He Asked Me to the Dance ...

​There are moments in life that defy re-telling.  Where an image tells a story far greater than words ever could.

I caught one of those moments this evening as my 51-year-old escorted my 7-year-old to her first ever father-daughter dance.​

​A moment, an image, in which I saw a lifetime unfold.  

Moments that defy re-telling ... (Doha, May 3, 2013)​

Moments that defy re-telling ... (Doha, May 3, 2013)​

This picture is so much more than a glimpse into the excitement of attending her first ever dance.​

It is an image of a love repeated throughout a lifetime.  

It is ...

  • helping her up the steps that very first time he put her on the school bus.
  • steadying her seat when she was learning to ride her bike.
  • waiting to catch her as she worked up the nerve to jump into the pool.​
  • cheering her on silently, with only prayer and a wave and a smile, as she performed in her first school concert.
  • hoisting her onto his shoulders so she'd be closer to the sky to watch the fireworks.
  • throwing air punches as she crossed the finish line of her first triathlon.

It is ...

  • holding his breath as he waits for her to come home from her first date.
  • having nothing to offer but a hug when she experiences her first heartbreak.
  • watching her proudly receive her degree.
  • giving her away after walking her down the aisle.
  • brushing away the tears as he sees her cast that beautiful gaze upon 'the other man in her life'.
  • reliving this moment as he holds her first born.
  • having her look at him this way again as the curtains draw closed.

"He asked me to go to the dance, Maman."

​My heart is full.  

"F" Me in the ME! ...

No need for a disclaimer on this one ... bear with me and you'll decipher it soon enough.

A few weeks ago, Smilin' Vic, Kiddo and I were seated at an upscale restaurant, enjoying a leisurely and rather costly meal.  We had fibbed to get kiddo in ... minimum age is 10.  On our way to the restaurant we grilled her mercilessly:​

Us:  "How old are you?"​

Kiddo:  "Seven."​

Us:  "No, you're not seven.  You are TEN.  Do you understand?  Anyone asks, you are TEN.  Let's try again.  How old are you?"​

Kiddo:  "Seven."​

Us:  "For goodness sakes, you are TEN.  Just for tonight, you are TEN!"​

Kiddo:  "But that would by lying, Maman, and you said I'm never supposed to lie."​

Me:  "I lied." ...

"Just bear with us, ok?  It's a white lie. If we don't lie tonight, we can't get into this place, and that would be horrible.  So 'how OLD ARE YOU'?'"​

Kiddo:  (Crosses her arms against her chest, extreme look of disappointment as she tries her best 'I expected better of you' look on me) "Hmmmmph.  Ten, I am ten years old."​

Us:  "That's good, better, now let's practice a few more times ..."​

Anyhow, we made it in, and no one bothered to ask her age.  Once she got over her initial disillusionment at being born to lying, scheming, conniving parents, she was actually quite stoked at her newfound maturity.  She spent the evening trying to do things that made her more "ten-like", leaning in to me and quietly asking "Is this how a 10-year-old would hold her fork?" and "Since I'm 10, can I go to the bathroom on my own?" and "I don't think 10-year-olds have to eat what their parents tell them to."  ​

But the reality is a 7-year-old can only fake it so much.  So as kiddo was enjoying dessert and Smilin' Vic and I were finishing off the last of the wine, she suddenly gasps and exclaims "That man over there just said the "C" word."

Now just stop for a minute, and picture Smilin' Vic and me simultaneously spitting out our finest red ...​

Smilin' Vic:  "Shhhhhhhh!  Where did you hear that word?"​

Kiddo:  "Well, you say it all the time Papa, but you told me not to say it."​

Now don't get me wrong, Smilin' Vic's repertoire is occasionally peppered with profanity, a throwback to his years in the barracks.  But some words he has forever relegated to the literal battlefield, the "C" word which immediately springs to mind being at the ​top of the list.  So Smilin' Vic is visibly flustered.  "I DO NOT, nor have I EVER, used that term in our house."

Kiddo:  (loudly enough for fellow diners to hear and cast disdainful glances our way)  "But you DO, Papa; you say the "C" word all the time.  You even said it about another driver when we were coming to the restaurant."​

Smilin' Vic:  (well, at this point he's not actually saying anything out loud ... he is silently, mentally going through his entire collection of curse words, spewing them in his head, where only he can hear them and appreciate their true significance ​... he does this regularly ... it is a kind of mantra for him in those moments where he is particularly flustered - but I can almost hear the expletives myself, so loudly is he thinking them).

