The Help

My sister’s family has a wonderful maid/nanny who is very well paid in terms of her peers. She is sweet, friendly, intelligent, hard-working – and she knows how to stay out of your way, which is important, I came to realize when she spends the greater part of each day in the same apartment with you. I am not criticizing my sister for hiring help, in fact, I didn’t meet a single family in Bangkok who didn’t have at least one hired nanny or maid. Besides which, I appreciated p’Pa’s work every day that she was there, and especially on the days she was not. It was heavenly to have a squeaky clean bathroom and all my clothes laundered and ironed for me.

But consider the lay-out of Sue’s apartment: The front door accessed the main part of the house and in the main part of the house every room was outfitted with a air-conditioning unit.

The side door opened directly into the kitchen, the muddy room, the laundry room, the maid’s room and the maid’s toilet. There was a locking door between the kitchen and front door (which my sister’s family never locked). None of the maid’s quarters, not even the kitchen, was air-conditioned. There was no air conditioner back there at all – but it was still where all the ironing was done. (This is also why Sue and Joss rarely cook at home – when you reach a certain income level, Thai culture presumes a cook.) The back part of the apartment is where the maid is supposed to be. The front part is where the family is supposed to be.

Furthermore, the maid’s room, barely larger than Sue’s walk-in closet, did not have a regular door, but sliding GLASS doors. That’s the kind of status maids have in Thai culture – they get limited amenities and no privacy.

So, whenever I was sitting out in the air-conditioned living room reading Wolf Hall with my feet up – or knitting while watching the last few episodes of Lost, I felt slightly guilty whenever p’Pa passed by with her cleaning supplies. It was worse when we’d be eating a couple of kilos of peeled rambutan – that she’d peeled for us and served before slipping back to her area.

And worse, she was there 4 1/2 days a week to clean and watch Noi naa – but she herself had TWO CHILDREN. Two babies who until recently lived with their grandmother in a town north of Bangkok. I’m guessing that when her kids were younger, she saw her kids once a month – actually I’m hoping that’s the case, in reality it was probably far less. (Now, her kids are older, and the 12-year son lives in Bangkok with her and her husband and goes to school. The 8-year old daughter is still north with grandma.)

Also, I had difficulty with the lack of privacy issue. If you have a full-time maid, no matter how discreet you are or they are, THEY KNOW YOUR BUSINESS. Heck, they do your dirty laundry. Which is why my sister won’t even consider cloth menstrual pads – I mean, where would Sue even keep the dirty ones? There’s not many hiding spots in a house where the maid puts everything away for you. The maid knows exactly how much you drink, how late you sleep in, how you treat your husband, and how short your temper really can be.

No thank you.

With those thoughts on my mind, it’s no wonder that I completely lost myself in Kathryn Stockett’s novel The Help. Granted, the Thai culture of servitude is different from the American history of slavery-cum-servants, but there are common threads when dealing with mistresses and servants.

Told from the perspective of three women in Jackson, Mississippi during Martin Luther King’s glory (jeee-sus, that means black people were routinely getting lynched in my lifetime… *shivers*), this story reads like a memoir, but has the tension of a mystery thriller. Because two of the women are black and hired servants, and the third woman is white and wealthy – you get a gripping flux between the perspectives of both sides.

Damn, it was so dangerous in those days. I mean, the kind of danger a slave risked by learning to read kind of danger (does everybody know that the traditional punishment for a slave caught reading was the loss of a finger – for the first offense?)

Above all, this book is about the power of WRITING and the value of struggling to think things through, despite the pain you risk.

Stockett says that there is one line in the book that she truly prizes:

“Wasn’t that the point of the book? For women to realize, We are just two people. Not that much separates us. Not nearly as much as I’d thought.”

She wrote this book in memory of her family’s own domestic servant, Demetrie, who died when the author was sixteen years old.

Posted in books, Thailand | 13 Comments

That Girl has Sass on Her

Me: Bella, You have A LOT of clothes.

Bella: And you Mom, have a lot of YARN.

Posted in says bella | 7 Comments

My sister is coming! My sister is coming!

I promise to get a better family portrait when they visit!


Looks like my sister and her family are coming to visit the last two weeks in July and the first week of August.

I’m starting a list of FUN THINGS TO DO IN SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY (Well, actually probably more accurate to say South California..) Then Sue and her Brit/Aussie husband can decide what looks the most fun for them and their two little girls.

