forever, only to find sweet and sour chicken and chow mein on the menu. What the? Turns out the German-named restaurant must have been bought out by some Chinese owners, and though they still offered a couple German items, we were taking the chance of eating Chinese-German food. No way.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

dentist

We finally found a dentist kind-hearted enough to take us in and fix our teeth. Look what a great job he did with Juma's baby teeth.



Saturday, December 15, 2007

bibliophiles

Anyone who has been to our house, or has seen us during leisure time knows that Justin and I both love to read. Back in New Haven, we had three very full bookshelves in the living room, another in Juma's room, and three more in our bedroom. And eight or nine more boxes of books in the basement storage unit.

Needless to say, we've encouraged Juma to love books, too. We've been reading him books since before he could comprehend what a book was, and he's had his own library card since before he could write his name on the back. Now, we have "reading practice" every day so he can improve his own reading skills. He's up to Cat in the Hat and Arthur books.

We've recently discovered he has the attention span for us to read him big kid books, the kind with no pictures and hundreds of pages and dozens of chapters. After Justin read The Golden Compass on my recommendation, he started reading it aloud to Juma. Juma was quite interested, but the subtleties of the plot were beyond him. That was okay, because he still liked the armored bears and the daemons shape-changing and other fun fantasy elements of the book.

Two days ago, we decided to try reading Harry Potter to him instead. Start a bit simpler. We'd been planning on reading the books to him for years, just waiting for him to be old enough. I read him the fist chapter, and he was jumping on the couch in excitement, asking questions about everything. He couldn't wait until I finished sentences and paragraphs to find out "Who is that? Why did he say, 'What the...?' What do the ghosts look like?"

When I finished the first chapter, he immediately demanded the second. He wants more and more, and it's delightful to watch his eyes light up. We're now on chapter 9, and pushing through quickly.

Woohoo! My son loves Harry Potter!

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Christmas meme

Ashli tagged me to answer a Christmas survey (at least, I think I was the Sarah she tagged. There are a lot of Sarahs.)

1. Wrapping paper or gift bags? Wrapping paper for kids; it's just too much fun to open to deny them that pleasure. Bags if I'm in a hurry or feeling lazy!

2. Real tree or artificial? This year, we're at Justin's parents, and they have artificial. Last year, we were at our own place, and got a real one even though it was against apartment rules. ;)

3. When do you put up the tree? I like to put it up the day after Thanksgiving, but Justin prefers later, so usually sometime before mid-December.

4. When take down. Growing up, we'd always try to convince our parents to leave it up all year, and just do different decorations. It never worked. So usually about the time it's getting really dry and I can get Justin to help drag it to the curb.

5. Do you like eggnog? Yes, but it's too thick, so I always cut it with something.

6. Favorite gift received as a child? Ones I remember are my pink racing bike, pink mountain bike, and the matching bedspreads Jody and I got.

7. Do you have a nativity scene? A few, but I only put up the one with sentimental value. It was hand painted by Justin's parents when they were newlyweds and given to Justin's maternal grandma. She gave it to Justin, as the oldest grandchild, the year before she passed away.

8. Hardest person to buy for? Justin

9. Easiest person to buy for? Juma--last year it was anything Cars or Toy Story. This year, it's anything Star Wars or Transformers.

10. Worst Christmas gift ever received? Nothing I ever hated

11. Mail or Email Christmas card? Mail, but this is the first year ever we've done cards.

12. Fav Christmas movie? A Christmas Story

13. When do you start shopping for Christmas? After Black Friday

14. Have you ever recycled a Christmas present? I don't think so.

15. Favorite thing to eat at Christmas? Vicki's toffee, hot chocolate, sugar cookies...

16. Clear lights or colored on the tree? I prefer clear, but we have colored at home

17. Favorite Christmas song? I really don't like Christmas music

18. Travel for Christmas or stay home? We usually travel. This year, at Justin's parents'.

19. Can you name Santa's reindeer? Juma asks me to sing Rudolph about once a week all year long, so yes.

20. Do you have an Angel on top or star? Star.

21. Open presents Christmas Eve, or Christmas morning? One on Christmas Eve, the rest on Christmas morning. The Wilson family tradition was to remind Mom and Dad that we get to open one on Christmas Eve. They would then deny we ever had such a tradition, and we'd say it's also the tradition to deny we have the tradition. And on and on the friendly arguing would go until we got to open one present each.