I have never heard Smilin' Vic use that particular term; I'm thinking we may be on the wrong track and I need to diffuse the situation.  I lean in to kiddo.  "Kiddo, can ​you whisper the "C" word into my ear?  I promise I won't tell anyone."

Kiddo leans in, cups her little hand around my ear and whispers softly:  

"Crazy."  

"That man said "crazy" maman, and he said it two times, and Papa's not telling the truth, because he says it too, he does, I swear."

And this folks, is what you get when you try to do the right thing by teaching your child not to use certain words.  We should have known; this isn't the first time this has happened.​

There was the time kiddo announced to her nursery school teacher that her nanny uses the "F" word all the time.  

While the "F" word can be considered offensive in North America, it is brandished quite liberally, and more often used as a common adjective than a curse.  But here in the ME, it is construed as extremely offensive.

Our poor nanny used to pick up kiddo at daycare every day, and really couldn't understand why everyone was looking at her funny.  

When her teacher brought it up ​casually one morning as I dropped kiddo off, I had to explain that the "F" word in our house is actually:

"Fat."​

Our nanny is Philippina, and like most Asians we've met here, has no compunction whatsoever against using the word; going so far as to gleefully tell me or Smilin' Vic we've gotten very "fat" upon a return from Italy or Switzerland or another of those indulgent countries that serve up the most delicious, unctuous, cheesy, and creamy of dishes.  We've had to explain a few times that while it may be quite normal in this culture to tell someone they're fat, most Westerners tend to find it rather offensive, actually more offensive than the 'other' "F" word.

We also have the "S" word:​

"Stupid."​

The "D" word:​

"Dumb."​

The "H" word:​

"Hate."​

But yesterday, I heard kiddo conspiring with her two friends by the pool.  They asked me to pretend I didn't know them, to pretend they were just teenagers enjoying a day out.  I thought it was the cutest thing ever.  

They lounged in their chairs, taking in rays.  They introduced themselves to me, explaining that they were triplets.  Their mother had a very difficult birth, so they had to take the bus straight from the orphanage to get money and jobs.  One was an artist engineer.  The other was a doctor who cleans beaches.  The last went to beauty salons, but was also an artist.  

Then a little boy walked by with his mom.  I heard kiddo exclaim to her friends: "Hey, I know that guy, he's my friend."  The second girl answered: "Yeah, he's in Grade 1, my mom was his substitute teacher once."  The other girl whispered:  "Your friend's HOT."​

Once I had recovered from falling off my own lounger, I realized that

"HOT"

is now the new "H" word in our house.  ​I watched the three girls (who I did not know) saunter over to the boy and his mom.  They engaged him in a few moments of 7-year-old flirtation as he looked at them eagerly as only an oblivious 6-year-old boy can ... he was obviously thinking that since there were four of them, they might be able to play a game of chicken in the pool.

So I'm reconsidering our strategy.  Kiddo's seven, going on ten.  Perhaps it's time to let her expand her repertoire and welcome her to the real world.  ​We've introduced the white lie, we've taught her that she actually can point as long as she's pointing at something, not at someone.  So maybe the time has come to introduce her to the concept of "term appropriateness based on context".

Or we could ​shelter her for the next twenty years and do our darndest to hold on to the toddler forever.  I like that option, I like it a lot.  

Fortunately, I love kiddo more.  And I want her to lead a productive life in society, be able to mix with the masses without coming across as a complete dork (though in fairness, I've made it this far with a fair amount of naïveté to my credit).  So chances are I'll start letting "stupid" slide into conversations, as long as it's directed at things or situations, not people.

I will say this:  the ME has been a blessing to us and to her as far as allowing her to be a kid.  She is probably enjoying her childhood innocence a lot more here than she could in the West.  Kids here get to remain kids here a lot longer ... remaining blissfully oblivious until now to the "F" word of my forefathers.  

And now you know.  "F" me in the ME is all about weight, folks, not about getting screwed (oops!  is that the new "S" word??????).

​7 going on 10 ... the artist engineer, doctor beach cleaner, beauty salon artist ... and HOT is the new "H" word ...

​7 going on 10 ... the artist engineer, doctor beach cleaner, beauty salon artist ... and HOT is the new "H" word ...

I Failed Me a Little Today ...