Free Concerts in the Park – When I lived in Joshua Tree, Bella and I would go to virtually every free concert in the park all summer long. After a hot summer day, running in the cool grass and chatting with friends while the sun set, all to the backdrop of great live music – well, what says summer more than that? The concert in particular that I want to see is the Beatles Tribute on July 30. This is at the Crown Valley Community Park in Laguna Niguel from 6pm-8pm.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UZ-T1PU3p8]
Ice Skating – Ever since my 3-year old niece saw Disney On Ice, she has been enamored with well, Minnie, but also with ice skating.
Luckily there a rink not two miles from my house. It costs $12 per adult and $3 for skate rentals. (No Homeschooling Mondays during the summer.)

Great photo opps with the balloon.


Hot Air Balloon Ride – Amazingly, this is also free. And technically it’s not hot air but helium that brings 25-30 people 400 feet into the air above the city of Irvine. It’s open only Thursday-Sunday.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI6k9iss2iI]
Wild Seal Watching at La Jolla’s Children’s Beach – We went to watch the wild seals (no sea lions that day) and both Christian and I were riveted. This is a long drive (at least an hour), but it’s free to watch and then you can go eat at the Brockton Villa (we had crab cakes, clam chowder, and the kobi sliders – all was great).

The Kogi Truck – Can’t seem to get enough of the Korean-Mex mash-up. It’s such perfect co-existence of two cultures. Tacos are $2 (kalbi, chicken, tofu, or spicy pork); burritos and quesadillos are $5, and specials are $5-$7.

Touching manta rays at Sea World on Homeschooling Day (admission was $8!)


The SoCal Unavoidable: Disneyland, Seaworld, San Diego Zoo – the best way to do this, I think, is to bite the bullet and buy the Southern California City Pass which includes tickets to all of the above attractions and is good for 14 days from the first ticket you use. An adult costs $269 and kids 3-9 are $229. Gulp. But consider this: an adult ticket to Disneyland alone is $184!!

Waldorf in the Woods – I think my niece will love our weekly playgroup. She’ll be able to catch it at least twice. In addition, we’ll try and make the new weekly Future Homeschoolers park day on Tuesdays.

Downtown Los Angeles. I like it more each time I visit...


Los Angeles by Train – As much as I love the Huntington, I’m thinking that anything as far as Pasadena will be difficult because we’ll have three babies (one only two months old) to consider. On the other hand, the TRAIN is always fun and takes us to downtown LA and Chinatown and back. There is a great Metrolink package called Friends and Family 4-Pack which is 4 adult roundtrip tickets anywhere on Metrolink for only $29. That’s great because one adult ticket roundtrip to LA is almost $15! Kids under 5 are free, up to three kids per paying adult.

Anna and Max on a winter desert walk.


The desert is so gorgeous though, in the National Park especially.


I’d love to take them to Joshua Tree, but again, that’s a long trip.
My house there will be empty though those last two weeks of July…

Don't tell Bella I posted this pic.


Sea slug


Tidepooling – While I’ve long been a fan of Tablerock in south Laguna (from there you can swim to Secret Cove, and walk through the arch rock to Tortuaga, which is normally only accessible by walking to the north end of 1000 Steps Beach and scrambling over a rock jut), I’ve lately been appreciating the north Laguna beaches. The tidepools are just amazing at Diver’s, Fisherman’s, and Shaw’s Cove. Parking is free or metered, there are rarely crowds and I can see some art on my way out.

If we go to south Laguna though, we can stop in and visit my s-i-l's family and their pet pig, Oblio.


I’d love to go strawberry or cherry picking, but the timing might not be right.

Noi naa has already skyped with Sierra's kids and is looking forward to riding bicycles with them.


Sierra and the kidlets.


I anticipate some time hanging out with Sierra and her kids Anna, Aiden, and Oliver.

I assure you, Christian DOES like ice skating even if it doesn't look like it in this pic.


