The nut doesn’t fall far from the tree . . .

My girlie is a quirky character. After 4 kids, I’ve fallen firmly in the nature over nurture camp and Camille is proof positive that one nutter begets another. That might sound like too strong a statement to make about a 6 year old, but the signs are all there that she has the potential for the same weaknesses and patterns of thought that will land her on the Zoloft train if I can’t figure out how to help her manage it. Or maybe she’ll need it regardless. At least I’ll be able to tell her that there’s no shame in that game. And we can get matching pill boxes to dole out our daily doses of sanity. 
One symptom I see is that she has an irrational (key word) reaction to change. I know that lots of people don’t like change, but most people don’t have to fight off tears if they go to church and find that their class has been moved to another room. Her anxiety doesn’t flare up with everything, but if it’s a situation that she once found anxiety provoking and has since been able to manage, and then one small thing changes, it’s an entirely new phobia all over again. 
For example, the bus. She’s great on the bus now. She smiles and waves and goes off to the bus. Yay.
 
But I have to wave to her as the bus passes our house. One morning I had to hop in the car to head out to an appointment right after getting her out of the house and when I told her that I wouldn’t be able to wave that morning, she about had a breakdown. She flopped on the ground and burst into tears and refused to go to school. This is not an “I love Mom so much that I will be sad and miss her if she doesn’t wave goodbye” kind of sadness. It’s an “I need this mental checklist to be completed so that I know everything is normal and the same as every other day” kind of reassurance. 
On that day it was easier for me to delay my departure for 5 minutes and wave to her than to spend 5 minutes convincing her that she would be fine on the bus with her brothers even if I weren’t standing at the window as they drove by. 
And swim team. She’s a great swimmer and she has nothing to fear, but if she’s been swimming in lane 2 for three weeks and then she shows up and they say, “Congratulations! You’re swimming so well that we are promoting you to lane 3,” she will tear up and cry through the entire 45 minute swim because she’s scared it’s going to be something different that she won’t be able to do. God bless her coaches who have learned that’s just how she is and pretend that she’s normal. They are actually impressed by her ability to cry and swim at the same time — on those days she prefers backstroke. 
I’ve made her continue swimming because she’s good at it (they swim grouped by ability and she’s the only 1st grader to be moved up to lane 4 — poor girl keeps getting promoted) and because I want her to practice doing things that make her uncomfortable so she realizes that she can master them. At the end of the first term she showed up for swimming and it was a pool party/free swim day to celebrate and she got teary eyed because she was expecting to swim laps. God bless her.  
But finally, as we approach the end of the school year, I’m seeing light at the end of all of these tunnels. She’s made friends with an older girl in her swim lane and she’s been smiling before getting in the pool instead of biting her lip. 
It’s definitely worse when she’s tired so we’ve been working on fixing that. And it’s worse when there’s been a lot of change all at once, like at the beginning of this year. It’s as my therapist explained:  I could be fine for a while without medicine, but if there’s a perfect storm of stressful events (like a birth, a move, a deployment, a back surgery, and a child’s surgery all at the same time — thanks 2004) my brain might not be able to handle all of that at once and that’s when things start to short circuit. (And why I take Zoloft preventively — so I don’t have to dig myself out of a mess later). 
I knew she was like me, but our move to Abu Dhabi and seeing how she couldn’t handle all of the newness at one time really highlighted that. I told Josh we can never move again if we want her to have a chance at normal. Just kidding. Kind of. 

At least she is able to express herself and writes letters to me all the time. Usually they are drama filled and full of accusations that I’m not a good mom. If she’s already feeling this way, her teen years are going to be good times. (Basically nobody loves her and she drew pictures of herself happy and crying. )

 (This one is “stop treating me like a baby and like you hate me.”)
But they are quickly followed up by sweet apologies. She burns hot and fast and then is swiftly contrite. 

Writing in her journal (not for school, but for fun) all about how she loves school. She is her mama’s daughter. 

And she doesn’t just write in English. Look at that Arabic! It says something like, “My name is Camille and I love bunnies.” Let’s have more of that and less of “My mom is mean.” But I still love my little nut. Calvin summed it up perfectly when he said, “Our lives sure would be boring if we didn’t have Camille.” 

