The 2013 Bucket List

Today when someone at work asked what my New Year’s Resolutions are for 2013, I actually didn’t know what to say.  I am tired of making Resolutions, or rather, I am tired of me not adhering to my new year’s promises.  Each year I write them down, when I could just as easily scribble out the year on my list as the ‘resolutions’ don’t ever seem to change!

So, this year I am drafting a Buck-Res List – a mix between Resolutions and things I would like to do/achieve.  I have been inspired by Lesley Carter at lesleycarter.wordpress.com – Lesely has lived and is living the most amazing life.  She lives life to the full, follows her dreams and her heart’s desires.  I imagine she is one of the most adrenalin pumped,  happy, and fulfilled people on the planet.  If only I had a fraction of her imagination and courage…..

Lesley’s 2013 Bucket top 10 are:

1. Visit a new country
2. Move into our new home and finish decorating
3. Visit a new continent
4. Visit a new state (USA)
5. Visit a new province (Canada)
6. Drive a NASCAR
7. Visit my family in Canada
8. Be in Ottawa on Canada Day
9. Skydive – again (I’m addicted)
10. Have an encounter with a new animal

WOW – I have thought long and hard about my Buck-Res List, but still, I hereby reserve the right to change/alter/modify/amend/update the list (yes! I was a lawyer in a previous life!).  In no particular order:

1. Be a better Parent

2. Blog every day

3. Finish writing one of the books I have started

4. Spend more one-on-one time with DH

5. Re-learn French

6. Learn how to switch off/meditate/not sweat the small stuff

7. Run some sort of race (and, not the rat race!)….be it a 3k, 5k, 10k or a marathon……..

8. Be rid of my bordeaux coloured curtains that clash horribly with my new purple sofa

9. Find lightshades for downstairs’ naked lighbulbs

10. Giggle as much as my kids

11. Stop saying ‘don’t do that, don’t do this, no, not a good idea’ to anyone under 21 years of age

12. Watch a camel race

13. Take DH and kids to the top of Burj Khalifa

14. Learn some new child-friendly recipes

15. Read more exciting books to the kids everyday

16. Change all the cherry coloured standard doors, cupboards and skirting boards in the house

17. Visit the Antiques Museum….(after 5 years in Dubai, it’s amazing how much things we have still yet to discover!)

18. Finally find the Blue Souk

19. Learn Yoga or Paddle Boarding

20. Make another list once I can tick off 10 of the above!

Happy 2013…Peace, health and prosperity to you and yours!

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I’ll Huff and I’ll Puff……

To mark the kid’s Christmas holidays, I splashed out on a ‘make your own Gingerbread House’ from Spinneys.

Every time we went shopping in run up to Christmas they would flock to the Ginergbread House boxes neatly stacked on the shelves, and ‘ooh and aaah’ over them as if they were as cool the latest Moshi Monsters or GoGos, or other bit of plastic that casts a marketing spell over kids.

‘AED70 (Euros15)….hmmmm….a rip off for a house that was probably incapable of being constructed to match the perfectly decorated ‘Hansel and Gretel’ house on the front of the box’, I thought.  My usual reaction to their pleas was to look disinterested, gently shake my head, all whilst making a beeline for fruit section.

DD would always complain that I was a ‘meany’ Mummy, and I always say ‘no’ to their requests (read demands!)…..Not wanting to be remembered as the Grinch who refused to buy the Gingerbread House (and therefore have to fork out for future hours on a therapist’s couch), but moreso to prove DD wrong, I secretly slipped one of the mesmerising boxes into the trolley!

Yesterday evening was the first chance we had to construct this house.  It looked easy enough; I am usually quite good at assembling things, even without instructions (courtesy of many hours assembling IKEA furniture in the days when IKEA did not offer a home assembly service!).

‘This shouldn’t take long’, I thought.

I prepared the icing ‘cement’ and got to work.  Within minutes DD pointed out that I was using the roof parts as the walls.  Hmmmm…….embarrassed and blaming incoherent instructions (courtesy of years of listening to DH’s excuses for not being able to assemble IKEA products!), I corrected my error and continued with my project…..I fiddled, I fumbled, I fussed.  I tried to hold 4 pieces with 2 hands whilst applying more sticky icing.  Each time I let go of one side, it collapsed.  I was having more success sticking the house parts to my hands than to each other.  Once I rescued a side, the other side caved.

