Showing posts with label lunch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lunch. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Mountains and Food...Always Food :)

Blog About September 2021

Doug made a trip up north to the mountains to visit with the owner of a resort so he could help an NGO organize a retreat they wanted to have. Doug was with the resort manager and his assistants for most of the day. Doug said he had one cup of coffee, two glasses of tea and lots of conversation. They also told him they had recently built a zip line, and they wanted him to try it. The day was a success, and he was able to secure the resort at quite a discounted rate for the NGO and also get some business for his tourism company.

This is at the top of the zip line.





I guess he made it to the bottom because he came home later that night.







































September 22, 2021

Besides Doug's tourism business (KeyTreks), Doug has another job. This last week, two of the men at work arranged a barbeque for all of the employees and their families. Caleb and I joined in, and we were glad we did. The food was amazing. Most of the teachers speak and teach a different language from the one I am learning, so I didn't do much communicating, but the ladies were sweet to make hand gestures and let me know what they were laughing about. 









































September 27, 2021  

Doug made a couple of trips to the mountains this month to meet with friends. 



















On the first trip, the men cooked fish up in the mountains and had a meal while they visited. You can see them sitting in a circle behind the smoke. On the second visit, they invited some new people and had tea over an open flame and their conversations were full. 


September 25, 2021

Friday, November 26, 2021

Easter and Toilets

Blog Post About April 2021

I know it's Thanksgiving for you in America, but I've just gotten to Easter last spring.

For Easter 2021, we got together with a large group of Americans and we all brought dishes to share.

The house that hosted grilled a lot of chicken tikka for us, and there was more than enough to feed everyone!

April 4, 2021


Keira and a few kids had an Easter egg hunt in the house and the courtyard. 

The weather was nice, and we enjoyed a long afternoon together.

I don't know why I am going to show you this, but I took a picture of it because at the time, I was thinking, "Does this ever happen in America?"

Maybe it does.

Maybe this is what a lot of gas station restrooms look like.

But for here, this is pretty common. 

This is a toilet at the local medical clinic I went to for a check-up.


Can you see all the water dripping all over it?

I'm pretty sure this was not from a recent cleaning.


All the water on the seat, on the floor, on the top, etc is from the previous user. 

This culture likes to use a spray hose when they finish going to the bathroom, most of the time in lieu of toilet paper. 

It's rough being the person that follows this act because you have to do a lot of wiping down before you can use the apparatus.

I just thought I'd share.

April 5, 2021

And instead of ending on that note, here is a picture I took of Keira off of instagram of her dancing last spring.

April 11, 2021

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Lockdown (with Twins)!

Keira and I started having lunch outside.






























April 5, 2020

And then we started doing school outside.








































April 6, 2020

And others came and went with their books and computers as the sun would allow.

The yard really was a great place to relax and not feel so cooped up.

 

April 13, 2020

There was one week during quarantine that we came home from the 
grocery story with two trays of eggs.  

(Each tray holds 30 eggs...we eat a lot of eggs).

Anyway...these two particular trays were FULL of twins.  

Maybe on a "normal" week, we wouldn't have gotten so excited about it, 
but during quarantine, the excitement was a little higher than normal as you might imagine.

For example, in the picture below, I only cracked 7 eggs!

I know. I know.  Amazing, right?



April 7, 2020


Also, much like in America, each day the government posted numbers for us to see.

I think our country did an excellent job at first with a quick lockdown and keeping numbers low.

























Later in the month , after they loosened restrictions so people could 
celebrate the beginning of Ramadan (April 23), the numbers quickly escalated, 
and then trying to get the number of cases back down again was a hard thing to do.

One of the assignments Keira had to do for the French school was write a message 
for their school page in her own language to "Stay at Home."






































April 13, 2020

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Food, Family, Friends

In November, our language helper had to take a trip out of the country, so we had some unusually free mornings.  Doug and I took advantage of the situation and told each kid we would each take each of them out on a date for breakfast or lunch, wherever they wanted to go.  

We were almost successful.  Here we are 5 months down the road, and Karis still hasn't had her date with Doug.  Things in school kept coming up for Karis, but I know they will eventually have their date.

When I went with Kylie, she wanted a big Arab breakfast, so we ordered one that is designed for 2-4 persons :)



It was delicious and delightful!

November 11, 2019

Karis and I also went for a breakfast, albeit smaller.  And Caleb and I got hamburgers one day for lunch. Doug also had a breakfast with Kylie and a lunch with Caleb.  These extended times with the kids one-on-one were some of my favorite last fall!

Two days after my breakfast with Kylie, my friend invited me and another lady over for lunch. We always have good and fun conversations, and there are always so many things to try.


In her living room, I spied this picture on the shelf.  

It's a lovely thing to go into another person's home and find sweet pictures of your own kids being displayed in their living space.







































November 13, 2019

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Acceptance Letter

Kylie's college acceptance letter came in November.

The trick is that the letter was mailed to my parents' house, and so my dad scanned it and forwarded it to us by email.

What I didn't know is that he also forwarded it to Kylie.

Nevertheless, Doug and I wanted to make a big deal out of it, so we sealed it in a beautifully scripted envelope (writing creds to Karis), and we told the kids we were going out for a special lunch (Keira was at school).

We took them to a fancy steak house, and they kept asking, "What's up?"  

(Note: There is actually a "gold" menu in this restaurant where you can get your steak, coffee, dessert, etc. covered in edible gold. Don't worry, we didn't try it, but a few of us did try some of their beef.  Good, but nothing compared to Doug's steaks or those I've had in America.)

