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11.25.2015

Special Helper Spotlight | Miss PAM!


When people love your kids, they find a special place in your heart, right parents?

So it should be no surprise that we have a special corner in our hearts full of love and gratitude for our 'neighbor', Miss Pam.  She comes to our home three mornings per week from the next village over to help our Ellie with homeschooling.


And as most people who have ever home schooled can attest, some kids just seem to work harder for someone who they know isn't required to love them unconditionally (i.e. someone who isn't his parent).

Pam also brings a her own approach and creativity to teaching Ellie and we see Ellie responding and progressing under her methods!

So this Thanksgiving week, while we reflect on all of the gifts we have been given, this special help from Miss Pam with Ellie is right up there at the top!

11.24.2015

Party Time at School!

I used to think I had it pretty well altogether.
I like to plan.  I keep lists, a calendar, a schedule on paper and one online.

But there was this one time.  (My parents love to tell this story at my expense.)  They were visiting us in Kentucky.  Nathan was away with a team of students on spring break and I was hosting my parents.  Ellie had a spring performance of some type at her pre-school and we were going to sit on bleachers in a gym and watch the kids sing some songs and carry paper flowers, or something of that sort.

Ellie's class starts to march into the gym and my stomach sinks in horror.  Every single child in her class was dressed in a powder blue shirt.  Except Ellie.  She was wearing red.  Somehow I didn't get the memo. It didn't make it on the calendar.  My face and neck were the color of her shirt as my parents silently turned and looked at me.

Fast-forward six years and this time it's just my Dad visiting.  I go to pull out Reni's lunch bag from his back pack and a slip of paper falls on the floor.

"Ftese," it reads.  Invitation to an inauguration celebrating the opening of the new school.  All parents are invited to attend at 11:00. 

[Gulp]

That was like 3 hours away.  No time to worry about it.  We'll drop Reni off at class and come a little late after class.  

I take him into his class room and the teachers are all wearing heals and pantyhose, tying balloons and hanging decorations.  The little girls are in dresses and tights with pretty bows in their hair and Reni is wearing his 3rd best denim shorts and a grey sweatshirt with a moose-head on the front.

[Gulp again]  I do my best to explain that we'll be late, but that we're coming, silently stressing with unknown questions barraging me as I take in the scene.  Are we supposed to bring flowers for the teacher?  What does protocol require in this situation?

A few hours later we arrive to a packed parking lot and the sounds of clapping and children's singing. I've never been more grateful for school uniforms.



Reni is going to shoot me some day for posting these images.  He groans that he has to wear a 'dress' at school.

Below his non-conformist spirit is on full display during the singing of the Albanian national anthem.


Yes. I have to say it was the first pre-school program I've ever attended where the refreshments included adult beverages (below).  Just a cultural observation.


The food was incredible, thanks to the sister of the head teacher who runs the school (I'm pretty sure that sentence was full of mis-placed modifiers).  She has her own restaurant!  Sadly, it's not near our village!
There was byrek, shish-kabobs, boiled vegetables, salad, sausage, cheese, and assorted desserts!


The grown ups got the good stuff.  The kids ate sack lunches from home.
Here's Reni with his desk buddy.


11.15.2015

Open For Business

When we transitioned to Albania, I inherited the women's crafting project.  I didn't accept it begrudgingly, but with a certain weight of responsibility. I like marketing, business plans, and whatnot.  But this is no lemonade stand.  What lemonade stand ever had to deal with multiple currencies?  Or paypal payments?


We decided last year to transition from jewelry -- which had a very low profit margin and was split evenly between the women -- to knits, which was something the ladies had a knack for, and which allowed each woman to earn according to her ability, labors, and creativity.

Last year they rolled out a bunch of goodies for the winter season and many friends in the States responded very well, purchasing dozens of scarves and headbands for a chilly winter in America.  I was tickled to surprise them with their payment envelopes at Christmas time.  THAT was fun.

 Giggles, tears, stunned silence.


This year I worry about the knitters' expectations for sales.  I mean, how many more of my friends in America need scarves?
 

I've been photographing all the new merchandise, then tagging, cataloging, and posting it online.

And with each one I breathe a prayer that it might be bought, that faith will grow with each sale and that answered prayers will wrap and warm hearts just like these scarves wrap necks and warm bodies.



So this blog post is to announce that the Knit Shop is open for business.  With all new merchandise for the 2015-16 winter.


We've got some legwarmers, hats, and finger-less gloves.  We even have a few pieces for men!


