Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘projects’ Category

Pull up a chair and sit with me a while. It feels like forever since I sat to write down thoughts from our daily lives here in Ankara. Most of that has been because of being psychotically busy. When there is a moment of time, there is often no energy. But mostly it is because the thoughts in my mind have been jumbled, swirling, forming, and waging wars against internal editors of common sense/censors. It is time, though, and I have time. The morning is clear and cool and quiet. The tea is hot.

P1090997

Comfy chairs outside an Ulus store.

Prom happened. A university was chosen. Dakota is now a future Lobo at the University of New Mexico, in “Albuquirky” as she calls it. She recently spent a lovely week in Germany where her soccer team not only came in dead last, but also received many compliments on how friendly and enjoyable they were and how they made everyone they met feel. One teammate sustained a pretty nasty concussion. To say the least, it wasn’t the trip that they all were looking forward to.

Jackson is involved in scouts and soccer and has after school activities where he is learning to play hockey. He has some interesting events he is really excited about that we are in the middle of plans for. He is growing like crazy and seems to have a one track mind for ramen noodles which he prefers to prepare himself. He survived being in a massive hail and downpour squall that caught him and friends off guard while outside playing. The red welts on his arms and legs go well with the shiner he picked up last weekend from another outdoor play with friends. He’s looking pretty rough, but adorably growing up as well.

P1080763

This is an old photo taken in Beypazar back in late autumn. I love the interaction of the family members and friends. It is what drew me to quietly snap their photo.

I’ve spent a lot of time lately driving in the car around Ankara to get to and from meetings and to get children to and from pickups/drop-offs. I can swerve and honk with the best/worst of them now and it doesn’t faze me, much. Being out and about has helped me learn more about the city.

I have found a refugee camp that goes unnoticed right under everybody’s noses and daily business. They are truly invisible but in pure sight. The beggars on the corner are increasing. It is heartbreaking. You could give and give and it wouldn’t be enough. I have heard of numbers swelling, of scuffles between refugees and locals, of backlogs and need. I heard the rumor that there were hunger strikes and protests where refugees were sewing their mouths shut to bring attention to unfair practices at the UN. That rumor is true, it seems, and has been done by a handful of Afghan refugees who are experiencing some very difficult circumstances in their quest to find a safe and welcoming place to have a life. I had heard the rumor, though, about a couple months back, so I wonder how many have done this before it was reports in the news – or at least in this English version of this Turkish newspaper. There was another rumor of some restructuring going on in one particular refugee assistance group – so there may be new opportunities to serve in the next year.

P1090989

A back patio style seating area behind a small store, off a side street path in Ulus

My PTSO commitments are winding down. A new board was selected and they are a great group of ladies who are very capable and talented, so a lot has been getting things handed off. There have been final meetings, too. I just have a few last bits to wrap up for the scholarship committee. I was up til 1am the other night folding and assembling special bulletins for graduation. It felt so good waking up with it accomplished and even better delivering the product. My impromptu happy dance was joined by the office staff still which had us all cracking up. And with each bit, comes more excitement for our daughter’s approaching graduation milestone. Times are good. Although I am glad I stepped up and took on a leadership role with PTSO, I am also very ready to walk away and have that behind me. I think that I am better suited for a support/behind the scenes kind of helping. The front line is brutal at times as much as it can be rewarding; many times I was way out of my comfort zone. I grew a lot this year and I think I helped make a difference. I also had to make some decisions to say no, to disappoint others, to draw lines, and to be judged all the time, not just about the school support, but also perceptions of how I supported my children. My skin wasn’t always thick enough.

P1090991

One family in Ulus chats to another from their balconies.

In January, we chose to move our son from this school to another: the pre-move battles, the fallout, the two school schedules, having to become a twice a day taxi because the new school’s bus service was unavailable for the remainder of the year. Jackson is in a very good place now. Adjustments haven’t always been the smoothest, but we are 100% convinced we did the right thing for him despite the complications to us all. He is thriving. And as he has told us numerous times, “Mom, we’re ok. You know this is a first world problem.” Such wisdom. He also, now that he has MUN (model united nations) as a class, frequently addresses any complaints of parental decisions with rebuttals along the lines of “the delegation of Jackson greatly objects to the oppressive tactics of the dictatorship delegate of mom regarding sanctions against …..” He’s actually quite good, which is lucky for him because I find myself smiling despite the frustration of insisting for the third time that he hang up clothes or he will lose some privileges.

