Basel

Long, long ago last week before there were wasp stings and cortisone treatments and side effects of cortisone treatments, I had a birthday. I am 41. Here is what I did. Zeus planned to be around home that day to hold down the fort. I left him with an easy lunch for those children, and then I drove to pick up Tata for an outing to Basel. Once every six weeks or so she goes to her hairdresser in Basel and gets a taste of the big city, so this time we planned that I would go along. From here by car, it is actually quicker to go through France, so that is what we did. It takes about an hour. It was a lovely day, and once we had navigated numerous tiny French villages with bad signing and the busy approach to downtown Basel, we parked and walked around the old city. I accompanied Tata on foot to the hairdresser where I was introduced to Olivier, he of the intense eye and swooping bang. “AH!” he said intensely fixing me with his sharp brown gaze, “The American!!”
“er… yeah.” I mumbled and excused myself, feeling not so gorgeously dressed and therefore perhaps a bad fashion representative of my country. Then I had a lovely two hours to myself in downtown Basel, going into shops, going out of shops, hunting in vain for a crock pot, buying cheddar cheese, at last finding a few fun new items of clothing to buy with some birthday money. Here is what struck me as I meandered around: IMG_0380 A whole wall of Barbapapa goodies!!! Barbapapa is a French cartoon character that is like a blob of playdoh with eyes who can change into any shape he likes. His wife and many covenant children who are pictured above also have this amazing ability. Hep, hep, hep, and he’s a boat to take the whole family sailing! Hep, hep, hep, and he’s a carousel ride for the town children while his wife becomes a circus tent and the children all the circus animals!  At parties back home, when the children needed a little down time, we’d put on a Barbapapa DVD and they were mesmerized. None of our little friends seemed to mind that it was all in French. They just knew that this was the right kind of guy to have around – hey, he might turn into a rocket ship! Hep, hep, hep, une bonne chose de faite! IMG_0379 There was also a large display of all things Hedgehog. IMG_0381 And another one with a basket of my favorite things:  mushrooms! However, upstairs in the housewares, there was a definite style trend towards all things and colors American. Interesting, isn’t it? In the States, to sell something we put a “Euro” prefix on it: a Eurotreatment, a Eurospa, a Eurotoothbrush. What that usually means is “more expensive.” We decorate with maps of France and Italy and miniature Eiffel towers. Well, looky what they’re doing over here! IMG_0377 IMG_0378 The map on the pillow says, “Lexington United.” I have never heard of that country. In another store, while looking at a rack of filmy t-shirts with the label “American Vintage” selling for CHF 79 (approximately $79) and thinking that I had never paid $79 for a t-shirt, filmy, vintage or otherwise, my cell phone rang, and I got another nice birthday gift: Zeus was calling me to tell me he had just gotten a nice job offer from a certain Swiss pharmaceutical company headquartered right there in Basel! We would not actually have to survive the winter eating moldy apples from the orchard! Very nice news indeed, but it still didn’t make me want to buy an overpriced t-shirt. I found mine a little later at a better deal. IMG_0391 An architectural detail that pleased me IMG_0388 The Basler Rathaus, or town hall, with daily market. It is painted a very dramatic red with details painted out in bright gold, green and blue, but why there was a huge optical weirdness flag hanging in front I did not learn. It is making my eyes weird out just looking at the photo. I do not approve. IMG_0389 On the Rathaus square, a very busy place to catch trams. I am a little embarrassed to say how nice it felt to be anonymous in a big city, no one knowing my business, and no one really caring either, not even the lady in the housewares department of one store where I asked about a crock pot. “No, don’t have one, muttermuttermutter.” When the matter was pursued, it turned out that they could order one for me, but you had to do blahblahblahblah and anyway she wasn’t about to tell me about it. Oh, well – my money walks. Basel is a nice city – like all Swiss cities somewhat modest, but somehow less uptight than Zurich and less pompous than Geneva. It seems a decent mix of the normal and the international, bordering as it does on two other countries. Erasmus of Rotterdam lived in Basel, which is why I believe he was called “of Rotterdam.” If he’d stayed there, he would have had to have a different nickname, like Mr. Longnose. Erasmus He is the most famous Humanist of the Renaissance, and his work in preparing a new Greek New Testament paved the way for the Reformation. Both Martin Luther and John Calvin were reading Erasmus’ Greek New Testament when they came to understand that Scripture taught grace by faith alone. He agreed with them about many of the abuses of the Catholic church, but in the end, thought they went too far in separating from it, and he stayed in the Catholic church. He also tightly held to the doctrine of man’s free will. And that’s Erasmus! Okay, all done little history lesson for the day. After a couple hours Tata and I met up again, and she took me to lunch at a very chic restaurant overlooking the Rhine River – it’s just at the far end of the bridge. IMG_0383 The Rhine has grown quite a bit since last we saw her, high in the Alps. IMG_0384 Here she has grown into the big river that makes the border between Switzerland and Germany from Lake Constance to Basel, and then from Basel cuts north and forms the border between France and Germany for hundreds of kilometers. IMG_0399 This was the view from the restroom of the restaurant. IMG_0395 Back up above at street level and looking north and across the bridge downriver, you can see the buildings in the distance which belong to Novartis, the aforementioned pharmaceutical company. I have learned that it is a larger company than Microsoft, which put things into better perspective for me. Wow. Our lunch finished, Tata and I puttered some more in shops,and she made me a present of a gorgeous flower arrangement that is still gracing Tante Lina’s buffet. IMG_0401 We loaded up the car, made our way out of the city, through all the French villages with bad signing, back across the border to our own village. Where my family was preparing a dinner party! IMG_0404  with a traditional Lego creation – this time a train that actually moved on the track! IMG_0407 and a delicious gluten-free cake with berries from the garden! IMG_0414 Thank you everyone for a wonderful day!