Every day, I'm confronted with something I've failed at.  My days are filled with mistakes and failures of varying degrees.  Some days it's something small, like failing to remember to put the water bottles out for the water delivery truck on Wednesday.  Some days it's something big, like failing to read the e-mail from kiddo's teacher reminding me that today is "Crazy Hair Day" at school.  And some days it's something monumental, like failing at my job.

But one thing ​I've learned from failure is that 9 times out of 10 it teaches me something.  I like to believe I've actually grown from my failures, that I've become a little bit better at some things.  It might be that I've only become more accomplished at failure itself, but I'll take any success I can get.  Surely my failures have made me somewhat smarter than I once was?

For example, I once ran freely through my mom's yard wearing jelly shoes.  We had a huge Husky/German Shepard mix back then.  I failed to realize there was a chance I would collide with one of the doggy land mines littering the yard.  I realized my mistake as soon as the poo started seeping through the gaps in my jelly shoe.  I've learned not to run through open fields wearing jelly shoes.

I once rubbed my eyes after basting ribs in hot sauce with my bare hands.  I failed to heed the warning label that said "Avoid contact with eyes.  If product comes into contact with eyes, immediately flush liberally with fresh water."  Lesson in self-macing quickly learned.  Tabasco BURNS!

​I failed to wait until AFTER pulling a shirt over my head to apply lipstick ; I learned that you can remove a lipstick stain with hairspray.  

I failed at freely acknowledging a mistake; I've learned that you can avoid a lot of pain with a sincere "sorry".  

I failed at admitting that I didn't know what the hell someone was talking about; I've learned that you can avoid a lot of frustration by just admitting that you don't have all the answers.  

I failed at telling a lot of people exactly how I felt; I've learned that when you stop pretending, life becomes a lot simpler.

There are always exceptions; e.g.  ​I repeatedly fail to get to work on time.  That is the 1 time out of 10 that I just can't seem to learn from.  I figure I more than make up for it on the one hand, staying late on the job more than my turn.  However, this usually perpetuates the cycle of failure, with me arriving consistently three minutes behind the school bell most every day as I rush for after-school pickup.  On good days I convince myself that one could consider my tardiness a success if measured in terms of consistency.  

Then there are other failures, bigger failures, monumental failures, that make me rethink the implications of my actions on my life and that of others.

Yesterday I failed at sunscreen protocol.  Up until then, I could boast almost eight years of immaculate protection of kiddo's pearly-white skin in the ME.  I started off well, immersed Kiddo in spf 50 as is custom.  But then I let her swim and play in the desert sun for just a little too long without re-applying.  Her red shoulders and the pink hair part on her skull were the first indication that I had failed.  Her desperate attempt to rouse us at 1:00 a.m. by vomiting profusely over Smilin' Vic and I and our bedding was ​the second sign.  Her dry sunstroke heaves throughout the early morning hours lent credence to the epic proportions of my failure to protect this amazing little translucent being.  (I'm happy to report she's back to running about care-free as I type this post.)  I consider this a MONUMENTAL failure.  I am supposed to keep her safe.  Safe from the bad guys, safe from harm, safe from the elements.  Lesson learned: Failing my child is not an option. 

Recently, I admitted to failing at my job.  This hasn't been my biggest failure ever, but it's been a really hard one to admit to.  Me, who has always prided myself on my ability to 'get the job done'.  But I finally found a job I just wasn't willing to invest any more of me into.  So I quit.  In case I forget how massive a failure this one is, kiddo has been running around telling everyone for the last few weeks "My Maman quit her job!'  Funny thing is, I feel ok about it.  Lesson learned:  There is sometimes victory in failure.      

Years ago, I failed at marriage.  This one nearly killed me.  Slowly.  The failure dragged on for years, and it hurt - not only me, but many around me.  But then I succeeded at divorce.  Life has a way of throwing curve balls like that.  Lesson learned:  Sometimes success doesn't look quite like we expected it to.

For over six years, I have been failing my family back home.  As an expat, I just don't think there's any way around it.  I am not there to listen to them, to help them, to wrap my arms around them, to comfort them when they most need it.  Lesson learned:  Sometimes failure is the only option ... and it sucks.

Yup, every day I fail me a little.  But as they say in these parts, "What to do, yannih?"  I take the good with the bad and move on, and hopefully a little growth will come of it.  Hopefully the multitude of failures accumulated over the years will help define a successful lifetime.