Now… to enjoy my daughter’s graduation, my mom’s visit, celebrating with other senior parents, to watch my son have amazing school opportunities and travels, to see my daughter have her first real job, to experience more of Turkey, to play with the dogs, to clean my house from the spawn of Wookie fur bunnies that her shedding has let loose all over, to snuggle my 100 pound lap dog and to sit and have tea and laughter with friends, to look forward all the lavender going into bloom. I had heard the rumor that although adversity can destroy, it also can bring many blessings and growth. It really is spring here. Lots of new beginnings. I’m thriving too.

P1090990

I love this bench made from ancient ruins. I found it along the back side streets of Ulus.

Thanks for sitting with me a bit. Now that you’ve heard me chattering on, please do let me know what is going on with you. Send emails or old fashioned letters; leave a comment. I will be making calls soon to catch up with you. Blogging is great, but so one sided. And I miss my friends and family all around the world.

 

 

 

Read Full Post »

In Turkey, if you need medication you go to the neighborhood ECZANE (pharmacy). They are all over the city, usually with a neon sign out front to indicate that they are there and are open. They also usually have a male mannequin with only boxer shorts on sporting several bandaged appendages in case you need further visual confirmation that they do carry all your health needs inside.

 

But the eczane I’m going to introduce you to is not typical. Located in the Ulus section of town, this is the first pharmacy in Ankara – ergo the oldest. It is also just one of three that still makes its own medicines. Plus, the senior pharmacist is legendary.

P1090801

Here is Jackson outside the Durman Pharmacy where he ‘apprenticed’ for three days during his school’s “Work Study Week”.

Mr. Niyaz Dermanci is almost 90 and still comes in to the pharmacy to take consultations, often making the medication required himself. The second day of Jackson’s ‘job’ I got to see him in action while waiting for my son to finish up his work.  Of course I didn’t bring my camera that day, but I got to observe. There was a line of several people all in the back end of the store and he met with each one – fully engaged in listening, observing, asking questions, taking notes then giving information. Each client seemed welcomed, at ease, and relieved upon speaking with this octogenarian who was responsible for opening the very first pharmacy in Ankara. There was a peace that just accompanied him. You could tell that he loved what he was doing. It wasn’t a job to him. It was a calling. Jackson got to watch him in action too, as well as the entire pharmacy staff.

P1100013

“can not find a cure to the disease, the breath is taking on veteran pharmacist” Google Translate is worthless, and yet I still go there for help

Jackson and his classmate learned all about the pharmacy business. They watched an interesting movie on drug use that wasn’t the typical “Don’t do it” –  but explored the effects of a performance enhancement pretend drug on your mentality and physical health.  Here is the trailer to Limitless (yay for private internet as YouTube is still blocked here!). They got to wear lab coats and rubber gloves and they actually made things like wound disinfectant, lotion, cologne, and placebo pills.  They learned about how the computer is used in their business – tracking merchandise and purchases (not just for video games, boys!). Of course, on their break time they got to play some games.

 

P1100010

The only photo I got of my son in his lab coat. They were perched up on a ledge along the back. I think they were playing on his friend’s tablet during a break. Another bad parenting example – my child does not have a tablet and he wasn’t allowed by us to take any electronics with him. Will he grow up hating us for this or will it build character and personal interaction like we hope?

Here is the group on the last day. The boys were presented with framed work study completion certificates that would rival any framed university degree. They were also spoiled with Turkish tea breaks throughout their days working there – Jackson always chose apple tea – and Turkish lunches. I wonder when Jackson is all grown up and he ventures into a Turkish restaurant in some random town for a meal, will the food remind him of this incredible opportunity to work at a pharmacy in Ulus? This was his first real immersion on his very own.

P1100014

 

And here are some of the products that he got to make in the laboratory. For a child who has always been a ‘potions master’ in the making from birth, I wonder how this opportunity will shape him and his career choices. Regardless what he chooses, I am thrilled that he had this experience and at this business.  Between their hospitality and educational guidance, this was a huge highlight in our experience here at post.