Stupid evil wasp of iniquity

So Sunday afternoon just after I’d taken those pictures in the previous post of a mellow Sunday afternoon reading under the trees, tra la la, I got up to take dishes back to the kitchen and out of nowhere a wasp stung me on the arm (in the triceps, for those who’d like to know.) Nasty thing! It hurt like heck, of course, but I was brave and took the dishes in anyway on my way to the medicine cabinet. I slathered it in tea tree oil and stuck on a band-aid (Snoopy!) and didn’t think much more about it. The next day my arm didn’t hurt much but I had weird muscle pain in my back between my shoulder blades. Then it moved to my chest. As the day progressed, I started feeling really out of it and a little dizzy. I began wondering if the pain was caused by the wasp venom. I took a bath to soak it out (?) and headed for bed. I think maybe Zeus thought I was crabby, but I was just super tired and couldn’t think very clearly. This morning the pain had moved down to my left hand and was making it all tingly. I was also much dizzier and faint and blurry thoughted, and I started thinking that this was really weird. I’ve been stung before without any reaction like this. So I did a search on the internet (!). I found an informative site that had helpful news links in the side bar: Camper Dies after Bee Stung! Grandma Killed by Wasp Sting on Hand! The site information explained the different grades of reactions to stings: a local reaction at the sting site: bothersome but not too worrisome, and systemic reaction where badness (to use the medical term) travels somewhere else in your body and causes reactions there. A severe systemic reaction is what we know as anaphylactic shock. The symptoms listed were these: hives, faintness, dizziness, tingly of extremities, wheezing, difficulty swallowing, tingly feeling of lips and mouth, confused thinking. Yikes! Now I know that anaphylactic shock is something that occurs within minutes if not seconds of a sting. It sounded like I was having shock reeeeaaaaally slooooooowly. I know I can be kinda slow sometimes, but c’mon! Still, it was worrisome: my extremity was tingling and I kept feeling like I was going to black out. Wasn’t my tongue feeling kind of tingly too? And my lips? Or was that because I was just squeezing them together? Was that swallow as easy as the last one? Aaaa! Finally I called the village doctor and made an appointment. Sigh. On Thursday night Zeus and I had gone over the budget. We have some nice pricey health insurance (mandatory in Switzerland), and to save a little money we opted for higher deductibles and prayer. We decided we just wouldn’t go to the doctor this year – we’d avoid him altogether! – maybe not so realistic with four kids. But we’d be super healthy after all, right? from all those fresh mountain herbs and cheese? Sigh. I was the first one to go and in the end, it’s a good thing. I wasn’t being a hypochondriac after all. The doctor said my symptoms were kind of classic for a delayed reaction or serum sickness. He gave me an oral cortisone to take for three days along with my anti-histamine, and told me that next time my chances are about 50% of having a similar or greater reaction, and I should start carrying the cortisone around with me. He gave me a cute little keychain box to keep them in. IMG_0452 So, relieved, I swallowed the meds and went home for a nap, which is what I had wanted to do all day, but had been a little afraid to as there was no one home but Hermes to poke me if I just slipped off and away into unconsciousness. Now with the kids home from school and some cortisone in the system, I let them fend for themselves and did a major flop. After the flop, my brain started thinking a little more clearly and I felt a little better. Still dizzy and tired, but better. I went to bed early again. But now I am suspecting that whatever cortisone does it must also stimulate ADRENALINE because it’s 4:42 am and I’ve been AWAKE for three hours!! And feeling wordy and chatty!! The doctor did say that generally, it should be taken in the morning. Hmmm… So I feel like I lost two days in there. I was going to paint a wall in the kitchen today (our landlady said I could!), but it was a no go. Rats! It will have to wait.