May we all fail a little so that we may grow a little, and ultimately emerge triumphant.

"You build on failure. You use it as a stepping stone. Close the door on the past. You don't try to forget the mistakes, but you don't dwell on it. You don't let it have any of your energy, or any of your time, or any of your space." - Johnny Cash

So Many Options ... One That Pleases Me ...

So I was asked to attend a Qatari wedding again this weekend.  Truth be told, I'm actually starting to enjoy them!​  (Check out the post on Weddings in the ME.)

I was a little disappointed.  Because I can't attend.  

Why?  Because my weekend schedule is fully booked.  

My 7-yr-old is registered for a triathlon tomorrow.  Entirely non-competitive, confidence-boosting, socially-energizing and self-validating experience for a 7-yr-old.​

For a 42-yr-old mom this translates into energy-sapping, frustrating, early-weekend wakeup.  I hate that good things have to happen so early on a weekend morning.

But my fun doesn't end there.  Nooooooo.  

Immediately following the triathlon I will embark onto a fun-filled Brownie overnight camping adventure in the desert, filled with all the requisite camel spiders, hard sleeping surfaces, boiling over toilet facilities and  para-military moms (not all of them, but there ARE a few).

I wish I could fake excitement.  I wish I could feign enthusiasm at braiding a friendship bracelet, leading a scavenger hunt, saluting the Brownie flag, taking on latrine duty on the 11th shift, scalding my hands as I scorch wieners over the campfire, wrestling with tent pegs and struggling to drown out the snores coming from Brownie moms who have managed to fall into a deep, dark sleep on the cold, hard ground.

But the truth is I will be out there with a few likeminded peers craving a gin and tonic, wishing I could sneak away for a smoke, dreaming of my bed and my Soldier's arms around me.​

I liken the Brownie camping weekend to Hell.  That probably makes me decidedly unworthy of anything worthy.  But it REALLY does suck.  

Yet my daughter dreams of it all year long.  It is a definite highlight.  She hyperventilates just thinking about it.  And the most amazing thing is ... she STILL WANTS ME TO GO WITH HER.

Other girls her age are quite offended to have their moms tag along.  My daughter begs me to.  She says it won't be fun at all if I am not there.  Check my blog next year to see if this still applies.  I am one of the lucky ones.  

And so my HELL becomes my REDEMPTION.​

I am faced with so many options this weekend ... yet only one that pleases me;  the one that displeases me the most.  To spend some quality time in the stinking desert with my totally amazing daughter.  To get to build some memories with her that will last a lifetime.  If not for her, at least for me.  

To watch her as she participates in something 'bigger than her' (see "Something Bigger Than Me"), and watch her eyes grow wide in amazement as she sees the older girls perform a skit around the campfire.  To see her eyes light up with wonder as we walk through a desert trail in the night, observing the constellations, wondering what lies out there in that vast unchartered landscape.  To feel her joy as she joins in in sing-along's she's practiced all year.  To sense her contentment as she lies down next to me at night, safely ensconced in her sleeping bag, head nestled on her princess pillow, knowing that she is surrounded by friends of all ages, all races, all cultures, all religions, all nations, knowing that they are her peers, her equals, her sisters from different mothers.

And I will spend a torturous and sleepless night.  And I will gripe about it; probably all year long.  My fellow cool Brownie moms who don't attend will thank me for it.  My husband will owe me for it.  My ​daughter will love me for it.  But in the end, I had an option.  And this was the one that pleased me.

In the end, we always have a choice.  And the choice makes the difference.  I've chosen to live my life with no regrets ... this always makes me think about my options and the choices I make.  One choice may give me immediate gratification and leave me with nothing in return.  The other choice may give me pain and hardship in the short-term, yet leave me with a lifetime of happy memories.  When you look at it that way, it becomes much easier to sort through your options.

Thank grodness I've got a galss of wine tonitgh!  It's the shrot-temr gartification that'l cronvince me that tomorrow's hrardship will leaf me happy!​  LOL!

Cheers!​

Crossing the Finish Line - Triathlon 2012!​

Crossing the Finish Line - Triathlon 2012!​

​Daisy Scout Campout 2012 - Al Shahaniya

​Daisy Scout Campout 2012 - Al Shahaniya

​Setting up the tent ... Al Shahaniya 2012

​Setting up the tent ... Al Shahaniya 2012

​Daisy Scout Fun ... 2012 Al Shahaniya

​Daisy Scout Fun ... 2012 Al Shahaniya

That Teeny Tiny Voice in Me that Roars

It's often been said that I speak softly.  Sometimes too softly.  

