Showing posts with label "S". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "S". Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Mazel Tov SM and EM!

We get a Mazel Tov! My brother "SM" got engaged to an amazing, sweet, beautiful and wonderfully kind and sensitive girl, with great priorities. (Did I miss anything? What more could there possibly be? She really is an amazing chickita!)


And as happy and excited as we are for the couple, it's hard to be so far away. BH we at least know her, so that makes it much easier. IY"H some of us will make it for the wedding, but so begins the next string of smachot that we'll be absent for :(. Needless to say, the past day or two I've been feeling kind of distant. 


Then Hashem sent me something to make me smile tonight, a reminder . BAW was saying Shema and doing the bedtime rituals when he urgently called me upstairs. I dropped everything and ran up, worried. He was laying in bed with S and R and told me to listen to S sing his daily davening. S started again for me in a sweet 6 year old sing-song:


משיב הרוח ומוריד הגשם, ותן טל ומטר לברכה על פני האדמה. אבינו מלכנו שלח רפואה שלמה לכל חולי עמך ישראל. והחולה שירה בת מעיין. והחזר את חיילי צה''ל (צבא הגנה לישראל) הביתה בשלום. ואת החיל החטוף גלעד בן אביבה שליט 

שיר המעלות אשא עיני מעין יבוא עזרי

"Mashiv HaRuach U'Morid Ha'geshem, v'tein tal u'matar l'vracha al pnei ha'adama. Avinu malkeinu shlach refuah shelaima l'chol amcha yisrael, v'lichol cholei amcha yisrael, v'hachola Shira batMaayan. V'hachzeir et chayalei tzahal hganah l'yisrael habayta b'shalom, v'et chayal hachatuf Gilad ben Aviva Shalit.

Shir Hamalot Esa einay...."

"Make the wind blow and the rain fall, and give dew as a blessing on the whole ground. Our Father, our King, send a full recovery to all of the sick of Am Yisrael, and to the girl Shira Bat Maayan. And return the soldiers of Israel to their homes in peace, as well as the soldier Gilad ben Aviva Shalit. 

Shir Ha'Maalot...."

How beautiful is that? These 6 year old boys are davening every day for the return of Gilad Shalit. I don't know who the "cholah" is, and would love to hear if anyone knows who she is. I did a search but didn't come up with much. 

So while it doesn't make me miss my family and the current simcha any less, it's just another gentle reminder that we are here, and it is good.

It is very, very good. 


Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Ah, that reminds me of when BAW was little...

So, the S Independence Stint reminded me of my all time favorite story of BAW in the Era known in our house as BK; Before Kids. Actually, it came A LOT Before Kids.


BAW's family made Aliya from Queens when he was but a wee lad of 2 years old. We've recently counted and just figured out that this summer BAW made aliyah for the third, yes, THIRD time. Anywhoo...


BAW's father tells the story of the Ws of the time; new (read: clueless) immigrants, with no background in Hebrew language, in the late 70's before Aliyah was all the rage, and before most Israelis knew any English. It was a very different time back then. Well, every day, my FIL would dutifully put BAW (which is such a silly acronym for him in this story, since at the time he was FOUR years old) on the van that would take him to his school and every day he would wait in the same spot to greet the van and take BAW home. Until one very different day when the van pulled up, let off the other kids, and BAW was no where to be seen. My FIL asked the driver, "Wait! Where's my son?" to which the driver replied, "He wasn't at school."


Trying not to panic, my FIL ran home and called the school, who also informed him that BAW never showed up at school that day. "But I put him on the van myself this morning!" Long story short, and lots of panic later, here's what had happened.


My FIL had indeed put him on a van that morning, just not the right one. He went to a different school, sat through a whole day of class, and here's the kicker, no one even noticed an extra boy, a cute red head sitting there in class. Until the end of the day, when all the children went on their respective vans and he was left sitting alone in the classroom. Somehow they were able to get his name out of him and at the same time my FIL was trying to track him down, they made the connection, and were able to reach my FIL who came to pick him up. From a different school. At the end of the day.


Can you imagine the panic my in-laws must've endured for those agonizingly long minutes until they figured that out? Again, it's just a reminder about how different things are here.


Kinda makes my S story seem silly.

S goes to a friend's house

I am behind. Waaaay behind, again.

We've had a busy but great week here with Grandpa V. and E visiting! So much to do, so much to see. But more on that later. I promised an update about the crazy call from my 1st grader S early last week.