Giving homeschoolers a good name, and You Can Too!

If that sounds like an offer you can’t refuse — it is! But first a story. ***** Along with all the difficult moments of starting school in another language and culture there are some bright spots and some surprises. In Artemis’ science class the teacher has been reviewing some basic biology facts, but it turns out they are not so basic. In one instance she asked the class which were the Five Kingdoms of Living Things. Plants and Animals everybody knew. With some prodding she got someone to come up with bacteria – the Monera Kingdom. But no one knew the other two – except, you guessed it: Artemis!  The Kingdoms Protista and Fungi, of course! Then, next class while discussing Fungi, who alone knew that besides mushrooms and toadstools, yeast is another very important kind of fungi?  Yes! You are right again: Artemis! Five_king After class her teacher stopped her to ask if she had taken a lot of biology last year. “Well…” says Artemis slowly, “we did have a science coop with some friends last year, and we went over a lot of this stuff.” “Ah, yes, because you did school at home?” The teacher has heard about our homeschooling ahead of time, apparently. “Yes, and well… My mom and another friend made up a bunch of songs to help us remember science facts. That’s why I know them.” “Really!” exclaims the interested teacher. “Just for you and your friends?” “Well, actually they made a CD that should be coming out sometime very soon.” The teacher exclaims some more and professes interest in having a copy of the CD when it is ready. WELL, PEOPLE, IT’S ALMOST READY!!! ***** It’s true! And here you thought I was just sitting around communing with the cows and making hot meals for everybody. No way! I, and my scientifically musical partner Julie, are scientifically musical recording artists! This was actually a project that came together just before we left the States. It’s been in production since, and while I always meant to tell you about it, now I think it’s better this way, anyway, because now it’s almost ready! I can create excitement in the market! So if you would like you and your kids, homeschooled or no, to effortlessly learn the names of the planets, the five requirements for life, the continents and oceans, the five kingdoms of living things, kinds of rocks, the classification system, the families of vertebrates and Much Much More, you need to get our CD! It is called All Around Us – Singing Science, and when the moment has definitely arrived when they are available for purchase, I will tell you here how to get your copy. I could continue, and tell you how when we went to see nearby dinosaur prints last weekend, all of my kids knew without a doubt that those prints were embedded in SEDIMENTARY ROCK! but that is another post. Until then, watch this space and get ready to sing!

