Amelia Bedelia
Let me preface this post by saying that I am eternally grateful that I can hire someone to help me out around the house. All these marble and tile floors that need to be mopped daily because of the sand and dust and the 6 bathrooms alone would quickly become my nightmare without major assistance. Thankfully, I have that. But along with the help comes some headaches . . .
I was looking for two books this morning. Books that I know I left on the floor next to my bed because I was reading before I went to sleep and there’s not room on my teeny tiny nightstand to put them up. But now they’re gone. If I were straightening up, where would I put them? And so the hunt begins . . . trying to put myself in the mind of someone who is from another culture, who I don’t know very well, who may or may not understand me if I ask her a question.
Sometimes I put things in places that might not make sense to someone else, but it’s exactly how I want it. Like the old pitcher that I have tucked under the entryway bathroom sink because I use it to water the plants out front since it’s easier than dragging the hose out from the garage. 50% of the time the pitcher gets put back in one of the lower kitchen cupboards and I have to track it down before I can start watering. One time I asked Nanny to water the pots in the front of the house and I came home to baby seedlings that looked like they had been through a hurricane — battered and bruised and lying over in the dirt. I think she must have turned the hose on them full blast and that was that. (Thankfully I was able to rescue most of them by propping them back up and supporting the stems with extra soil.)
She’s a mad washer — she puts everything in the washing machine. I opened it today to find one of my decorative pillows in shreds because she had put it in with a bunch of heavy towels. I’m not even sure why she thought a pillow that sat on the back of the couch, mostly untouched, needed to be washed in the first place. Too bad it was one of my favorites, from a trip to Turkey. No big loss though in the grand scheme of things, but I do feel like I have to go around “rescuing” things. Like the kids’ lunch boxes that can easily be rinsed out in the kitchen sink. I found them in the pile to be washed and brought them downstairs and rinsed them myself.
I wore a wool sweater for about 10 min before bed, laid it on a bench in my room and it disappeared back into the wash. Combine our hard super hot water with a dryer that scorches with blistering heat and my clothes are looking old after 2 months. I hung up my sweater on the coat rack so it wouldn’t get washed (I’m terrible about hanging things up so this was an extra effort I made to keep her from washing it) and the next morning it was gone. I asked if she knew where it was and, sure enough, it was back in the laundry basket to be washed. I did have a conversation with her about how I would put things in my dirty clothes basket if I want them to be washed and that seems to have helped. It doesn’t solve the problem for the rest of the household, but I can only tackle one thing at a time. Next up will be explaining that not all of Camille’s knit clothes or fancy dresses can go in the dryer.
The language barrier is a thing — I think she understands, and she always says, “Yes, Madame. Of course, Madame,” but then come to find out that she maybe doesn’t exactly understand what I meant. When the movers delivered our stuff I asked her to help open the boxes when they brought them upstairs. When I made it upstairs after the truck was completely unloaded, the masses of boxes were all siting in stacks in every room of the house and she was fluffing pillows and straightening stuffed animals on one of the kids’ beds. A perfect example of rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic if I’ve ever seen one. I asked her about opening the boxes and she said, “I did!” And proceeded to show me how she had cut open the top of every box . . . and then just left them like that. Totally my fault for not being more clear or specific, though I could have sworn I said something about unpacking. But maybe not, since I was busy trying to check items off the inventory sheet as the movers brought boxes inside.
| Nice layout visually, but not what the plants need |
Culture shock
This week the boys have been waking up early for school and streaming the Dodgers playing in the National League championships (against the Cubs) as they get dressed, have breakfast and wait for the bus. I was walking through the room this morning, on my way to let the dog out, and I see Camille peering into the computer screen as the voiceover recites: “If you have an erection lasting more than 4 hours, see a doctor.”
Commercials!! Did I tell you we don’t have those here? We have breaks in TV shows (usually not at the prescribed commercial breaks), but our “commercials” are generally previews for upcoming TV shows, a call to prayer, or administrative cable TV notices. I have seen an occasional ad for this laundry detergent that keeps your black abayas from fading and last week I saw an Emirati family smiling around a fried fish after mother had sprayed Febreeze in the air to get rid of the cooking odors, but they’re not the norm. And they’re in Arabic so it feels more like a game than an ad, as I try to figure out what they are saying.
I had taken for granted the joy of not being marketed to, told what I “needed,” and shouted at. And the gift of not hearing about “long lasting erections” at every turn.
Go Dodgers!
Save the drama for your mama
mundane details
Thanks for the encouragement that saying something is better than saying nothing at all. You all may come to regret those words . . .
Josh is off in America this week for work. I’m happy that he gets to go, but I’m happier that I get to stay and finally feel settled in our house. I know it was hard for him to pack up and head out right as we finished the last of the unpacking of the boxes. We have a few more things to hang on the wall, but I’m out of supplies. Hanging on cement is a pain in the behind — we have special hooks with needle-like nails that are supposed to go into the concrete without breaking it up, but we’ve been having about a 50% success rate in this house. And I’ve had to strategically place a few photos to cover up some of the crumbling holes in the wall where they failed. Whoops.