We were waiting for the kids to get home when the phone rang, and it was S. He was "just calling to tell you" that he was at a friend's house in BS (a good 10 minute drive away).

Me: "What? How did you get there?"
S: "I took a bus."
Me: "What?!"
S: "A bus."
Me: "What?! What?!"

I was shocked and did what I always do when I am shocked: posted immediately to FB. I mean, these things are important. People have to know about these things, you know?




ME
OMG!! OMG!! S just called from and friend's house in BEIT SHEMESH!! to tell me he's there for a play date! Um, ok.... ?

December 30, 2010 at 4:01pm via iPhone · Privacy: ·  · 


  •  likes this.

    •  nice...
      December 30, 2010 at 4:07pm · 

    •  Is that the town next door or something? Got some independent kids there, Mama.
      December 30, 2010 at 4:07pm · 

    •  You need a clock like the Weasley family in the Harry Potter books. Maybe iPhone will make a Weasley clock app where people can kinda check in now and then with a status update. Course that means all your kids would have to have iPhones, but what the Hell.
      December 30, 2010 at 4:09pm ·  ·  1 person

    •  I got freaked out too when my T did that to me for the first time months ago!!!
      December 30, 2010 at 4:12pm · 

    •  At least he called.
      December 30, 2010 at 4:19pm · 

    • ME:  yup, about ten minute BUS ride!! Took the bus with the friend! S is SIX!!! I guess so, but I am not ready for this!!'
      December 30, 2010 at 4:25pm · 

    •  No, at 6 this is a bit independent, even by Israeli standards. And we don't have to follow ALL the Israeli standards either, just cuz we are here. Unless you are perfectly OK with this (which it doesn't sound like...), you're gonna havta stop it now, 'cuz it will (because of the culture) happen again...
      December 30, 2010 at 4:34pm · 

    • I would be totally freaking. Did he at least tell B?
      December 30, 2010 at 4:36pm · 

    • ME: Ok, trying to stay calm. We'll have a chat when he gets home, don't you worry!! Out of the blue we happen to have the car this afternoon and BAW happens to be home, so he's on the way to get him...
      December 30, 2010 at 5:01pm · 



    • HahaHa- say bye bye to your little Americans!!! Contrary to what Z wrote- six is not at all too early according to MANY israelis. I remember loads of incidents that occurred with kids this age or younger...December 30, 2010 at 5:06pm · 



    • Oh and M's comment- "he called! That's not Israeli at all"
      December 30, 2010 at 5:08pm · 

    • ME: My favorite is BAW's story of when he was three or four...I'll blog it later from a keyboard
      December 30, 2010 at 5:08pm · 

    •  ‎!!!!!!!!
      December 30, 2010 at 5:09pm · 

    •  Gotta love a 6 year old who feels comfortable enough to get on a bus with a friend! You go, S!
      December 30, 2010 at 5:36pm · 

    •  I guess there are certainly some differences between life in the US and life in Israel!
      December 30, 2010 at 6:31pm ·  ·  1 person

Saturday, January 1, 2011

We've Gone Viral!

We've Gone Viral! Ok, so maybe not in the blogging world, but at home we've had a really, really weird viral week.


Thursday night was scary. My brother "S" who is in high school here in an American program in Be'er Sheva lost muscle control on the left side of his face. Like all responsible 15 year olds, instead of reporting it to a dorm counselor or other adult, he posted it on FB. Within the hour he was at the hospital and I was on my way down to Be'er Sheva to meet him there. 


An Israeli hospital experience is a blog post of it's own, but a hospital visit in Be'er Sheva? I could go on for hours. I could tell about the HUGE, beautiful new building of Soroka Hospital with an impressive staff. Or, I could tell you about the JAM packed waiting room full of Arabs giving us dirty looks. I would LOVE to tell you about the Chabad woman who came in at 1:30am to put out candles for Shabbos for people to light if they had to stay into shabbos. 


But this story is about viruses. Suffice it to say, when your 15 year old brother calls to tell you he has no muscle capabilities on one side of his face, you don't really think, you just move. I borrowed my FIL's car, and hightailed it to Be'er Sheva on autopilot. I got there in about 35 minutes, and was waiting with him after 45. 


Really, it was uneventful. It was the typical Emergency Room visit, waiting for 7 hours to see a doctor for 7 minutes. It turns out he has a mild case of  Bell's Palsy, which thank G-d is a temporary virus. By looking at him you can't really notice it, but after talking to him for a few minutes you start to think, "Is he mad at me? Are my jokes not funny? Did I insult him?", only because his facial expressions are all wrong. He is smiling, but it looks like a superior smirk. He is trying to blink, but ends up rolling his eyes.