A year of transition

12 months from now we’ll be preparing to move. The change could be as small as moving all of the furniture out of this house and switching it with another department’s furniture (different job with the embassy, different furniture pool) or moving to a different house in Abu Dhabi, or as extensive as preparing pets for export, new school admissions, and gearing up to move to another country or even repatriating to the United States.

I have no idea which way it will go, but every single option will bring big changes to our household. We’ll no longer be an active duty military family, but will have entered the ranks of the retired. For the first time in 21 years, Josh will have personal autonomy. He’ll no longer be property of the US government. We’ll even be able to take that trip to Lebanon (currently not allowed).

But no longer will we be able to rely on God’s direction for our future coming through loud and clear, as strong as a blast from a bullhorn, in the form of military orders every two years. Now we will have to sift through soft whisperings and hope that we are hearing him properly as we determine which job to take, where to move, and how long to stay.

I’m excited. I am confident that even in this shrinking job market, Josh will have multiple job offers to choose from. Who knows where that will take us, but I’m willing to go. I can only laugh at the direction my blog would take if we end up back in the US. I know I’d have plenty to write about:

So much skin! Why is everyone walking around with a Starbucks cup in hand and virtually no clothing on their bodies? 


Who needs 286 varieties of cereal? How am I supposed to pick one if it takes 20 minutes to look at all the choices?


Oh Costa Coffee, how I miss you. I know as a stockholder I should be loyal to the Green Mermaid, but those Brits have you beat. 


Wait. I have to drive to pick up McDonald’s? They don’t deliver? Hold on. NO ONE delivers?!?!? 


OK, I get that restaurants don’t deliver: dry cleaners must deliver at least — what do you mean I can’t afford dry cleaning? Dry cleaning costs HOW MUCH? It’s not $2 to clean a dress? Well, never mind then. Back to only buying easy care clothing.  


And so much more . . . 


Interesting things are ahead for us and the transition starts next month when Calvin graduates from High School. I am so thankful that we aren’t trying to transition our family at the same time we are sending our oldest off to college. Avoiding that perfect storm of chaos is the reason that Josh postponed retirement for one year and took this assignment in Abu Dhabi.

Calvin will finish school, go on a farewell tour of the Middle East (traveling to Oman and Bahrain to say goodbye to his friends who live there), and then we will all fly to California to send him off. When we return to Abu Dhabi the real work of transition begins. Resume writing, interviewing, negotiating, and continuing in the current job to finish well.

Counting down — the beginning of the end. New beginnings are right around the corner.

Why we went

Someone asked, “Why Uganda?” Of all the countries on the African continent, Uganda isn’t the first one you might think of when it comes to vacation/travel/safari. Kenya? Sure. South Africa? Definitely. Several friends have gone to Tanzania, but we chose Uganda for this:

To visit the Michelle and Julia Hoffman children’s home. Almost 5 years ago, our friends from Oman were killed in by a drunk driver while home on summer vacation. Their friends and family joined together to bring something beautiful out of the ugliest of circumstances and raised money to start and maintain a children’s home in their honor/memory. 
The home was fully operational with 51 kids in November of 2013. Every spring break since, a group from Oman has gone to Uganda to bring donations, play with the kids and be part of their lives in a small way. (Other groups from the US go at different times of the year through the ministry organization True Impact Ministries.) We sponsor 2 kids — Joshua and Jamawiya, but I never pictured myself actually going to meet them. Calvin went on the first trip in 2014 and Carter went last year in 2016, but when we looked at the calendar for this year and saw that our spring break matched up with the trip dates AND it was an easy direct flight from Abu Dhabi to Entebbe, Uganda, AND we had some financial help offered by dear friends (because the cost for 6 people was out of our reach), we decided to go for it. 
2014
  