Food I’m planning: Algerian Lamb Shanks, Eggplant Parmesan, Spice-Stuffed Okra, Pesto, Rice Nut Burgers, Orange Chicken and Lemon Risotto, those Sweet Sticky Ribs I love, Salmon Wellington (Bella can do), Flax Muffins
Sue misses Mexican food, so we’ll make an effort to do some of that. I like Baja Fish Tacos; it would be good to meet Chad there after work on a Wednesday. I like Javier’s too, but that means the Spectrum, although Sue may have some shopping she wants to do.
Other possible places to eat out: We recently discovered Bistro K which looks great and has a half-price menu during happy hour. We’ll also make a requisite trip to In ‘n Out – luckily that’s walking distance and easy to do after Thursdays Waldorf in the Woods playgroup. La Rana is a Mexican food joint within walking distance, and we like to hit Baja Fresh every once in a while too. Of course the tamales at the Sunday Laguna Niguel Farmer’s Market will be a must.
Maybe we’ll hit the Original Pancake House for breakfast one weekday morning. If they want pizza, we like The Upper Crust at the Greenfield plaza.
Shopping: Although Bangkok is great for shopping in many respects, nice clothes, bathing suits and good shoes are better here. I’ll take Sue to Loehmann’s and Nordstrom Rack. We’ll hit the Newport Children’s Bootery for washable leather pediped sandals for Noi naa. If she’s aching for more, we can hit TJ Maxx too.
(Okay Maura, NOW I call this post finished.)
[P.S. July 21, we may go to the free family day at OCMA. We also hope to include two days of easy camping at Caspar’s. And Joss is welcome to do a long ride (50-70 miles) with Chad – on any given day that we go somewhere far, odds are that Chad will want to bike there to meet us.]

Posted in SoCal attractions | 4 Comments

Letter to Christian at 2 years 1 month

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAD26HWfAis]
Hello Baby,

The last couple of months have been rather momentous for you. In fact I don’t think you noticed your birthday (May 23) being eclipsed by the birth of your cousin Leela (May 21) at all. In fact, after the requisite chocolate birthday cake and candle blowing (your dad was present cybernetically through skype and a laptop on the dining table), you danced around the bedroom singing, Happy Birthday to ME, Happy Birthday to ME! Next year, I promise, the birthday crown and birthday banner will be finished.

Two is a big time. Your language has taken extraordinary leaps and bounds. When we first arrived in Thailand two months ago, your uncle Joss was taken by the way you liked to point and say, “Ova der” for “over there,” but now – well you like to give LOTS MORE DETAIL. And you’ve even discovered pronouns, “No, Mama, YOU do it” and “I like it, Mama. I like it a lot!”

You also started saying, “I DON’T like it” and for that, I cold turkey stopped reading Go, Dog, Go, a book I’ve always enjoyed, because it seemed to really trigger that “don’t like” concept for you. But the biggest development is that you aren’t just repeating phrases anymore, but making things up as you go along in conversation. Unfortunately, you get shy around others and get quiet, but luckily for me as your Mama, I hear you making sense of your world all day long and singing songs and rhymes from start to finish. You are incredibly adorable.

The farmer says that there will be cherries at Guldseth Farms for another two weeks. Bumper crop this year.


Another big development: NO MORE DIAPERS!!!

On the way to Thailand, I had you in diapers, but we had only one miss the entire way there (24+ hours door-to-door), so when we got there I put you in a pair of training pants (Hannah Andersson makes a nice organic cotton one in extra-small). I didn’t put another diaper on you for the rest of the trip. We had accidents (only one missed poop – and that was the first morning after eating the poop-inducing dragon fruit), but all in all, I’m impressed with how capable you are with communicating your elimination needs to me.

You were also a champion traveler. And a good playmate for your cousin Noi naa. You were thrilled by every adventure down the street, which make you fun to be around.

Helping Ganma and Gampy pick cherries.


The adventuring hasn’t slowed down since we’ve been home: we’ve already been cherry picking, to the beach a half-dozen times, to the seals in La Jolla, and more. This is going to be a fun summer.

Besides the outings, you’re having fun just being at home: your Grampy built you a wooden play kitchen where you’ve been making me soup and tea every day; and we came home from Thailand laden with wooden Plan Toys: a parking garage, construction vehicles, a fire house with fire engines. You’re entering imaginative play with gusto, and that’s a special delight for me.

I love you, Baby. Let’s play!

Love,
Mama
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QO-x1dMv9dA]

Posted in Christian Holden | 1 Comment

Elimination Communication Cheat Sheet

A diaper-free Christian standing on the bathroom counter at the Taipei airport. All pees and poos on that 20-hour trip home went directly into the toilet.


I’ve been asked to speak on the topic of elimination communication to the moms of local attachment parenting group (AP Living) who meet weekly. These are the notes that I will expand upon during my talk.