All in all, he is ok. He is the calmest, most laid back, "chilled" person I know. He has excellent self-esteem, and only minutes after getting the diagnosis was he cracking jokes at himself. "Wow, who's the Palsy now?" 


Besides the discomfort of his eye (people with the virus can't control blinking, so the eye doesn't close on it's own), he is fine. Really, Ma! Fine. Today he even told me he has certain sensations on the right side that he didn't have yesterday. IY"H it will be gone soon. But how weird is that?! What perfectly healthy 15 year old get's Bell's?? The doctors were completely unruffled calling this a "common virus." Um? Ok....


Which leads me to my next virus of the week. Of course, story first! When B was almost 2 years old, he contracted the strangest thing; a terrible virus in the mouth; large boils and blisters both inside and out. I have never in all my years of parenting seen a child in so much pain. He cried endlessly for days. BAW took off work. He wouldn't/couldn't eat, and getting him to drink was a full time job. This went on for 7 days straight. He lost weight, I was losing my mind. We saw 2 different doctors and no one could tell us anything more than it was a "common virus". People around the neighborhood started to hear of our plight, and insisted he drink fresh goat's milk, and that only this would help the sores begin to heal. I am not one for hippy-dippy healing or the like, so I ignored this suggestion for another day or two until we could take his crying no longer. 


On the last night of Chanuka we piled everyone into the car and headed out the the farm across the street from RBS. We found an older Sefardi man who took one look at us, and said, "C'mon back!" He led us to the back of his Meshek and put a goat in the the milking bay. BAW held B underneath it, and the man liberally squirted milk straight from the goat into his mouth. He sputtered and cried, and I felt awful. But I was desperate, and worried that we would never see the end of this "common virus". 


I kid you not, he went to sleep and woke up 50% better. That next day he started to eat, and by the next day he was almost completely without sores. Call me crazy, but I think it worked. The strangest part of that "common virus" is that it's still here with us today. Believe it or not, every single year at the mid-end of December it rears it's head as severe cold sores on the very same child. And every single year it gets less severe. All I can hope for is that one year it will be gone completely. "Common", huh?


And last but not least are my very favorite good friends, Molluscum Contagiosum. When we first were home to these lovely little pimple like white spots in the diaper area or legs, J was 3 years old. Having never seen them before I took her to the doctor that informed me it was just a...wait for it... "common virus" and could take 6 months to 2YEARS to clear up. We housed that virus for 6 and 1/2 long years. It indeed took up to 2 years per child to pass, but by then, the next one had gotten it, and we would have to wait out another two years. 


After six years, I was expecting N, and R was just seeing the last of them. For 6 months I refused to bath N in the big tub, swearing I would not allow another child to come into contact with them. I used different bath towels, I wouldn't let them in the same swimming pool! And for 12 whole months we did not see them. And then, we moved back to Israel, land of the "common virus", and sure enough, I just noticed them on N's backside. 


I don't know what it is. You have to believe me, even with my P Post, we are clean people! We disinfect! We are not gross!! And yet, the viruses still come. 


So that was our week; A Week in Virus. 

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

A very bad day ends well

Today was one of those days. Yup, you've had 'em. The kind of day where you want to run away screaming. Or drink. A lot.


After the morning rush (which actually went pretty well today) I plopped the youngest two down in front of Caillou, and ran upstairs to get dressed. BAW was in the shower. After about 5 minutes it dawned on me that I didn't hear any noise downstairs. When it's too quiet with Little Red on the loose, I don't think, I just panic.


Me: "R! What are you watching?"


R: "Nothing."


Me: "Where's N????"


R: "Outside. Heading down the steps."


FIVE MINUTES they were downstairs folks, maybe less. We live on a VERY busy street, the main one going into our neighborhood from the highway. As I said, I was upstairs getting dressed, which without getting into too much details insinuates various states of undress. I grabbed a bandanna, but had no time for shoes as I flew down the steps. I swooped down on him (in only a diaper of course) just in time. I won't even mention the group of work men with their dirty looks at the undressed woman who can't keep an eye on her own baby.


And that's how this wonderful day started. He came upstairs and sat on my bed with me while I had a near heart attack. It took 10 minutes for my heart to stop pounding and my breathing to be normal again.