22. Most annoying thing about this time of year? Christmas music

I'm tagging Malia, Laura Ellis, Jody, Tricia, and Laura Frisby.

Friday, December 07, 2007

another check-up

I went back to the doctor on Wednesday, and since it was a new guy, I had to re-hash everything (um, it's all right in the chart in front of you). Basically, my joints are still really stiff and painful, and some of them swollen, but the major fatigue I was feeling in September and October has lifted quite a bit. I had taken another anemia test before the appointment, and I found that I am only slightly less anemic than I was before, but at least it's improving. The doctor ordered re-tests on just about everything, to see if we get the same results of if something comes up positive this time. Also, he prescribed a 10-day course of a steroid which is used to treat arthritis.

So I took the first steroid last night, not expecting any progress from just one. But when I got up this morning, Justin asked me how I'm feeling and I realized I'm feeling as good as I've ever felt with this sickness. I could almost make a fist, when normally in the morning, I have an extremely limited range of motion in my fingers. Also, I realized when I walked through the kitchen on the hard stone floor, I wasn't walking tenderly to lessen the pain--there were no pain.

It is wonderful to feel almost normal again.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

brush & floss; brush & floss; brush & floss...

Since we finally have insurance that covers dental check-ups, Justin suggested we make appointments with a dentist here in California. Just so we can get everything taken care of before we head to Tanzania. So...

1) I found the only place in the city that takes our insurance.

2) They were booked ahead for at least three months.

3) I found out the same non-profit dental provider has a branch in a town 45 minutes away.

4) I managed to get appointments with them for all three of us on Halloween.

5) We picked Juma up from school on the appointed day, and drove out there.

6) We didn't bring anything for Juma to prevent a meltdown in the car.

7) We didn't bring anything for Juma to prevent a meltdown in the office.

8) The address on the website and on mapquest didn't differentiate between I street and West I Street, so we got confused and lost and arrived late.

9) They didn't want to let Juma do anything more than get X-rays because we were late.

10) Justin exchanged appointments with Juma, so Justin got X-rays only.

11) Sarah and Juma got X-rays, and were told they have [Ashli, don't read this] 4 and 2 cavities, respectively.

12) The dental assistant told us "You need to start brushing Juma's teeth." We informed her we brush his teeth every morning and night. She said, "Then you need to brush them after every time he eats or drinks anything but water."

13) We went to schedule follow-ups for the fillings and Justin's exam. The next available date was January 7.

14) We begged and pleaded for an earlier date, but they wouldn't budge. We agreed to the date.

15) Then the receptionist asked when we want appointments for the fillings.

16) What the ^%$#@ are the appointments on January 7 for then?!?!

17) Cleanings.

18) Only.

19) So we asked for dates for fillings. January 27.

20) We're not supposed to be here by then.

21) We made the appointments anyway, with the promise that the receptionist would call us if there happen to be three cancellations on the same day.

22) We drove home.

23) All of that took six hours.

24) A few days later, we got a call about some cancellations and went in the next day.

25) The dentist filled ONE of Juma's fillings (he was perfect with only a shot) and ONE of Sarah's fillings. And told Justin he had four cavities, too.

26) That took 4 hours.

27) We realized they want us to come back FOUR MORE TIMES to do ONE FILLING EACH TIME.

28) We complained all the way home.

29) We found a friend of the family that would squeeze us in out of the kindness of his heart.

30) I called the out-of-town place to request our records be prepared so we could pick them up.

31) They said okay, we'll call you when they are ready.

32) I called them and said, I'm coming, get them ready.

33) I drove 45 minutes out there, popped in, grabbed the files, said thank you, and went back to the car.

34) The administrator ran after me, saying, Oops, I should have checked your ID.

35) I showed her my ID and got in the car. She went back inside.

36) As I was about to drive off, she approached again, saying she couldn't release Justin's records to me without his signing a release form first.

37) I explained he did sign one, the first time we were in, because we knew we might switch dentists from the beginning.

38) They could find no record of his signing any such form.

39) I protested, went inside, and tried to remember with the receptionist that we did sign the forms. Both of us remember the conversation where we discussed singing the forms, but she remembers us deciding not to right then, while Justin (I got Justin on the phone) and I remembered we did.

40) Still, there was no proof that we did. And HIPAA laws and HIPAA laws, after all.