I. Definition of Elimination Communication (the EC spectrum)
II. My Story – started full-time at 3 mo., used cloth diapers, graduated at 23 mo.
III. Tools and Accessories
a. Potties – several, for easy access (I like BabyBjorn), the sink, the great outdoors (rule of thumb: go where it would be appropriate for a dog)
b. Easy-access clothing – split crotch pants, vests, leg warmers
IV. Getting Started (often you’ll use a combination of these techniques)
a. Timing – upon waking, every half hour or hour, depends on time of day
b. Intuition – you’ll develop a feeling
c. Cuing – a sound, like hissing or shushing or grunting for poos
d. Baby’s signals and cues – squirming, crying, arching back
V. Tips for Success (from Ingrid Bauer’s book)
a. Offer potty opportunity as soon as baby wakes up.
b. Always offer potty opportunity before going out.
c. Make regular pit stops en route.
d. Try to potty when you arrive.
e. Offer potty opp. whenever you undress baby (for bath, changing, or sleep).
f. Choose clothes and diapers that are easy and quick to remove.
g. If using diapers, try cloth diapers without covers.
h. Make a cuing sound anytime you notice your child going, even if it’s a miss.
i. Act quickly on the slightest thought or intuition about pottying.
j. If one thing isn’t working, try something different; stay flexible.
k. If you encounter challenges, continue offering regularly, and respect a “no.”
l. Avoid pressure; stay relaxed and patient.
m. Connect with other like-minded parents.
VI. Resources
a. Books
i. Diaper Free: The Gentle Wisdom of Natural Infant Hygiene by Igrid Bauer.
ii. The Diaper-Free Baby by Christine Gross-Loh
iii. Infant Potty Training by Laurie Boucke
b. Websites
i. http://www.diaperfreebaby.org
ii. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diaperfreeoc
iii. www.womantalk.org (that’s me – search under the category of “elimination communication”)

Christian is more likely to use the big potty now, but he also loves reading time on his little potty.

Posted in elimination communication | 2 Comments

The Turnip Story

The puppet show sometimes takes a lot of energy to pull together, but the kids love it.


Our Waldorf in the Woods summer session begins tomorrow. Our puppet show story will be The Turnip.
The Turnip
retold by David Sidwell
One fine day at the end of summer, an old grandfather went to his garden and saw that he has grown a large turnip. A very LARGE turnip. He wanted to pull it out of the ground so he could eat it for supper, so he pulled and pulled, but he couldn’t pull out the turnip.
He called out to his wife, “Wife! Come help me pull out this turnip!” She came over and grabbed him by the waist, and they both pulled and pulled, but the turnip wouldn’t budge.
So the wife called for her son: “Son! Come help us pull out this turnip!” He came right over, grabbed her by the waist and the son and the grandmother and the grandfather pulled and pulled but the turnip wouldn’t budge.
The son called out to his daughter, “Daughter! Come help us pull out this turnip!” She came on over, grabbed her father by the waist, and the daughter and the father and the grandmother and the grandfather pulled and pulled but the turnip wouldn’t budge.
The daughter called out to her dog, “Dog! Come help us pull out this turnip!” He came over, put his paws around the daughter, and the dog and the daughter and the father and the grandmother and the grandfather pulled and pulled, but the turnip wouldn’t budge.
The dog called out to the cat, “Cat! Come help us pull out this turnip!” She came over and put her paws around the dog, and the cat and the dog and the daughter and the father and the grandmother and the grandfather pulled and pulled, but the turnip wouldn’t budge.
The cat called out to the mouse, “Mouse, Come help us pull out this turnip!” He came over and put his tiny paws around the cat, and the mouse and the cat and the dog and the daughter and the father and the grandmother and the grandfather pulled and pulled, but the turnip wouldn’t budge.
The mouse called out to the cricket, “Cricket! Come help us pull out this turnip!” She came over and put her tiny, tiny claws around the mouse, and the cricket and the mouse and the cat and the dog and the daughter and the father and the grandmother and the grandfather pulled and pulled . . . and the turnip finally came out!
It came out so fast that grandfather fell on grandmother who fell on her son who fell on her daughter who fell on the dog who fell on the cat who fell on the mouse who fell on the cricket. Then they all got up, dusted themselves off and went to the kitchen—where they cooked and ate the turnip!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tWO0ZzJcqE]
It was delicious!