A string of mumbled swear words slipped out.  I made a mental note to stick with ‘no’ when I say it to my kids! Despite a very strong urge to fling the entire thing against the kitchen wall, I persevered; my kid’s impending excitement spurring me on.  Seriously, I think Dubai managed to erect the tallest building in the world, the Burj Khalifa, in less time, and with a lot less effort (and swear words)!

Finally, when I had the walls up and steady, I attempted to put on the roof.  Looking back, I should have used less force.  My sausage fingers, as DH calls them, were not built for the delicate operation of assembling something so fine.  One push with my index finger, and the whole thing came crashing down; just like in the story of the 3 little pigs.  I may as well have huffed and puffed…

My kids….they were expecting a perfectly constructed house which they could decorate with all the E-number-candy they could lay their hands on……I hoped they would settle for decorating 2 walls, 2 gable ends and a roof!  Oh, why not just cut to the chase, and let them eat the remaining icing, and candy straight from the bag!  I could never again be accused of being a ‘meany’ Mummy, could I?!!!

DS1 has just asked if I can help him construct his Millenium Falcon lego he got from Santa……the Gingerbread House experience is still too raw.  Daaaaaadddddyyyy………..DS1 needs you!

 

 

 

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Mission Impossible

At least that is how it feels…….

We moved into our house over 3 years ago.  With us, we took all our furniture, and it seemed to fit in well enough.  2 things we didn’t have: curtains for the 9 windows downstairs; and light shades.

3+ years on and we still have no light shades downstairs, and a very ugly set of curtains on 5 of the windows (this will not be the description I use when I try to sell them on Dubizzle!).

My excuses?  As we do not wish to replicate an Austrian ballroom drenched in chintzy chandeliers,  many of the light shops in Dubai were instantly crossed off the list.  I personally would love the Arabic style light shades which hang eloquently from high ceilings, but unfortunately our ceilings are too low for such beauty.  We did find what we both thought was the perfect light shades for our rooms in Marina furniture store in Mirdiff City Centre Mall.  About 50 of them were hanging above the cashier’s desk.  I enquired as to the cost only to be met with uncomfortable laughter accompanied by a very confused look: ‘These are not for sale, Madam.  They are part of the store decor’.

Refusing to give up on the perfect shades, I enquired from where they sourced these wonderously crafted shades.

Again, my question was met another confused look that suggested I might be a complete lunatic, and should look around the store, and buy something that was actually for sale.

And so to the curtains.  I felt harried, rushed into buying curtains.  Our entire downstairs was exposed to nosey parkers, and the gardeners who walk into gardens as and when they need to.  Everything was on display.  That felt very uncomfortable, especially as we were due to go on summer hols a few weeks after our move into the house.  We needed to cover the windows as soon as possible.  My Expatwoman research threw up a much vouched for name.  He came to our house, took the measurements, and showed me his swatches (sounds a lot more exciting than it was!).  Let me tell ya, a swatch is very different to covering 5 windows….I know that now.  I have lived with that mistake for 3+ years.  I can’t stand the curtains.  I realised this the minute they were hung they were a mistake.  I have tried to like them.  Love was way too big an ask…..

I think I have been so scarred psychologically by my curtain decision, that my mind is afraid to go there again.  Since that decision we have installed a 4th bedroom, changed the kitchen worksurfaces, converted the garage to a playroom, installed artificial grass, changed the tiles on the porch and verandas, painted the interior, bought bunk beds, sofas, office equipment, bookshelves, shoe storage cupboards, kitchen table + benches……

Yep, think it’s safe to say, I am avoiding the curtain issue.  Out of mistakes grow our biggest fears…..fear of repeating or exacerbating that original mistake!!

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Operation Exterminate

This time of year in the desert is wonderful.  The weather is cooler, the sun still shines brightly, and there is an ‘eternal summer holiday’ feel about the place; it is just perfect……apart from the ants that have started to infiltrate the house in the past few days.