When I could breathe again, we got dressed and headed out to the park.  Once there,  N always goes on his merry way, climbing to the highest room in the tallest tower. And instead of saving the princess, he dances around just out of my reach, dangling his feet over the edge, swinging off a one story high drop, yelling, "Imma! Look!", until again, I get the eyeball rolls of "What is wrong with this mother? Why doesn't she control her kid?"


When he does finally emerge from the slide he always, always comes right over and pokes me with one finger while saying "EEP". He is not autistic (at least not that I've decided yet), he is merely giving me a shock from the static of the slide. Every. Single. Time.


Then came The Incident with the Disgusting Cat at the Park. In a desperate attempt to seem "normal" (and not mildly child abusive) I try to make small talk with the other mothers in the park. For them, it's easy. Their cute babies play at their feet while drinking bottles, or munching crackers. Mine looks more like this:














But without the safety pulley and rope, mind you.


After talking to another mother for I dunno, 23 seconds, I neurotically look over at N, and behold, he is sitting on the ground with a HUGE stray male FILTHY cat draped all over him!! Now, ya'll know me: I like animals. I actually LOVE animals. But first of all, I hate cats. And there are few things I hate more than dirty Israeli cats, so imagine my delight when I find this:










After ten minutes of the cat laying on him, him laying on the cat, him trying to be a cat, I dragged him home and washed him up, really good. Then came my favorite time of day: NAP TIME!!


Except, nap time is only fun when you can find the passy and the child actually naps. It is NOT fun when, say, the passy is lost, the child climbs in and out of the crib, and the mother suddenly out of the blue has an inexplicable backache unlike any she has ever experienced. It was such intense pain, and so out of the blue, I can only attribute it either to stress or, running through the streets at 7:45am hardly dressed, and grabbing up a 25 lb toddler and hauling him all the way back up two flights of stairs. Hmmmm... we may never know the real cause.


So, there we were, him not napping, me not being able to move. Let me tell you, it was not pretty. He always starts off by "washing the dishes." Translated to: spilling water over any and all surfaces in the kitchen including (but not limited to) counters, bread on counters, stove top, igniter flames, and floor. Then, he gets down off his step ladder, and slips on the floor and cries. This is just what happens. We have it down to a science by now.


And then comes The Phone Call. Dummy that I am, I actually answer it. "Hi, this is the secretary of AY boys' school. Please hold for the principal." Oh Shoot.


"Hi Mrs. W. Is it possible that your first grader "S" is allergic to rabbits?"
"Um, yes. I guess so." Scintillating conversationalist that I am in Hebrew.
"Well, he isn't breathing very well. It could be something. It could be nothing. But we do have rabbits visiting for today. Also, his face is swelling. Kind of quickly. Maybe you should come pick him up."


BAW was there in about 3 minutes flat. While I lay on my back, also flat. And yes, it looks like he does have a pretty severe rabbit allergy. After a quick stop to the pediatrician who assured us he'll be just fine, we now have an appointment with a pediatric allergist for some more extensive allergy testing.


Since it's Tuesday, and my favorite day of the week, school was out early, so everyone walked in at just about the same time. Thankfully, BAW had managed to score some more passys in the midst of all the chaos. Don't worry! I was helpful too! Someone has to hold a place on the couch.


At this point, I was in so much pain, I was crying, and had no way to get any relief. That's when the kids got home, needing lunch. Oh, and I forgot. J had 2 friends come over straight from school, and B had one.


That put N's nap off forever as the girls needed the room. The rest of the afternoon was uneventful, and there's not much to report, except a trashed house, busy kids and a very bad backache. I did get a hot bath, but it helped almost not at all.


Hungry kids, broken mother, working father, R's Chanuka party at 5pm, big party here tomorrow with family = Crying mother.


Then came a strange turn around. Just yesterday I was asked to say daily perakim (chapters) of Tehilim for a very sick infant in the neighborhood. Since I was sitting around anyway, and it was getting close to shkiya, I sat and was able to have some real kavana. I davened that the girl should merit a refuah shlaima along with all the other cholim of Am Yisrael. It took me no more than ten minutes to say, and an amazing thing happened. My back ache was almost gone!!! 


I believe! (Please say this with a heavy Southern preacher's accent.)


And just in time for me to jump up and get R dressed for his party (5pm? No other kids from the family invited? Are you kidding me?), and run right over there. It was nice to be just me and him and we really had a great time at a beautiful party! On the way home, I noticed, no back ache! Really! It was truly amazing!


An even better end to The Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Day was that a friend who is visiting from the US left me a message while I was out and is going to stop by in a bit and say hello. Oh, and I even got my dough for chanuka cookies up and in the fridge.


