Okay, okay.... There is so much to say and tell and explain but so little time. I feel like I need to post something like one big run-on sentence of my life here but the practical me is still trying to organize it in my head so I can get it all down in one cohesive blog. But, this crazy, sporadic brain of mine is still trying to grasp the concept that I am actually living here in China so it's not going to be very cohesive. And heck, people just want pictures, right? Pictures of what my new normal is, pictures of my everyday life, information of what I actually do everyday, right? So, here we go -- my life in pictures. (A cohesive and toned-down rant of all things Beijingy will follow, I promise.) I think the easiest way to do this is to describe a typical day here in the outskirts of Beijing.
6:30 am -- I wake up to the sounds of church bells emanating from my brand new iPhone because I have yet to find a store that sells alarm clocks and my iPhone does not get phone reception inside our home and it doesn't get data outside of my home so this fabulous, must-have, 4S, Siri-talking iPhone is only reliable as an alarm clock, oh yeah, and as a camera.
7:00 am -- wake the kids up and dress them in THESE
-- I LOVE SCHOOL UNIFORMS!! Makes for an easy morning. (This is Claire's P.E. uniform but on regular days she wears an adorable plaid pinafore dress.)
8:15 am -- head off for school dressed like THIS:
because the high, the HIGH is 35 degrees! And it sounds even worse in Celsius which is just 1 degree!
Leave the kitchen looking like THIS
Leave the kitchen looking like THIS
Load up our Buick minivan driven by THIS guy
and the picture does not do justice to the danger and pure terror of the Chinese driver loose on the streets with no lights and no kind crossing guard -- I miss you, Aunt Deni!
8:30 am -- Alex and Claire go to school HERE
8:40 am -- make it back to our home through THESE gates which are heavily guarded from what, I don't know, but it makes it just a little inconvenient to have visitors.
weather-worn gate (which the landlord says he will repair when the weather turns warmer -- but he also said that about the garbage disposal, so I'm a little leery.) And you need a special swipe key to enter these gates which once I forgot and a security guard jumped the wall for me to let me in -- I guess those security guards are good for something besides trying to look intimidating in their Mexican Mafia uniforms. The gate leads to our little sad excuse for a yard which of course will be repaired in the spring and then I enter THIS
The morning consists of either hunting for some very useful item such as bandaids or a plunger and visiting one market to get the cheap Chinese food and another one to get American products that I deem necessary or I just WANT, but you pay the price for. (A box of generic cereal like "Fruit Rings" I can get for the equivalent of 5 or 6 US dollars and I haven't deemed the real Fruit Loops to be worth their $12 price tag.) And then I go to another market the size of a small bedroom to get the BEST FRUIT IN THE WORLD! Seriously, the fruit here is awesome. And then there is another stop to get great tasting bread at a bakery aptly named "Tasty's." (The weird tasting Bimbo bread just wasn't cutting it.) And that's just food. We came to China with nothing but our suitcases so it has been a challenge hunting down needed items for the home. One day I will dedicate a whole blog post to the IKEA shopping experience here in Beijing but I don't have the energy to tackle such a task at the moment. And honestly I don't have a sense of humor about it yet.
Or I might visit some new found friends like THIS
Or stop my 2 yr old from literally walking on thin ice like THIS.
Sometimes if I'm lucky I get a nap (or I pretend to be sleeping while my ayi is hanging up freshly laundered and ironed clothes in my closet -- love her!)
Or if I'm really lucky like today I get my first spa treatment the Chinese way which consisted of an hour long foot and leg massage (with complimentary rubbing out of all tension knots in shoulders and neck -- Awesome!) and lunch out with more new friends at a great Indian restaurant HERE
3:15 pm -- Then I come home right in time to pick up my older kids from school and brave the traffic on foot all the way home.
3:45 pm -- eat the fruit that I bought at the market but my ayi cuts up and has waiting for the kids when they get home. I think she can cut up mangoes and pumelos with her eyes closed.
We work on homework (where the kindergartners are writing in cursive and the second graders are learning fractions), let the kids run around crazy inside, break up fights that occur every nanosecond, let the kids play trains from a borrowed train set, or play hide and seek in the ghost-filled basement until Cory gets home from work and we sit down to a fabulous meal that was not cooked by me which makes it even more delicious. HERE
8:00 pm -- kids are in bed and I am usually soon to follow. Sometimes we flip channels on the TV and get surprised when we find "real" shows like The Voice and American Idol which probably are on a set schedule but one that we can't figure out.
Life is definitely really KOOKY around here but I think I love it. I am constantly saying THINGS SHOULD NOT BE THIS DIFFICULT!! But I read a fortune cookie once that said:
Difficulty at the beginning usually means ease at the end
We are definitely putting in our time. But every night I go to bed, look up at my high-beamed ceiling and feel really blessed and extremely lucky to be on such an adventure.
I cannot get over your ayi, I can see how you already feel endeared. I would! Every mom needs an Ayi! Hang in there during the difficult parts! From my perspective, it's really buying you a grand adventure, and that's got to be worth something, right? Also you've done hard things before (I've seen you) and this will be another that you laugh about someday! :)
ReplyDeleteDitto Tristen. Get me an Ayi, stat! And that massage while we're dreaming... :) Hang in there. It will all come together, albeit rather slowly. Love you guys!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed hearing about your adventures! I miss you guys and Dean asks about Bradly. Hope it continues to get better each day! Hope to read more soon!
ReplyDeleteoh, Kelli, amazing. And to think, we were all shleppin around the village just a couple years ago! what an adventure. I love love love reading your blog.
ReplyDeleteAyi! Ahi! Ahi! You are making me feel very, very jealous! Randy is going to get a "my life is so hard, Kelly has an Ayi" conversation tonight:) Really, Kelly...its so fun to read all this...what an awesome Adventure...and you are the perfect person for it. Sounds amazing...keep up the writing! And Pics...I gotta see the Plaid Pinafore uni!
ReplyDeleteWow wee! What a whirlwind for the Wiltbanks! How fun to read about your new adventures abroad and see pictures as well. What an incredible experience. Alex, you be sure to tell mom that we did fractions in " year 2" ( aka "first grade" here in the states)! We sure do miss you. Please send a letter telling me all about your new home and school! Good luck to you all and keep that blog updated. It's so fun to read!
ReplyDeleteKeri Stewart