Usually, it’s only a couple of the miniscule insects on a scouting mission; you know like in movies where one or two people are sent ahead into a potentially dangerous situation to report back on the level of danger, if they survive?  Well the ants crawl around the place, often going in different directions as if trying to throw the home occupants off the scent.  Channelling my inner Buddhist, I didn’t bother with them.  They found their way in, they will find their way out again, I reasoned.

Then again, they might signal to their comrades to come join the party once we had left the house!

We returned to the little critters ransacking the kitchen and, the alpha ants displaying their trojan skills by carrying off various bits of food from breakfast which had been left on the floor (yes, I hang my head in shame that DH forgot to sweep the floor after the animalistic breakfast had by 3 munchkins under the age of 8 – a recognised but rarely invoked reason for divorce…I may just join the rare few who have if I don’t get rid of these ants soon!)………Ironically, our Dustbuster (handheld hoover) had died, and DH, not quite sure if he could chuck it in the recycling bin,  left it on the kitchen floor.  On our return a number of  ‘in your face’ cheeky ants were circling the very thing that had once sucked them up.  It was like watching some sort of celebration at the demise of the Dustbuster that had served us so well for so many years.  Hideous.

I have laid the ‘gel traps’ to no avail.  These traps are hailed as the top of the range of ‘humane but deadly’ exterminators.  The ants are attracted to the gel which they take back to the nest, where it should destroy the enemy.  However, my observation of this trap is that the effect on the ants resembles the effect of Granny overdoing the sherry on Christmas day, with them wobbling about on 3 of their 6 legs at any one time (for the avoidance of doubt, Granny has only 2 legs, but appears legless after a glass or 2 of sherry!).  They look so sozzled, it is highly doubtful they could even find their way out of the house, let alone make it back to their nest.

Thinking I could beat them into submission, I took out my large, noisy, old fashioned hoover to suck up all the beggars, and any leftover food from Christmas day which my still be lurking somewhere.  DH nearly had heart failure; ’tis a rare sight, me and the hoover in the same room, let alone waltzing about the house in perfect sync, and working together on operation ‘Exterminate’.  Dalai Lama, I know we should live and let live, but I can’t live with ants.

The ground floor of my house was spotless when we were on our way out the door this afternoon.  But then DS2 ran back to the playroom (which used to be our garage) to pick up something, and then ran past me leaving soul destroying words hanging in the air ‘there are lots of ants in the playroom, Mummy’.

Thinking one of the little terrors had left a sticky lolly stick or sweet wrapper on the floor, I huffed and puffed my way to the playroom, muttering something about finishing/boarding school under my breath.  To my surprise (because it wasn’t the munchkins’ bait that led them to us), and disgust (because of how many of them were marching their way, literally 2 by 2, along the wall to the door which would give them access to the rest of the house!), DS2 was right.  I searched for the source and found the wall at the garage door crumbling.  I ran outside to take a look from the other side of the garage door.  The little gits has burrowed a hole in the wall on the other side, and managed to force 2 new tiles each about 1 foot in length (30cm) away from the wall (the tiles were only laid 8 months ago!).  I was stunned.  At the rate they were going, they would unearth the house and carry if off down the road, leaving us with a dusty sandpit plot surrounded by artificial grass….Well, if each one can carry 20 times its own body weight,  that thought isn’t too farstretched.

Right, this means war.

Well, not real ant war, as I refuse to call in pest control to deal with this (not because I want the glory of triumphing over these creatures, but because we would need to leave the house for up to 48 hours if we did!).

I raced to the supermarket to check out the alternatives to ant traps.  It appears sprays are the answer.  If they can kill cockroaches, surely they can kill the little anty gits………I will be spraying all the entry zones tonight…..let’s see if it works.

Now, on to my next battle; head lice/nits.  Oh the glamourous life I lead……..

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Had to Share

‘Dreams are illustrations from the book your soul is writing about you’, Marsha Norman.

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Monopoly Monsters

Santa brought the kids a couple of boardgames for Christmas.  Monopoly Junior has definitely gone down a treat…..I myself was a little disappointed to see the game theme is parties as opposed to properties, but I guess for 5+, that makes sense.