41) The administrator explains to me then to Justin a way to get Justin's records to their sister office in Merced, then we could pick them up there by Thursday, the day of our appointment with the local dentist.

42) I realize we could just have Justin run to the local mailing store and have the dental office fax the release to him, and he could fax it back and I could go home with the records.

43) The administrator faxes the form to Justin. And we wait. And wait. And wait.

44) We have a little chat about Yale public health and how I could get a job at this non-profit.

45) I call Justin to see if he sent the fax. He had, and he was already back home, too. We figure out he sent it to the medical office's fax, not the dental office's, and the administrator has then fax it back to her.

46) Finally, I take the record and go.

47) By then, it's five o'clock and Justin's brother and his family are over for dinner, back in Merced.

48) I start driving, make an accidental turn, and in trying to correct it, I end up on a highway going north out of town instead of east, back toward Merced.

49) After at least a few miles, I realize my mistake. It's dark, so I can't tell direction by the sunset.

50) There are no turn offs. Just farms. And farms. And farms. I see some lights up ahead that make me think there's a right turn, so I decide to pull over there and consult a map.

51) There was no turn-off, just a bend.

52) I pulled over anyway, trying to ignore thoughts about women alone on secluded country roads, turned on my hazards, and grabbed a map.

53) No map of California, just one of the western states.

54) I found where the town had been, but the highway I was on did not appear on the map. Just not there. But I know I was northbound by the highway signs, so I figured I could keep going north, then cut right onto a highway that is on the map and that does go east to Merced.

55) It worked!

56) I took more wrong turns within Merced.

57) I got home just as the dinner guests were leaving.


Moral of the story?

Brush your teeth. A lot. And floss. And make appointments well in advance.

And get a GPS unit for the car.

Friday, November 30, 2007

movie time

To pass some time and bond with Juma, we pursued one of my favorite time-wasters, watching movie previews online. Since Juma was with me, I kept the previews to kid movies.

First on the list was Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, which Juma laughed at. He kept wondering, "Magic? Is magic real?" I guess this has gotten pretty poor reviews, but I'm sure little kids like Juma would enjoy it. I really like the stars Dustin Hoffman, Natalie Portman, and Jason Bateman.

Next, we watched The Golden Compass, which I really want to see. But I think Juma is young enough to be frightened by the action and thrills.

Lastly, we watched Alvin and the Chipmunks, a movie I would never consider seeing. Except that Juma laughed his head off during the preview clips, and watched them four times each. I haven't seen him laugh that hard. Ever.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

california

We drove back from Utah to California yesterday. Some people think we're crazy for making the drive with a kid, but, frankly, he loves it. Why?

"I get to watch movies all day long."

Yep, we got him a mini-DVD player. This from parents who got The Alphabet Game when we drove all day long as kids.

So when Juma complains that the screen on the DVD player is at a bad angle, or the previews won't get over fast enough, or he can't get his right earphone to sit just so on his ear, and tell him, "Well, Juma, I'm really not going to listen to you complain about stuff like that, because you know what? When I was a kid, and we drove in the car with all my siblings, between Washington and Utah, do you know what I got to pass the time? A cup to throw up in. So quit your whining or I'll turn off the movie and we can play Name That Smell or Count the Sagebrush. You don't know how good you've got it, boy!"

I might as well be telling him about how I walked to school uphill, both ways, through the snow even in May, without shoes. I am officially a parent.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

honey nut cheerios

"I love these. It's like honey rolled up into a tiny circle."

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Friday, November 16, 2007

thanksgiving

We're driving out to Utah on Saturday to be with my family and two of Justin's siblings for Thanksgiving. We're excited, Juma and I were practically leaping on the walk home from his school today. I haven't had Thanksgiving with my family since we moved out to Connecticut, so five years ago. Back then, there were only five Wilson grandkids, and now there are twelve!

Thanksgivings in Connecticut were generally quite small, and often lonely. The first year, we joined our friends the Valenzuelas, a family who only became closer over the next couple years. But they moved to Indiana for more grad school. The second year, my sister Jody and and her son Ammon joined us from Massachusetts, and we cooked a chicken rather than a turkey. And then Jody moved away, too. The third I can't remember if we joined the Valenzuelas again or if we had it alone, just the three of us. Last year, we joined the Wests, Frost/Lundeens, and most of the Woodworths (the wife was getting an appendectomy), people who had become more family than friends in our four years in New Haven.