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Thai Street Music

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrMT4NvL6y0]
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFmgIVUEZeU]

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You Too, Can be a Pied Piper

Learn a song, or two. Kids will love you for it. I find myself singing with kids everywhere – even ones I don’t know, and I find that a little singing always, always brightens my day.

We’re beginning the summer cycle of our Waldorf in the Woods playgroup next week. We’re going strong – the group is still full of great, committed moms, and more families being added to the waiting list all the time!
Our craft this time will be wet-on-wet watercolor painting (every time) and our story will be the classic tale of The Turnip, which I will post shortly.
Here are our new songs and handplays. The other songs, the ones we use every time have been posted previously and can be found on womantalk.org by searching “waldorf songs.” If there is not a video with music above the words, then the words are simply spoken.
This cycle all songs and handplays are from Betty Jones’s A Child’s Seasonal Treasury, an excellent resource.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1StFSedxSh0]

Birthday Song
Oh welcome welcome lovely day.
With sunshine bright and flowers gay.
With painted birds that sing their song
And make me kind and good and strong.

[We will not be singing the first birthday stanza, but these are the words for your reference:
In heaven shines a golden star.
An angel led me from afar.
From heaven high unto the earth
And brought me to my house of birth.]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eX7NwaHTW2M]
Morning Song
Good morning dear earth. (Crouch, touch ground)
Good morning dear sun. (Rise and extend arms to sky)
Good morning dear rocks and the flowers every one. (Crouch and knock fists on ground, then wave fingers and sway hands for flowers)
Good morning dear beasts. (Remain crouching, put hands on head for horns)
And the birds in the trees. (Flap arms while rising to stand)
Good morning to you and good morning to me. (Bow to others twice, then stand upright and cross arms over chest.)

Bubbles
Bubbles are a lovely thing to blow (Make a bubble with forefingers and thumbs)
On a hot, dry summer day,
Big and small, they rise and fall
And POP! Along the way (Clap for the pop)
Sparkling crystal rainbows (Sweep arms overhead from one side to another)
In the sunshine bright, (Make sun with circled arms above)
How I’d love to be a bubble (Make bubble with forefingers and thumbs)
And sail into the night.

Ten Fingers
I have ten little fingers (Stretch hands out front)
And they all belong to me, (Point to self with both thumbs)
I can make them do things, (Rub hands together)
Would you like to see? (Open hands, palms up.)
I can shut them up tight, (Make fists)
Or I can make them wide, (Extend fingers)
I can put them together, (Clasp hands, fingers intertwined)
Or make them all hide, (Put hands behind back)
I can make them jump high, (Hold hands high)
I can make them jump low (Place hands on floor)
I can fold them quietly, (Fold hands together)
And hold them just so.

Flower Elves
Pretty flower elves are we,
Dancing to and fro,
Peeping out from ‘neath our buds
As round and round we go (Children skip or gallop in circle waving colored veils)

Sleepy, sleepy snails are we
Our steps are long and slow.
We drag our feet along the ground
As round and round we go. (Children take big slow steps around a circle.)

Butterflies from the air are we
Our wings are fairy light
We dance before the king and queen
Upon the flowers bright (Children skip around a circle while flapping their arms)

Funny little gnomes are we,
Our beards are long and white,
Towards the rocks our footsteps turn
To tap from morn ‘til night. (Children trudge, bent over, around in circle, while hammering fist on fist)

A long green snake in the grass are we
Our tail is far away.
We wriggle and wriggle and twist and turn
As in and out we sway. (Children put together outstretched arms and hands and act out described movements, while walking around in circle.)

Fish Alive
One, two, three, four, five, (Make fist, unfurl one finger at a time)
Once I caught a fish alive! (Wiggle all fingers)
Six, seven, eight, nine, ten, (Bow a finger for each number spoken)
Then I let it go again! (Wiggle fingers, then hide hand behind back)
Why did I let it go? (Shrug shoulders)
Because it bit my fingers so! (Point right index finger and pretend to nip it)
Which finger did it bite? (Close fist)
This finger on the right. (Hold on right index finger and wiggle it.)

Posted in waldorf | 1 Comment

Jetlag Blues

Sometime during the trip...


I’m going to have to pause before I even begin and make myself a cup of tea. I can hardly keep my eyes open. Christian went down for a nap an hour ago at 4 pm – I hope he’s not thinking he’s going to sleep for the night.