I recalled my Monopoly playing days with my brothers when we were growing up.  It always started off as fun, but slowly, it turned into to all out warfare as, inevitably one person had a ‘monopoly’ on the expensive properties, and was raking it in with every throw of the dice.  My children would be different……..

Party Monopoly sounded so much more sedate, so much more civilised; the perfect introduction into the wonderful world of family boardgames.  For over an hour, they played happily together, and I was feeling rather smug about having hinted to Santa about what seemed to be the perfect choice of board games, though I was not willing to relinquish the reins of the banker role to one of those little mites….

Unsurprisingly, as time passed, the kids were losing interest and the game was becoming more like ‘Monotony’ rather than ‘Monopoly’.  So, I tried to liven up the game, inject some energy into the flagging enthusiasm.

I now fear I have created  Monopoly Monsters!

Bankrupt DD was a permanent fixture at Mummy Banker’s door, looking for a line of credit.  Her approach was remarkably similar to that of Greece’s approach to its debt; borrow now, don’t pay interest, don’t repay the capital, and still collect $2 when you pass go.

Property….errr….I mean, Party Magnate DS2, was literally laughing at and all the way to the bank.  I think he had more money than the bank!  Secretly I was wondering how I could get him to hand over some cash to re-capitalise the bank without any future repercussions for the bank.  But DS2 watched every $ like a hawk…., and even demanded collateral before handing over anything on loan!  A 5 year old who understands the basic principles of banking.  If a 5 year old can do it, it really begs the question of how elected governments around the world messed up so badly in the recent Global Financial Crisis.

DS1, on the other hand, had gone rogue.  Each time someone landed on his ‘party’ he would yell in a ‘show me the money’ type voice, ‘Pay the Price Baby, Yeah!’ as he outstretched his little hand for his ‘rent’.  As the game wore on, he became more animated with his ‘rent’ demands.  He might do a little dance, shake his derriere, and be ‘so in your face’, I was willing to ‘OK’ the slap his attitude deserved!

Seriously Santa, what were you thinking?????  How could you do this to us??  Back to Scrabble it is…..

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More Things Kids Say (Well, What My Kids Say!)

On our way home from the Madinat Christmas Market yesterday evening, where the kids saw Santa, they were in high spirits.  We arrived at the market 10 minutes early.  Santa was not in his sleigh but…his gift filled sacks were!  His sleigh was roomy enough for my brood to chill out comfortably, which they did.  For some reason, the sleigh came adorned with handbells (seriously, why?).  Santa’s sleigh was just an open invitation to every child to mess, cause mayhem and ring the bells until such time as the ‘dongers’ came off their ‘ringers’!  DD had a good ‘nosey’ through the 2 sacks filled with surprise goodies, and had already decided which gift she wanted before Santa arrived.  She caught the attention of her brothers, and the jittery huddle that formed suggested a high level meeting to decide what they should choose from Santa’s sacks!

When Santa arrived, the kids weren’t all that bothered.  They stepped down to make way for him but continued to jockey for pole position in line to see him!  Equally Santa did not seem all that interested in his job.  Honestly, our 3rd year going to the Madinat for our Santa visit (and for the two 7 year olds this may be the last for them….sniff, sniff…), and this guy has to have been the most miserable, uninterested Santa ever…..he didn’t say a word to the kids, didn’t wish them ‘Merry Christmas’…nothing….nada.

Thankfully the kids didn’t notice.  The twins chose the soft toy over the ‘bucket and spade’ set.  DS2 felt he had to follow their lead….even though I think he wanted the more practical of gifts.

So, back to the car ride home.  I am not sure who started it….but stuck in a traffic jam, the kids were chatting back and forth when one of them piped up to say ‘Yooouuuu are soooo hooooottttt’!

Clearly I misheard.  My chldren are not there yet, I assured myself, blaming every kid and their older siblings for potentially exposing them to ideas beyond their years.  But judging by the conversation that followed, I had not…it was repeated by the next child.  They started talking about boys at school calling girls at school ‘hot’.