Jamawiya and Joshua in 2016
Honestly, I was nervous to go because it meant taking malaria medication (I don’t like taking medicines that I haven’t taken before), traveling with strangers (we were meeting up with 3 other families who were unknown to us), 3rd world cleanliness standards for food — I can live with “rustic” toilets, but food storage and prep makes me nervous, and just an all around not being in control of any part of the trip fears. My initial suggestion was that it be a “boys trip” and I’d stay home with “the baby,” but at 6 years old, that excuse isn’t all that reliable anymore. Time to create another one! (just kidding). Anyway, Camille wasn’t going for the idea of the boys trip so I told myself to “buck up,” and committed to going. 
In the end, none of my fears mattered because they weren’t fears while I was on the trip. (Half of my problem is being afraid that I’ll become anxious. I know that doesn’t make sense. . . that’s why they call it mental illness!) My brain was fully cooperative and the strangers became family, I never felt trapped on the long rides in the car, and no one got sick. And I didn’t spend any time worrying that any of those things might happen. All kinds of win. 

These kids were a joy. This is Teddy. She is the extrovert of the home. She loved on everybody from the moment we arrived until the bus pulled out of the driveway. She was full of smiles.  

The Ugandan red clay — got all over everything and doesn’t come out! 
Look at those feet!

Duck, Duck, Goose
Carter and Caleb are both way better jump ropers than I thought they’d be. I was impressed! 

We spent all day at the home getting to know the kids and playing with the toys we had brought. Footballs (American and the soccer kind), jump ropes, bubble wands, frisbees and other outdoor activities. It was a bit overwhelming upon arrival because all the kids were swarming us and hugging everyone. Camille started crying and clung to me for the next 2 hours. That’s not a big surprise, since she doesn’t do new things well, but in this case I didn’t blame her since it was a bit much to take even for me as an adult to have all these hands and bodies touching me when we got off the bus. 
Doing the Hokey Pokey to warm everyone up while other team members handed out the t-shirts that we brought for the kids. The Hoffman home kids thought it was hilarious. 

This is our “daughter” Jamawiya. It feels a bit false for me to call her daughter because if she were truly my daughter I’d take her home with me and actually put in the real work of being her mom, not just sponsor her financially, but she was calling me Mom, Camille her sister, and the boys her brothers, so I’m going with it. 

I was proud of my girlie because before the trip I was putting together some gifts for Jamawiya, but I didn’t know if she had pierced ears or wore earrings. I ended up not bringing any, but when I saw that Jamawiya had pierced ears, but no earrings, I privately asked Camille if she’d be willing to give her the earrings she was wearing. They were brand new, silver kitty cats and she loved them, but she willingly gave them up (even through teary eyes). 

Jamawiya and her best friend Agnes. 
We have another sponsored child, Joshua — so why is he missing from all of these photos? Because he is really shy. The fun part was coming back again the next day and seeing him really come out of his shell. He’s smart and witty and his English is great. And we found out that he loves candy so he and Camille are practically twins. 
Taking after Nana Pam with his love of the ukulele!
Joshua photobombing Teddy and me. 
When they got tired of running around the kids loved to look through our photos. Josh had some great snow pictures from out time in Germany. They were amazed. 
And they loved taking and looking at photos of themselves. 
Camille was so much more relaxed on day 2. It made me wish we were able to stay longer since the kids were all warming up to each other and becoming friends. 
Jamawiya on the right, turning the jumprope for Camille. Meels started the day too shy to even try (and then kept tripping when she did), but by the end she was jumping along to “Mama in the kitchen, making chapati. I like chapati, yum, yum, yum” as the girls turned the rope along with the rhyme.  
My mini me — when it all got to be a bit much for her, she would retreat to the bus for a few minutes to recharge in peace and then venture out again. I’m so proud of each of my kids and how they each shone in their own way while we were at the Hoffman home. 
Good times, great memories. Everyone wants to go visit again and we will start planning for next spring break if we can. We saw a lot of amazing animals on safari, but visiting the Hoffman home was the highlight of the trip for the kids. I will be honest and say the highlight for me was visiting that amazing resort that looked like a treehouse, but our time at the Hoffman home was just as good in a different way. And I’d never want to go back to Uganda and not go to the Hoffman home, so same, same, right? #tryingtobespiritualandrealishard

Rookie Mistake — Good Friday

It’s a good thing we’re forgiven, because here I sit at home on Good Friday morning while church is finishing up. Oh, we went, but underestimated how many other people would also be going to church at the same time, with limited parking available.

