Since Kaia is very particular with what he wears, we knew that there was no way that we would wear just any old costume, not that we could find something easily here in Chennai. So, when we asked him what he wanted to be, he thought…’airplane…boat…no, dinosaur!’ So it was decided. My wife used some old shirts and a dash of creativity (with hand stitching) to make him a stegosaurus t-shirt, complete with back spines and a long tail. Sure, it is not 100% anatomically correct, but he loved it. She even made him a little hood with eyes on it, but predictably, he wouldn’t let us put it on his head. This boy just hates hats. So, maybe next year, if we’re back in the States, he can make up for the lost years and mark his fourth Halloween with a snappy costume punctuated by a nice neighborhood trick or treat run. I know that I’ll enjoy the candy.
Sunday, October 30, 2005
Halloween
Thursday, October 27, 2005
Monsoon
Kaia seems to enjoy watching the heavy rain. There has been this tractor making passes on the beach, picking up trash and rototilling the sand, for the past few days and, of course, he’s been loving that. A few days ago he woke up from his nap, in a semi-conscious state pleading to ‘see tractor, see tractor’. He can be very obsessive--in the photo to the right, he wondering "hmm, where IS that tractor?" But now that the weather has turned and I’m waiting for Noah’s
Saturday, October 22, 2005
The Geography of Family and Friends
Kaia has been privileged to meet and get close to people from all over the world during his first two years. Particularly from our time living next to the Asian Rural Institute (ARI) in Japan, Kaia became the loved nephew of so many aunties and uncles—Sister Edwin from Darjeeling, Amos from Ghana, Samba from Zambia, Ram from Nepal, Phoebe from the Philippines, David and Almut from Germany, Kimio and Hiroki from Japan, and on and on. These people have enriched both of our lives tremendously and we have very fond memories of our time together. So we thought it would be a nice idea to get a large world map so that he could begin associating places with our friends across the world. Of course, the concept of a world map is likely beyond his level of comprehension, but it seems like he understands the association factor. When asked, “where does Auntie Brynne live?” he points to the western US…or “where does Kaia live?” he slaps the subcontinent.
One clear memory that I have of being 5 or 6 is how much I enjoyed going to the bank with my grandfather. They had this huge rotating globe (I think the place was called World Savings) and I would sit was watch it rotate while he tended to his banking. I can remember being so fascinated by the large expanses of ocean, particularly in the southern hemisphere (for that was what a 5 year old can see best from that height) and how Madagascar would come around, this large island floating independent from the African continent. I wonder, as he gets older, what features will intrigue him on the map.
Monday, October 17, 2005
On Being Social
The funny thing is, and this is where the memories come back, is that he ALWAYS has a good time and is saying “Kids C is fun!” when I pick him up. It is a combination of being happy to see me and what he did, but recently he’s been also saying, “Kaia was crying” almost as if to ask himself what the problem was. Now this behavior is something that I can remember whenever my mom would force me to go to things that I really didn’t want to go to. I can remember birthday parties, summer camps, soccer practices, (especially) church, you name it—that I really didn’t want to go to and protesting hard not to. As an introverted person, social gatherings are not something that I seek out, I am very much unlike my mother in this regard. Anyway, those times that I took the step and ventured out, I would say that 75% of the time I had the equivalent “Kids C is fun!” experience, 5% if you looked just at church;) So I can empathize with Kaia’s pleads to ‘go home’ and ‘play with papa’ because those were places and spaces that I longed for rather than mingling with strangers. What I am already struggling with is just when I should heed his pleas and not make him go to something. The Kids Central call is a relatively easy one, but with other stuff it gets a bit more difficult. We shall see.
Thursday, October 13, 2005
Ayudha Puja
Once the area was setup, Joyce went around the flat, putting dots of sandalwood paste and red powder on all of the things that we needed to honor on this day. This meant the fuse box (for the electricity), the cutlery and even Kaia’s motorcycle (left)! Sekar, meanwhile prepared the large green gourd for smashing outside of the home by cutting a hole in top, mixing in red powders and small change, and placing a cube of camphor on top. Kaia, meanwhile, enjoyed the poori mix while cruising around on his newly blessed bike (left).
Additionally, this day is also to ask for blessings in one’s studies—how every convenient for me. Along these lines, you need to bring all of your books and important documents to the puja space as well, for them to be filled with the heat from the ritual. This is what you can see stacked up on either sides of the puja area (right). After everything is setup and in its proper place, you light the oil lamps, start the camphor burning and ring the bell. Each person, in turn then pays their respects to the divine—even little Kaia, who now knows the prayer and bowing positions well. Let’s hope that my laptop got with the program.