I stole a peripheral glance at DH who was peeing himself laughing.  I, on the other hand, was horrified, and contemplating finishing school for the expat brats in the back!

‘Where did you learn that?’ I enquired as calmly as I could.

‘TV’ came the synchronised reply.

‘Well, no more TV for you guys’, I retaliated, as I continued to mumble furiously under my breath about Disney teen shows.

”Errrr…noooo….actually, ‘so and so’ at school said it to ‘so and so’.  He says it all the time”  came the timely ‘save’.

‘Well, if she is so ‘hot’, you might want to stay away from her in case you burn your fingers (a lesson they are too young to understand, but valid nonetheless!)’, I interrupted.

‘Oh….Mummy……’hot’ means ‘beautiful’, responded my 5 year old DS.  ‘You’re hot, Mummy’, he added.

I couldn’t help but smile…..a charmer already!

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I Wish it were Tomorrow Today

The past few days have been a blur of bristling excitement, last minute pushes to ensure pole position on Santa’s good list, squeals of delight, and unstoppable chatter about what Santa brought.

The Munchkins’ Christmas Eve plans were executed with military precision:

Eat dinner – and for once, they managed to sit at the table without imitating a ‘Jack-in-the-Box’ every 5 seconds;

Bath, hairwash  – all without the usual threats from Mummy and Daddy to get upstairs ‘now or else’!

Feed Reindeer – Put the carrots out for the reindeer – had to wrestle these away from DS1 and DS2 who dreaded the loss of their snacks!

Prep the Runway – Sprinkle Reindeer dust to show the reindeer the way to our house (seriously, there was enough glitter in those packs to make our garden visible from the moon!).  As we have artificial grass, I told the Munchkins they should put the dust in a bowl for the reindeer.  The reindeer are old fashioned, and can only detect sprinkles on real grass or in bowls;

Feed The Big Man – Set out cookies and milk for Santa by the fireplace (which has no chimney, but that’s OK as Santa turns himself into sparkles and comes into the house that way – DS1’s take on it!);

Post-Santa-Prep – Watch TV, brush teeth (again without the usual arguments of who goes first, second, third), ascend to bed (without backchat – cue ‘Twilight Zone’ theme tune);

Wow…..some days I wish it were Christmas everyday, if only for the unusually compliant behaviour of my Munckins!

My favourite comments over the past few days:-

DS2 – ‘Mummy, can we go to Jesus’ birthday party?’

Me – ‘Sure, where is he having it?’

DS2 – ‘Dunno, maybe the bowling place in Ibn Batutta?’

Me (under my breath) ‘More likely to be St. Francis Church in Ibn Batutta on the 25th!’

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DS2 argued that Santa should eat enough to pop!  DS1 and DD disagreed, saying, he is not fat for most of the year.  It is only on Christmas eve when he eats so muuuuccchhhh pudding, cake, cookies and drinks so muuucccchhh Guinness/sherry/milk/7 Up that he gets fat!

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All 3 on loop for 3 days: ‘I wish it were tomorrow today already.’
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‘You cannot put the fire on, you will burn Santa’s bum!’ (we only have a fake fireplace and no chimney!)
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‘How did he know I wanted that?’

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DS2 – ‘I think Santa is an Arsenal supporter’.

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‘I hate Bray Wanderers’ said DS2 in response to Santa’s letter (which implied he might one day play for them!)!

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10am on Christmas morning DS2 asked ‘how long til Santa comes again, Mummy?’

Cue G&T for Mummy……

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Fairytale of New York

always tugs at my homesick heart strings at this time of year.  I love listening to it in the car on full blast, but can’t manage to get past the first few lines before I have to start fighting back the tears!  (One good thing about living in the desert, it is never considered silly to wear sunglasses at any time of the year, so at least I have my shades to hide my tears in the car!).  I am not quite sure why, but by the time Kirsty MacColl sings ‘And the boys from the NYPD choir were singing Galway Bay’, I am blubbering like a child who just found out that Santa doesn’t exist!