Our time is too short, and this post is too long, but one final thought. What's amazing to me is the ups and downs we can have in a day. I am going to remind myself that no matter how bad the "downs" the "ups" always follow.


Even in Australia.

Monday, November 1, 2010

On a Mission

Have I mentioned how much I LOVE living in Israel?! Especially now that the weather is finally cooperating, I feel like we can at last start living here, and loving it!

This morning, I popped out of bed (please read: “groggily slogged to the bathroom”) and loudly started announcing that “we” were leaving in ½ an hour for school, which drew some funny looks from the brood. See, “we” never go anywhere in the morning.  “We” generally stay in our pajamas until about 9am when N starts yelling for the park so persistently that it might just be child abuse if I ignore him any longer. “They”, on the other hand trek up the hill no matter what the weather, and when they need a parental unit for whatever reason, it’s “he” that goes up, and never, ever “We”. So, when I said, “we”, I got quite a confused and suspicious reaction.

Don’t get me wrong. In my defense, I am not just an overweight, lazy mother. For the record: I am an overweight lazy mother, who really, really doesn’t like the heat. And now that it seems to have officially dipped into the 70s more than one day in a row, I really have no more excuses. I’ve also spent a lot of the last week walking and it IS getting easier.

So, S, J and I trekked up this morning (B and A got a ride to ulpan in BS), and it was really a beautiful walk. The mornings here are crisp and clear and smell of something fresh and new. It’s a nice ½ hour to spend with the kids one on one, or one on two. I also love the hustle bustle of the mornings of all the kids getting to school, men coming home from shul, shopkeepers opening and the town coming to life.

My real agenda this morning was to help first grader S unpack his backpack and leave his books at school. Over the past few weeks, his books have slowly made their way from his cubby to his backpack, and everyday he has been schlepping a 20 lb bag up the hill, like a little pack mule. Yesterday, when S took his shirt off, BAW pointed out that he has not an ounce of fat on him. Regardless of his new GQ physique, I couldn’t take him carrying all that around with him. For some reason, I can’t get him to leave the stuff in his cubby on his own, so I figured this was a job for SuperMom. “We” to the rescue!

 Another fine point: I needed to speak to them at the school to remind them that once again, the kids are complaining that there is no toilet paper in the bathrooms. Even when I send them with tissues, they are embarrassed to take them out of their backpacks and bring them into the bathroom.  The dirty job of a mother….

So, off “we” went, and it was clear that J wasn’t going to believe that I was actually going to walk up with them until she saw me head out the door. About half way up, she says to me, “Hey, Ima, you do pretty well for someone who doesn’t do this every day!” Thanks for the perky encouragement, J.

We dropped J off and made our way up to the boys’ school. I still can’t get over the fact that a 5 (ok, almost 6!) year old makes this walk every day without complaint. Not to mention the 7, 10 and 11 year olds. I am really so proud of them!

Now, this particular boys’ school is known for total and complete chaos. And still, I love it. The boys are so happy, smiling, playing, schmoozing, and for the most part, doing it all like mentchen. We walked into S’s first grade classroom, and the boys run over, “Y! (They call him by his full name) Boker Tov!” They put their arms around his shoulders, they hug him, and dance a little impromptu jig as only first grade boys can. They notice me and immediately start to authoritatively help me, mostly in English with Israeli accents, some in Hebrew, a few in good ole’ American English.

“This book goes in the cubby, this one stays in the backpack.”
“Here, let me do it.”
“Come, Y, I will show you.”

They take over completely, throwing old papers away, organizing the cubby, and eventually hand me back a near empty backpack. They reminded me on some level of a coffee clutch of old Sefardi men. You know, the retired taxi drivers that sit around and drink “Caffe Turki”; brusque in their manner, yet efficient, and caring. And thankfully none of them had a cigarette. It was endearing and sweet.

After saying goodbye to S, I headed to the office to file my TP complaint, and the only thing to report from that visit was that a teacher gently put her hand on my arm and looked me square in the eye, and corrected a wrong word I had used in Hebrew. (I used “ya’giya” for a woman, she earnestly repeated “ta’giya” about four times.) So, that set back my using Hebrew ever again for about 6 months. Thanks.

Otherwise, besides that and the fact that for no reason known to man or the inhuman Bezeq phone company, we have had no internet for the past two days, all is good. I am writing this the old fashion way; in Word, and I guess I’ll have to repost it on the internet if we ever get it back.

Maybe the 1st grade boys can show me how.