Back to Kylie.  We gave her the letter, and of course she had seen it already, but we still wanted to make the day memorable for her.

Ta-da!!💗

Since everyone was looking so cute, when we got home, we decided to have a small, silly photo shoot.

It started small.


And got sillier and sillier.



I convinced Caleb to jump in,


and then he got silly.


After the "smolder," I knew it wasn't going to get any better than that, and I love it!

Kylie calls this one: Dreamy, Smolder, and "Fashun"


November 6, 2019

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

A Universal Experience

Food translates very well.

Food is a common ground for all people.

It is very easy to connect with people over food, and it seems like we do a lot of that here.

And I'm not complaining!

These two ladies invited me for lunch one day, and I have eaten with them several times since.  They are a joy to be with, and I love praying for encouraging them 

March 5, 2019

One Saturday night we got together with a large group for a barbecue.  Each of the five families brought their own meat to grill, and the ladies worked on side dishes in the kitchen.

Kids played games, ran around, and had a good time.


The food was amazing, and afterward, the host got out his guitar to sing for us. 

He has a great love for music, and even though he grew up in Syria, he listened to the music of Bob Dylan, the Beatles and several others I hadn't even heard of.  I'm not very versed in music, so I'm sure you would have recognized way more than I did.

When we couldn't sing along to many of them, he asked us what kinds of songs we sang.  A friend of ours spoke up that most of the time she sings worship songs.

He asked to hear some, so Doug played the guitar for us, and those who knew the songs, sang along.

It was a really special time to share beautiful worship with friends who had never heard anything like that before.

 March 23, 2019

We also like to try out restaurants that have an interesting Middle Eastern look/feel so that we have all the good places picked out for when you come to visit us.

You know you're invited, right? 


Wouldn't you like to come and experience this culture?


It's beautiful in so many ways.

March 15, 2019

And we can have the universal experience of eating together.

Saturday, April 21, 2018

A Special Spring Break Gift

This country has a week off in the spring called "New Day."  It's sort of equivalent of our Spring Break, but unlike Texas, where they break up the weeks when each school takes off, here, the whole country breaks at one time to celebrate this holiday.

This results in a traffic nightmare, especially outside the city.

Everyone is trying to enjoy their national pasttime...picnicking.

To do that, everyone travels outside the city to the mountains, the streams, and the fields.

I took Keira swimming at an all-female pool on the first day of "New Day."  When we finished, I washed her hair in the shower there, and she started scratching her head.  She'd been scratching it for three or four days, but at this moment, I happened to be with a mother of three little girls who had all had many bouts of lice between them. 

For the first time, instead of thinking, "dry skin," I thought, "Maybe???"

I didn't look then, but before she went to bed, I looked, and there were bugs crawling everywhere.

I was horrified, but I knew it was too late to do anything.

I had the HARDEST time getting to sleep knowing what was in her hair!!

What a gift to bring home for Spring Break!!!

These are a couple of the bites that I saw the next day. 

Poor thing!


I set up an ipad to play videos on a table outside.  

We set up chairs, had towels, combs, an oil agent from a neighbor, and went after those little buggers.  

At the same time, I had all bedding and stuffed animals and clothes, etc. bagged up air-tight waiting for their turn in the washing machine.  Ugh!

Three hours later we were finished and all the girls and I headed for a 12:30 lunch appointment with a friend who owns a salon.  

Keira had to let the solution set in her hair for at least 8 hours.  It had already been in there for two.


When we arrived, my friend had just finished getting a massage and needed to wash her hair, so my friend's daughter offered to do Keira's nails for her.




All hands given a manicure at this salon get their hands photographed and put on instagram.  

Keira was very willing!


It was close to three before my friend was ready.  We had tea and took a tour of the salon while she got things done (including getting her hair dried and curled).

She also asked me if I would like to get my hair curled, so I accepted.  However, when she walked over where a man was working on me, she said, "Did you know you have a lot of grey in your hair?  Why don't you color it?  It would help you looking younger."

If I haven't told you before, in this culture people always tell you if you are fat, old-looking, ask you your age, how much you make, etc.  

They hold nothing back.

It's great for a person's self-esteem :)


We finally made it to lunch around 3pm!

We were starving, but the food was really good.  We had tabouli, hummus, saj (kind of like a panini in a tortilla), fried eggplant, falafel, and fries.

Afterward, I drove my friend to the bank to do some business, and then we all went back to the salon where Kylie got her hair curled.

When we finally left, we had been with them for about 5 1/2 hours.  It was such a fun day.

However, when I got home, I realized, that we were only 30 minutes away from reaching Keira's time-limit for how long the solution had to stay in her hair.  I began to think I should have had them wash and cut her hair at the salon.

I called my friend, and asked her if that is something they would do, and she said, "Certainly."  They had throw-away towels, and they wouldn't mind at all.

So...we drove back and stayed there another hour.  

Keira got her hair washed and cut, and her head massaged.  She felt like she was at a spa (and told my friend so).



After Keira, Karis also got about 6 inches cut off.



I've been back to visit my friend at her house and her salon since this day.  She is a lot of fun, but the salon keeps her busy.  

I waited two hours for her to go to lunch last week, but I was offered tea and coffee and another free hair fixing.  I declined it all, but it's still a fun place to go and practice my language with someone who is a joy to talk to.