Because last night, after a moment of fatal hubris when I thought we were already past the jetlag, Christian woke up at 1 am and then stayed up until 7 am. I made flax muffins and let him play in the kitchen for two of those six hours, but the rest of the time (besides taking him to pee/poo EIGHT TIMES) was me sincerely trying to get him to sleep.
To be continued…

Can you see how much Christian loves his cousin?


Backtrack and update on jetlag status:
1st night – slept 16 hours straight through and woke up at 4 pm.
2nd night – awake 1 am – 7 am. sleep until 9 am.
3rd night – baby stirs fitfully from 1:30 am – 2:30 am. needs to be taken to pee, but never fully wakes.
4th night – baby wakes to pee around 3 am. continues sleeping.

Dare I say, that I think the worst is past? Whew – just thinking about that second night is making my hands shake and boobs ache (baby nurses a lot when he’s jetlagged!)

Christian on a tuk-tuk ride.

The moral of the story is
that there is always a price to pay for a 14-hour time difference, but that jetlag is over before you know it.
Totally worth it (although I might not have said that after night two).

Last day in Bkk - no matter how I dressed Christian, he somehow always matched his cousin.

Posted in Thailand, travel | Leave a comment

Entering the Final Stretch

Jackfruit - the one that looks like giant kernels of corn, but tastes like banana with citrus undertones. Mouthfeel: calamari without breading.


When I tell people that I’m going to be away for five weeks, I get a lot of head shaking and incredulous looks – but listen, one) a 20-flight is a loooo-oong ride for a 2-year old, so I’d better make it worth it; and two) five weeks feels like hardly anytime at all at the end of it all.
Now that I have five days before I leave, I’m thinking about all the things I want to fit in or experience ONE MORE TIME before I go. Tonight I got the pad thai and mussel omelet crossed off my list and yesterday I finally tried that famous duck noodle soup – but there are so. many. more. things. Massages for instance, I’ve only had two (granted, one was two hours long); more fresh jackfruit and durian for another; and yes, I want to go back to chattachuk for a fourth and final time this weekend (I found my favorite t-shirt stall last weekend! A real chattachuk achievement to be able to repeat find). And I need to get back to Chidlom Central, a regular mall, to buy more wooden Plan toys (they are 40% cheaper here since Plan is a Thai toy company – we’re getting Christian the double story garage for his birthday).

Fresh vegetable juice stands have become popular. We often get one with carrot, beet, and apple to start the day.


I laugh when people wonder about how much I reveal about my life. There is so much that gets unsaid – even stuff that I want to write about – or that I’ve already written in my head – that I’ll never have time to put down.

Buying veggies early on in the trip. When Sue saw this picture, she said, "That's strange, a photo makes it look SO FOREIGN."


For instance, my sister took me to a fabulous birthday brunch at the Shangri-la hotel this weekend. It was all-you-could-eat cuisine from around the world. I ate my way through a mountain of raw oysters on the half shell, and then tried a plate of chocolate desserts while Christian alternated between watching the barges passing on the Chao Praya River and the clown in the kids’ room.
The next day we went to see a fantastic traditional puppet show (rod puppets – each puppet requires three puppeteers).
Yesterday, Christian and I went with Joss’s cousins (the two kids and wife) up the river on a riverboat taxi to Wat Arun, or Temple of the Dawn.
Today, we all were treated to a delicious brunch at Crepes and Co by aforementioned cousins.
All of these deserve their own post.
And then I’ve been meaning to do a craft post, a protest-destruction post, a massage post, etc, etc.

In the hospital room the morning after Leela's birth. I think Songbae actually read all those pages before Noi naa nodded off.


But in the end, it’s more important to spend the actual face time with family, right? Even family from my brother-in-law’s side.
We are enjoying the company of the cousins (with two kids and they’ve already been traveling in India for three months) and grandparents (en route to England, Italy, and Greece). Clearly, both sides of the family have a thing about traveling.

The whole sofa. This is the sofa where Christian and I slept. Joss, Songbae, and Noi naa were on the floor between the sofa and Sue's bed.


Christian, in particular, is really riding the family vibe and joyfully greeted Noi naa’s grandma and granddad this morning (a little to Noi naa’s dismay, I think). He loves the cousins also, who’ve often been swimming and eating with us.

Joss taking a turn with the kids in the garden at Crepes & Co, this morning.


But, he will be happy to see his own Daddy, sister, and grandparents very shortly!

Posted in Thailand | 7 Comments