If you'd like a little piece of handiwork from Albania, pay our shop a visit and drop me an e-mail.  I can answer any questions you might have and if and when you want to make a purchase, I can bill you online and my Dad will hand carry it to the States, where it will be shipped to any address in the continental United States for a small fee, on or before December 1, just in time for Christmas.

http://villageknitsalbania.blogspot.com/

11.12.2015

Back in the Books



Adult education ain't no joke.  And we're just taking one Albanian course, 1.3 hours, 3 times per week.  Between that and the commute, we're looking at three mornings a week filled up, full, gone.  Just typing it here feels like I'm a baby.  But really, we're falling into bed right after the kids each night. (They told us language learners need more sleep each night - that was no joke either).  And, oh yeah, there's home work.


And in case you can read my Shqip above, Simon is a fictional character from our textbook.  I was to write him a letter... "i dashur Simon..."

There's my rough draft notebook and my official 'homework' notebook.  It's no term paper, but as any student of language can tell you, there's something satisfying about putting foreign words on paper... even if it's only a letter or short story.


I feel like we're soaking up so much.  And it's going to be over all too soon.  But as we were reminded yesterday, language learning never ends.  Even of my own first language.  Totes.  All the feels, hashtags and such.


11.05.2015

Tetor e dyte (October, part 2)

I've come to realize that September is a tough month for me in Albania. I like to be busy and 'productive' and for someone like me, I've yet to figure out the best way to deal with the way life is in this culture and our family's schedule come together during this particular month.

Then there is October.  I think this past October more than compensated for any emptiness I may have felt in September.

 Life has been busy.  Full of so many wonderful, good things.   And most of that was not anywhere on our radar at the beginning of the month.  (Because, after all, if I could have planned it, I might have spread it out a bit, right?)

Things like, oh, negotiating a property purchase and dealing with all the vagaries of visiting offices, banks, notaries, coffee shops (yes), and currency exchange places, etc., etc..

  • Like drawing up a wish list and meeting with an architect to make a master plan for the property in light of the changes in boundary lines.
  • Like preparing merchandise for the Village Knits booth at a craft show that is two weeks earlier than last year.
  • Like finding out that my Dad is coming for a visit in less than two weeks!
  • Like getting a message from a college friend whom we haven't seen since we only had one child but who is visiting Europe and asks if she can 'drop-in' for a couple of days to Albania.  (How cool, right?)
  • Like showing hospitality and sharing a meal with someone  new to the country and taking a weekend afternoon to show some city dwellers our family's favorite little bit of nature, away from the hustle and bustle
  • Like dealing with back-to-back colds and sick kids who can't sleep through the night because of congestion
  • Like squeezing in a trip on a business day/non-Albanian-class day to go to another city to pick up a certain child's Albanian passport that's been sitting in a government office for say, five months, waiting for us to make the time to come and get it.
  • And then there was the especially frequent electricity outages that seemed to take place during those blocks of time I had set aside to edit photographs or do laundry... [sigh]


Chrissy was only here for a few days so we took the kids out of school on a Tuesday (when we didn't have class) and drove up to Shkodra to visit one of our favorite castles in Albania's history.  
Somehow we completely forgot Reni's stroller and back pack (yeah, major brain lapse), but we did happen to have his 'boots' with us.  Turned out to be not the worst thing in the world because it allowed him to explore a lot of places on his own, rather than observing it all from the confines of his stroller or back pack.  Oh, and he napped pretty hard in the car on the way home.


We love this Ottoman-era bridge north of town.


"Aunt Chrissy" made pumpkin cookies with the kids Wednesday after class so we'd have treats for women's Bible study that night.

The kids have been BEGGING for autumn decorations (of which I have none, save a few pumpkin-scented candles).  We were unsuccessful in our one trip to look for a pumpkin (which we were told later were kept under lock and key at a particular produce market in Tirana).  This was the first year the kids really said anything about decorating our home for any holiday other than Christmas so I kinda felt a little "mom-fail" for not anticipating this and bringing stuff with me from America.


Thank you to whomever gifted me with a pumpkin cookie cutter years ago.  Reni knew we had it and so the cookies were his idea to get in the fall spirit.  I have no idea what Ellie is playing with in the background.



Before we knew it, it was time to take Chrissy back to the airport!  Though her visit was brief, we were so touched she went to the time and expense to see a slice of our life.  But before the airport, we squeezed in a super quick trip to Kruje.


The weather was exquisite.  The colors of our photos from Kruje just popped.  No editing necessary!



Bye Chrissy!  I'm so sorry we didn't get a photo with Reni too!  (something about him having school, or something) ;-)