Do you speak soccer?

er….I mean football? Making new acquaintances has been difficult for the children. Not by any means discounting the inclusive group of girls in Athena’s class, our kids are now in that peculiar stage in between making new acquaintances and making friends. Now matter how inclusive they are, you are still the new kid amongst a small group that has been together for from five to nine years and you don’t really always understand what they are saying. We try to do our part, like giving Artemis and three classmates a ride back from the pool this morning so they wouldn’t have to walk in the rain. Or buying an inordinate number of overpriced chocolates from Athena and her classmates for the Swiss Historic Foundation. I even kept a lid on it and did not share my personal thoughts on making captive public schoolchildren do your fundraising  dirty work. Just smiled and opened the wallet.  But still, it’s tough and awkward when you can’t express yourself. When you are trapped behind words that won’t appear on your tongue. Or maybe they do appear and you are brave and try them out and still no one understands what you are trying to say. Or worse they make fun of what you say. I am grateful at least that I know what it feels like and can commiserate. Who is having the hardest time depends on the day, but at the beginning Apollo was definitely in a funk. He is at an age where the concept of being from somewhere else and speaking a different language and yet still being a person worth knowing has yet to enter the group consciousness. (Artemis has a different story: the girls with who she rides the train think it is just so exciting that she is from Seattle, where Microsoft is, where Bella from Twilight went shopping!! ooo la la!! But, they wonder, do we like living in a house here? Don’t all Americans live in apartment buildings?) I got the impression that the other kids in Apollo’s class just didn’t know what to do with him, and he, feeling awkward, responded somewhat sullenly to the overtures which were made, which led to more awkwardness and frustration. Arg! And this was before one of the kids started calling him Teacher’s Pet every time her back was turned (new vocabulary: “chou chou” – now you know.) Apollo is also a boy, and boys need to do stuff. Girls, if they have the right vocabulary, can make friends talking over the various merits of different kinds of candy wrappers, but boys need an activity upon which to base their relationship. So good heavens, praises be for soccer…or rather, football, or better yet le football. The first week when Apollo was feeling very low, Zeus took the boys to the playground, and then who should they see arriving for practice but the soccer team! Zeus had just that day been trying to find out information about it, so he ran over and talked to the coach who was very accommodating. It was only their second practice of the year and most of the team hadn’t made it to the first. So my boys zipped home (about 2 minutes away), changed into soccer duds and cleats (brought from the USA for such a time as this), and zipped back for Apollo’s first practice. Here it is – he is in green on the right. This picture also tells another story. I keep telling you how close we are to the French border. Here you can see: the soccer field is in Switzerland, the corn field is in Switzerland, and the houses are in France. soccer practice After that practice one of the other boys kept saying, within in our hearing, and about Apollo, “Il est fort, eh? Il est fort!” He’s really good, huh?! He’s really good!  I don’t know whether or not he really was, but I so appreciated this boy’s saying so. Made me want to kiss him on the nose. (but I didn’t) The following Saturday was the team’s first game. It was very hot and Apollo was exhausted from a week of school in French, but he did alright. Hurray for soccer where it doesn’t matter if you don’t say a lot – just have to work to get the ball into the net. IMG_0164 After that game the coach remembered that Apollo really is not allowed to play an an official game without his “soccer license.” No joke, we had to get a passport sized photo of him and send in a form to some high authority, and now we are awaiting his “license.” Wouldn’t want to kick that ball without a license now, would we?! IMG_0169 The practices are long – two hours on Wednesday afternoon, but only once a week, except for this week when there are two. I don’t know why. However, the practice field is about a 7 minute walk – an under 5 minute scooter ride. So Apollo can scoot himself over there on his own. He scoots home more slowly two hours later, exhausted and famished, stumbling into the kitchen and immediately inhaling anything in sight that’s edible. But it’s worth it; he is a part of something and he belongs to a team.