My biggest complaint about our church is lack of parking. It’s a weekly problem, but in general we show up, park a few blocks away and hike in. No big deal. The church has a parking lot with about 25 spaces that people cram 50 cars into, but that doesn’t work for a church of 1200. It’s next to a residential neighborhood marked with tow zones up and down both sides of the street for non-residents. People seem to ignore that and I’ve never seen a tow truck, so maybe they’re safe. There’s a small school parking lot across the street and some parking near official buildings, but getting a spot is terrible any day of the week.

On occasion we have done the circle for 20 minutes and found a spot and once or twice we’ve circled for twenty, then abandoned ship and gone to breakfast. One time when Josh was out of town it was so crowded that I dropped the boys off in front of church and went to find parking on my own. After 15 more minutes of circling I couldn’t find anything so I texted them that I was going home. Carter is still mad about that one. In my defense, I was sick and they had youth group after service so there was no harm in leaving them behind.

Well today, Good Friday, we drove around for 30 minutes along with at least 200 other cars — the streets were jammed with people parked in illegal spots, tow zones, or on the sidewalk. Any regular spots? Forget it. My plan to arrive as people were leaving first service didn’t pan out. Usually we can spot someone, follow them to their car and slide in as they drive out. Maybe those church attenders never left and are all still chatting? We saw people on foot arriving from all directions. Not just to our church, but there’s a huge mosque, and an Orthodox church or two that also meet in this 4 block radius. The masses looked like ants, coming for sugar.

Josh was also sharking for a spot (doing the slow roll down the streets, looking for an opening) since Caleb had an early rugby game this morning and we were in separate cars. We were updating each other on our non-progress by phone as we inched along. I figured if Josh couldn’t find a parking place then all hope was lost.

We finally decided to bail 30 minutes into the service since coming in that late would be a distraction to everyone who actually made it on time. Next year, we’ll take a cab. Thankfully, He is Risen and we are not condemned for missing church. Now to figure out how to tackle Sunday morning Easter sunrise service (a normal work/school day here). Will it be crowded? Not so bad? All those first year unknowns. Inshallah, we will be seated before the service begins.

God Bless 75

We made it home from Uganda last night, dropped our suitcases next to the washing machine, and headed to bed. I woke up this morning around 7am — except when I looked at my phone it said 10:20. It felt like 7am. No time change issues, just post-trip fatigue.

It turns out when I’m not working and I have wifi, I can still write. Too bad I didn’t have wifi for most of the trip and I go back to work tomorrow.

Now it’s 2 days later, I’m back at work, and the only reason I’m able to post this  is because I had to get up early to take caleb to a field trip and now I’m in the parking lot at the gym, waiting for torture to begin. Of course I didn’t have time to put in my contacts, so I’m flying blind on my phone and this is probably riddled with typos as a result. Good thing I can’t see them or it would drive me crazy.

Dang it, I can’t even see how to add a photo to my posts from my phone. Oh well. Picture sleepy eyed, forehead creased, and gym clothes. That about sums it up.

Uganda was a great trip, but it wore me out. Lots of people, lots of kids to interact with, and tons of driving. It’s a miracle that I could go at all and a bigger miracle that I enjoyed it. God bless Zoloft. I think I mentioned that I increased my dose to 75 before my Christmas trip and I am reaping its full benefits now. I don’t notice any difference on a day to day basis, but this trip was the easiest for me mentally in a while. I just did everything without needing to think about it. Van ride with strangers for 6 hours? Sure, no problem. I’ll hang out, chat, knit, and enjoy myself. If you’re not Josh, you probably don’t realized the extent of this miracle, but trust me, this trip tested all of my weaknesses and I breezed through. Praise God.

I have tons more to write, but no time to say it. I’m hoping I have time to get my thoughts down on paper sometime this week, before my memories get buried under daily life here. So much to share, but this job is getting in the way of my creativity. Worth it though, since it’s given me a great connection with the boys … it’s a worthy tradeoff.