Finally there is the adornment of the car, which involves a garland on the grill, flanked by banana leaves, sandalwood paste splattered all over, and limes to be crushed under the tires for good fortune. All cars should be so fortunate to have such décor, even once a year. I wonder if the accident rate in
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Discipline
This morning was one of those times, when he wanted to rifle through the pantry (he was hungry and breakfast was late) and make a mess. This has been a constant problem for us, with his opening the refrigerator (sometimes we forget to lock it) and also pulling things out of the lower cabinets. Up until recently we’d been storing juice boxes down there, and it was a constant battle (even which ‘child proof’ locks, yeah right) with him opening boxes and drinking out of them (these are the large juice boxes, not the individual ones). Currently, there are 5 of such boxes in our refrigerator due to this habit. There should only be one. Anyway, he got really upset because there was nothing for him to eat (i.e. cookies that I had already stashed away) and began to arch his back and say ‘noooooooonoooooooo!!!’. I really hate these moments. First off, it is hard to keep holding him when he’s like this, and two, usually he slaps, hits or kicks you in the process. Often times, this means a launching off of the glasses. No fun. In these times, you can only just put him gently on the ground and hope that he doesn’t hurt himself. I waited a bit too long to do this and got caught by a left hook to the cheek, at which I raised my voice and said “KAIA—NO! Do NOT do that.” This, of course, didn’t help anything and just got him more upset. Kaia is a very sensitive child and takes it very hard when you raise you voice at him. Almost immediately, I knew that I had made things worse.
So eventually things calm down, he gets to eat and gets back to being himself. Me, on the other hand, I’m still feeling upset about how I handled the situation. As his parent, I should be in much more control over my emotions, regardless if he is flailing and whacks me. He’s only 2 years old and doesn’t know better. Teaching him to respond with raised voice and frustration is not acceptable and even worse than what he was doing in the first place. Hopefully next time, I’ll do a better job with my parenting….
Monday, October 10, 2005
Challenges
Why I Love this Time: Shirts with names “grandme shirt”, “surfer shirt”, “ant shirt”, “chickie shirt”, etc.
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
The Negotiation
One of these times was yesterday. With my wife currently in
Kaia: Watch Bob? Watch Bob?Now I know that the intentions are rather subtle here, but it was so funny to me that he was actually trying to bargain with me that I had to laugh. It seems like, as his language and development takes off, that there are lots of these moments where you cannot help but chuckle at the actions of your child. How did this little guy, who just a few weeks ago was saying ‘no’ to everything, now understanding the proper context for negotiation? I’m sure I’ll look back on this moment with nostalgia when he’s 13 and asking me to stay out just an hour later or 16 negotiating for the car.
Indiapapa: How did you remember that? No, Kaia. No more videos.
Kaia: Please papa…just one? Just watch one?
Why I Love this Time: The little running posture, with the hands open, palms forward, and arms straight. Back slightly arched, and running on tip-toes.
Saturday, October 01, 2005
The Club
While the club is open from 8am-11pm, most of the members come in the evening time. They show English, Tamil and Hindi movies on the weekends and lots of folks come for the open-air showings and enjoy dinner at the same time. Kaia and I, however, visit in the late morning, when there is nobody, except for the Sindur staff, whom we have come to know very well. There is Satish Kumar (like our old cat!), the General Manager of the club who grew up in Kenya, Shanmugam, the pool maintenance man, who keeps a great pool, Dinesh, the bar/game room person, with the 4 inch pinky fingernail, Padham (at left with Kaia), the young Nepali, Silvi, the cleaning woman with the distinct “Kaiiiiyyyaaa”, and on and on. Because, when we visit, we are generally the only guests there, it has become a very nice place to come back to each time.
General Manager (10,000 rupees/$230)If you consider that, on a given day, there are about 3 supervisors working (restaurant, bar/game room, exercise room), 4-6 waiters, and 6-10 cleaning folks, that would make for a total monthly expenditure of around $1,400. That’s 22 people, full-time. And you wonder why companies—not to mention large corporations--come to places like
Assistant Manager (6,000/$140)
Bar/Game room supervisor (3,500/$81)
Waiters (2,500/$58)
Poolman (2,500/$58)
Cleaning people (2,000/$46)