 

P1100021

Read Full Post »

The mayor of Ankara, Melih Gökçek, is up for re-election in March. When we got here a little over a year ago, we noticed a few construction projects going on and were told offhandedly something like, “Just wait til elections get closer, you’ll see  more.” Since we have been here we have seen a new mall, new clock towers, a new outdoor amphitheater, a new u-turn lane, and a new fancy possible walk over bridge (almost completed) over a main corridor road.

But, wait! There’s more!

Because if Mayor Gökçek is reelected he has announced some big plans for this capital city including, but not limited to, building the Ankara Strait to make us more like Istanbul. Arid is so last year, I guess, in city design. There is a theme park planned with its sights to set world records. Do you know what a ‘warring transformer’ is? My first impression had to do with the transformer we had one time that sent sparks flying every time you plugged in an appliance, nearly catching the house on fire. I think it might be the more cool version, though, like autobots and gadgets that come to life with just a shard of the cube and do really cool fight moves. Move over Euro-Disney! There are also plans for a new mosque, and cultural center, and a new museum about ‘belief’ and ‘history’, and a Metro Line.  This new line going from the airport to the city center, would be a gift from Prime Minister Erdoğan.

Now that is some big campaigning being unveiled! The plans would be completed in the next five years, bumping us out of the running to see the final results and attractions, though. Maybe one day we’ll get back here and we will get to see the results of Ankara transformed once again, just like return Ankarans (or is that Ankavites?, I just realized I don’t officially know what you call people from Ankara!)  or returning expats can’t get over the changes to the city since they were here last.

You can read the full article here from the Hurriyet Daily News Online.

Read Full Post »

We saved boxes for a week and cut them down, assembling a prototype village to rival all gingerbread villages. This one was Christmas bootcamp, made especially for the Marines at post. With several elves helping, the gingerbread was made, rolled, and baked. Then assembled, dried, and decorated with a few kilos of sugar induced madness.  Taken carefully into the back of the jeep, through security, and then into the Marine House, it joined mega decorations and goodies to surprise the Marine Security Det here at post.

The best part was hearing about their reactions when arriving back home from their contrived outing. Apparently there were a lot of sugarbombs dropped as they exclaimed their surprise. For us, it was one of the best parts of our Christmas this year.

P1090128

P1090132

P1090130

P1090134

P1090137

P1090144

Read Full Post »

I Spy Revisited

Sorting. Organizing. Sort of organizing.

This has been consuming my days and my eyeballs. Some of it has been electronic, as we are attempting to bring under control all our photographs. This not only means scanning, but also going through endless repetitions of electronic photos that had been duplicated way too many times and stored in too many clever places.  Does anybody else ever do that?: download photos, sort some of it, crop and save a few, rename, then not erase off the camera memory just in case (etc) and then downloading them again mixed in with new photos. And then picking the best and putting them in a new folder for a better organization?? Anyone??

Well, we have a mess. But it is a fun one at times. I’ve rediscovered photos we took as we started off on our State Department pathway. I’ve found some hiding from each of our 5 posts. From R&Rs with family back home. Sometimes it is tedious because I know I’ve dealt with the photo set several times already and here it pops up again somewhere, but in different numbers, and I just can’t delete them without checking to make sure I’m not throwing away something we want. Beside exact duplicates, there are sometimes the three versions of one photo to be finally decided on.

Once I clean up some space on the memory, it will be back to scanning old family photos and organizing them both in boxes as well as on the external hard drive. Then, we will pick the best photos from many categories: one for hubs growing up and his side of the family, one for mine, each post, safari, each kid from baby to KG, then from KG and all of school. We will make each category into a book with tales to go along. I’d like to have my kids be able to access photos and know/remember stories and have something that fits on a shelf easily and uniformly.

It’s a bit of a big project actually. Which makes walks with the dogs more welcome, as well as other diversions like this. I found this photo from last year when also sorting through lots of crap important items that needed to be assigned their semi-permanent location in our new home. So while you play, I’m gonna take the dogs on a stroll and then get back to work.

I SPY:
a cow, two rhinos, and three blue Bs
a ghost, three paperclips and seven keys

P1050300

Read Full Post »

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started