During a recent monthly meeting, my manager suggested I add "speaking more loudly" to my performance objectives this year.  I laughed at his joke.  He didn't.  Apparently he has a really hard time hearing me.

It's not that I'm not capable of speaking loudly ... those who know me will attest to that.  I can turn it up for a presentation, bring it up a notch if I'm particularly passionate about something, and really crank it up to "smart" volume if I've got a glass or two of vino in me.   And let's just say that my fifth repeat of a simple instruction to kiddo is pretty much guaranteed to register at 115 decibels.  

But in general, I am a "soft-talker".

Strangely enough, I come from a very loud family.  I am the youngest of 5 siblings, all of whom have no trouble at all making themselves heard.  My father has a booming voice; my mother is from a family of 18 kids who don't realize the neighbors don't have to be party to every discussion from across the way.  My constant complaint growing up was that I could never finish a sentence without someone in my family cutting me off.  The response was usually "Well, speak up if you want to be heard!"

I worked as a consultant for a number of years.  That job required quite a bit of workshop facilitation.  After my first experience facilitating, I was given training on assertive communication.  One of the exercises was to deliver a speech at one end of a 150 foot corridor to a single audience member seated at the other end.  Another was to practice delivery of speeches in a room by myself facing a mirror.  I have to admit the exercises were very useful, and really did help me identify many of my quirks.  

They also helped me to focus specifically on how my voice carries when presenting to a roomful of people.  I'm a much more confident and 'vocal' speaker as a result.  I am not afraid to speak up in a meeting, I don't get nervous facilitating a group, my voice doesn't tremble when addressing a crowd, and in general I remember to speak loudly and clearly.  But I still always preface a presentation with "If you're having trouble hearing me, please don't hesitate to make a sign or ask me to speak up."

​Despite all this insight and focus, I still have moments when my voice seems to leave me.  These tend to be (a) when I am speaking to a smaller audience, (b) about to say something I fear is controversial or likely to be met with resistance, (c) standing too close to someone and concerned about my breath ~, or (d) trying to be a gentle disciplinarian.

The irony is that it is usually in all of those moments (well, except 'c' perhaps) that I should be displaying my strongest, loudest voice as a show of confidence and bravado.  But there is an instinct in me that quiets my external voice as soon as my internal voice starts to boom.  Many times in those situations I will have to repeat my convictions, and inevitably my voice will get stronger and louder as I do so.  It's as if the more times I say something, the more my vocal chords are prepared to work with me; as if my brain has to convince them through repetition.​

But I must say that in some instances, particularly here in the ME, my teeny tiny voice has served me very well.​  In general, to a non-Arabic speaker, Arabic can sound like a loud, rather harsh language, making my voice seem even smaller than it is.  Whether in jest, in small talk or in serious conversation, Arabs most always seem to be arguing, particularly to the unaccustomed ear of one who has not been in the ME for any length of time.  I'm certain that initially my quiet voice has come across to some as subservient or docile, which is most definitely not the case.

As a woman working in an extremely male-dominated society, my "soft" hard approach has allowed me a gradual entry into internal business dealings and relationships without resorting to outright confrontation or abject humiliation.  A colleague once said to me "I don't think I've ever been told to 'f' off so gently or eloquently."  Another was reminiscing over a past dispute we'd had and said "I was actually a few miles down the road before I realized I'd agreed to the exact thing I'd told myself I'd never agree to."

This morning was an example of my teeny tiny voice failing me.  This most often happens at home, as was the case today.  I repeatedly, firmly, and quietly told my daughter that I had placed some supplies for an after-school-activity in the outside pocket of her bag.  I asked her if she would remember.  Over Cheerios and hair braiding she assured me she would.  I could have sworn she'd heard.

Yet as soon as I picked her up from the school yard, she cried out in front of her monitor that I had neglected to pack her supplies in her bag!  Sighhhhhh ....

I could have sworn that calm, reassuring, patient, teeny tiny voice in me had roared that morning.  But like more and more mornings lately, it would appear I was on 'mute' when speaking to kiddo.  Apparently my delivery still needs a lot of work.  ​

Uploaded by MrGooch2706 on 2012-05-28.