Monday, November 12, 2007

juma's first book

Juma wrote a book in school. The text reads "By Juma/ Matthew is my friend/ I am a police officer and Matthew/ is a burglar"


bi Juma




I am a ples afasr and Matthew
Matthew is my friend






is a brglr

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Monday, November 05, 2007

Halloween

Since we participated in Halloween activities on four separate days, Juma chose to wear three different costumes.

On Friday, when we went to the local zoo's Halloween party, and on Saturday, when we met some friends in Pismo Beach, he was a ninja, the costume we actually bought for Halloween.





On Sunday, when we went to his cousin's school carnival, he was an ewok (a costume make by his grandma years ago).




And on Halloween, he was Spiderman, a costume he chose months ago as a "reading practice reward."

jack-o-lantern

Juma was big enough this year to be really excited about his jack-o-lantern and pumpkin carving, and even big enough to truly want to help. But when those slimy, smelly insides of the pumpkin hit his senses, he was all for watching mom and dad finish up the job.

A study of carving, in pictures:











pumpkin hunting

Juma and I, along with Juma's cousins and aunt and uncle, traveled out to a local pumpkin patch to search for Halloween pumpkins.

Juma had a great time playing with his cousins.




He also learned how the local Native Americans used to grind corn using stones.




The boys also explored a teepee.




Then Juma ran circles around me. Just 'cause he's five.



I didn't actually take a picture of him with his chosen pumpkin at the patch, but I'll put some pictures of carving his jack-o-lantern in another post.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

halloween cookies

Juma's grandma invited all her grandsons over to make and decorate Halloween cookies.





They weren't into the making and baking so much as the decorating and eating-of-the-frosting.




And those dang leftover cookies keep calling my name from the pantry. Back, cookies, back!

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

sarah's health update

Since May of this year, my joints have been painful and stiff, my fingers and feet swollen and painful. I could still function fine, and was able to enjoy my summer. In mid-August, I even made a daily habit out of long bike rides after Juma went to school.

Since the end of August, the pain intensified, took up residence in my wrists, shoulders, and knees too, and found a new companion in major fatigue. I didn't have insurance all summer (that would treat me anymore besides at Yale, that is), so I just toughed it out with my new unwanted friend, ibuprofen. By September, though, I, or rather, Justin, realized I just couldn't take it anymore and sent me to a clinic. I would have rather just gone to sleep. Ten, 12, 14 hours a night had become normal for me.

The fatigue, it seems, is likely anemia, so I've added iron pills to my diet. (Funny, eh, that I got more-than-mild anemia when I spent all last summer studying it and encouraging women to take iron?) The pain, though, is still a mystery, and I am just got the results for some more tests: everything negative or normal. So the mystery remains, but at least I know I don't have lupus. It seems that something auto-immune is going on.

For several weeks, I lived in a painful daze of sleeping until 10 or 11am, picking Juma up from school, sleep-talking his way through his homework, trying to find activities for him to do where I could just sit there, and going to bed by 9pm. Oh, and wondering when the heck this was going to end.

In the past couple weeks, it seems the iron has kicked in and the fatigue lifted somewhat (I got up at 8am twice in the last week!). In the past week, I've actually had a few nights where the pain in my joints didn't wake me up for my large, middle-of-the-night dose of ibuprofen. And I've finally been alive enough to feel like I could get some of my to-do list tackled. This week, I've made dental appointments for us, reviewed Swahili grammar, and started learning Arabic script.

I'm not looking for sympathy here, just a mutual celebration that finally, finally, things are looking up.

Monday, October 22, 2007

writing and reading

Juma's been working hard in school. He recently won a writing award for his kindergarten-level writing.



And at home, we do extra practice reading. Each sticker represents a time he read the book. He earns a sticker a day and when the chart is filled, he gets a reward.



At home, his grandma set up a little private writing center to inspire him to write.



The first thing he did was to take everyone's orders for drinks and dinner.



(Wotr = water
ise te = iced tea
joos = juice
dr pepr = Dr Pepper
the speshl = the special)

The next writing task he wrote and drew a rendition of a dream he'd had the night before.



(Me and Tristan found jewels. Rylee tooc [took] mine.)

Friday, October 19, 2007

tats

Juma decided that putting on all his temporary tattoos on at the same time would be just so cool. Here he is showing off his full sleeve.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

family pictures

These are from June.