Back home this song was a Christmas favourite each year.  A timeless piece of festive ‘Gangnam Style’, it even got the most reluctant dancers jigging about on the dancefloor!  It was played in pubs, in clubs, and even shops.  The lyrics are infused with energy, brutal honesty, hope and disappointment, but when celebrating Christmas back home with my friends, I only noticed the way this song, like Christmas, brought everyone together.  We danced, we laughed, we celebrated; we celebrated friendships, family, love.  Any regrets, any sadness or misgivings about the year gone by were forgotten.

Like I said, I  love this song but now, the minute I hear the unmistakable sound of the accordion, a tin whistle, and a violin coming together to play the hallmark sound of traditional Irish music, I am overcome with nostalgia.  The lyrics come alive, and my mind is a maelstrom of emotion.

I am transported back to last minute Christmas Eve shopping on a bustling, busker-lined Grafton Street in Dublin.  I reminisce about meeting  good friends, some of whom I hadn’t seen for months on end, in The Duke on Duke Street, sipping G&Ts in the cosy warmth of a real Irish pub (or sometimes even shivering outside under gas heaters!). Then we would all head off in our separate directions to meet up with family to have dinner, go to midnight mass and try to finish the gift wrapping by dawn!

Then my mind wanders to the New York theme of the song.  I think of all of those emigrants/expats from Ireland who have ever left home, whether by choice or not.  I think about how many will be making their way home to the Emerald Isle for Christmas, and spare a thought for those would love nothing more to go home but who can’t.

At Christmas I miss my family, my friends, I miss Ireland, even moreso than usual.

Wise DH once commented that on St. Patrick’s Day  ‘everyone wants to be Irish’.  Similarly, when the Irish hear Fairytale of New York, they want to be home for Christmas!  So, no matter how many tears I cry listening to Fairytale of New York, I will continue to listen to it everyday during the festive season, and remember to forego mascara for the duration!

 

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The Wisdom of Kids

Recently, a friend asked if I could collect her DD from school and drop her off on my way home.  My munchkins were super excited; anything to mix up the norm, and push the boundaries of car etiquette (not that there is much of that in my car, despite my attempts!).

The first few KMs were filled with  the usual high frequency chatter which only those 8 and under (and dogs) can compute.  Turning up the volume on the radio, I tried to tune out the squeals…but it seemed these car creatures thought it was a ‘who-can-squeal-the-loudest-most-piercing-squeal-ever competition’.  I lost.

Then came the ‘boys v girls’ chat, a two-aside battle of the ‘gob’.  It was surprisingly evenly matched.  The boys challenged with ‘fart’ and ‘burp’ power.  The girls responded with wicked (and by that, I mean ‘clever’) put downs, and shrill, superior cackles.

As I once again reached for the volume knob on the radio, our guest piped up with something that was not offensive to my nasal or aural senses.  Her little face suggested her message was an important one.   Keen to hear what she was saying, I turned down the volume on the radio.

‘It is not good to meet someone online who you have never met before in life’ she shouted from the 3rd row of the car!

I thought I heard her talk about safety issues when using the internet, but given her tender age of 7, I wasn’t quite sure a 7 year old would have knowledge about such things.  I asked her to repeat what she said, and sure enough, I had heard right.  Apparently, the words of wisdom were passed down from her older, young teen sister.

I got to thinking about the sense of teaching kids about the potential dangers of 21st century technology.  Maybe adults could take note.

At work, a secretary has met someone through an online dating agency.  He lives in an unstable Middle East country, and unlike her, is not Catholic.  In the 2 months they have been emailing, Facebooking, Skyping, they have planned their wedding for early next year!  They have not met in person.  She has a daughter under the age of 10.  Her 18 year old is back home.  His parents are pushing for marriage as soon as possible.  She wants time to plan the meringue dress, tiara and party.  February has been decided as the more appropriate date.

Most at work have offered their blessings; others have not, going so far as to try to talk her out of it in the most blunt of terms, just as a responsible parent of a love-struck teen would.  Marrying a muslim in a muslim country is not as straight forward as marriages in other countries.  Marrying someone you have never met brings with it a whole other raft of problems.

To her credit, she has listened to both sides, and decided that should it not work out, she will walk away.

Perhaps she needs to consult DD’s 7 year old friend.  If she did, she might find out that it is not so easy to ‘walk away’ here.

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