The day after my last post ended, I decided to take Leah and Ine to Westmoreland State Park. We had the most beautiful weather in September, and Westmoreland's beach is something I have heard a great deal about from many local friends. I was trying to get Ine out of the house and away from her phone a little bit, so this seemed like a good choice of activity. Leah is a water-baby, and could happily live at the beach (as could I) so it was settled. We went to church that morning, then packed a picnic, and headed out. It was the perfect day for it--blue skies, great temperatures, a good bit of sun. We set up our little area on the sand and Leah had fun in the water while Ine and I relaxed in our chairs (I may have dozed off several times). Not being used to Virginia's sun, Ine got quite sunburned, but she recovered nicely. We took a leisurely walk as far as the park would allow us, and Leah picked up lots of feathers on the way, which she happily stowed in her feather jar when we got home. We didn't find any sharks teeth, however, which is apparently what Westmoreland is famous for, so I was kind of disappointed about that! It was a lovely, relaxing afternoon, however.
When last I blogged, we were looking forward to going to see Frozen on Ice. We drove down to Richmond after an early dinner at home and had no problem finding the Coliseum or procuring parking. Ine knew we were going, but I kept it a secret from Leah, so when we arrived, she was so powerfully excited. We had nice seats from which to view the show, the bottom tier back row dead center along the side where we could see the entire performance just fine. It started out with a Disney on Ice welcome--lots of princesses skating around including Leah's favorite Cinderella and my favorite, Rapunzel. Then the show kicked off and we got to see most of the movie performed by ice skaters. It was a wonderful show--Disney doesn't mess around! They used the soundtrack and dialogue from the movie, so the skaters were lip synching the entire time, but it was wonderful. The wolves were scary, as was the snow monster, but Olaf was as fun as he always is, Anna and Elsa and Kristoff were great, Prince Hans dastardly, the Duke of Weaseltown had his hair flipping around. All the fun of the movie was brought to life. It was a great deal of fun and I was glad to get to take the girls, who were entranced and enjoyed the whole thing. And of course, "Let It Go" was a real showstopper.
The princesses enjoying the show |
Because I had concerns over how Ine was responding to our family and not really seeming to be very happy, AFS spoke with her during the orientation period, which seemed to help. She started coming out of her room and out of her shell a bit more, which I noticed almost as soon as I picked her up on Saturday. This made me quite relieved, as I knew she was shy, but she had been SO quiet, really too quiet. Having other teenagers around helped too.
After the orientation, there was a birthday party for one of the AFSers so I picked the girls up there and drove them back to Fredericksburg. It was fun to see the kids in action as a group, I really think they have a wonderful group of kids this year. In past years when I would pick up my student, they were huddled together by country, sharing their language and not really intermingling at all. This group was all speaking English, all talking together, hanging out together, and having a grand time. They are in contact a lot, coming up with plans for weekends, and I think they will have a great year, despite being spread across Virginia. They will get together again in December for an international students Christmas dinner, and they have a mid-stay orientation in February, I think. And they are trying to work out a time to go to Kings Dominion for the Halloween fright festival. So we'll see if that happens.
Ine and Jana at the Natural Bridge formation |
This week, we have worked hard on bonding more as a family. I was concerned a bit that Leah and Ine weren't bonding better--obviously they are not going to be best friends given that there is 13 years between them, but neither one was very interested in the other. I never really thought about Leah's adjustment during this process, I just sort of assumed that given she likes everyone, she would be ok with a new person in the house. But now that she is older, it is definitely harder on her not to be the star of the show all the time. I gained some encouragement from Ine's mom as well, so I tried to think of some ways that we could do things as a family and have some fun. Ultimately, for some reason, I hit on board games at dinner, but I wanted something non-competitive that wouldn't make it so Leah felt the need to cheat and rig the game to her advantage like she normally does--the kid HATES to lose. For some reason, Jenga game to mind and I picked up a set while shopping.
I haven't played Jenga in forever and as far as I know, Leah has never played. Ine has played it before and enjoyed it, so I let her and Leah set up the game while I made dinner and then Ine and I taught Leah how to play. We played twice--Leah knocked over the tower the first time, but not before we got it pretty high, and I knocked it over the second time, which crowned Ine the Jenga champion of the day. It was lot of fun and we had a lot of laughs while we played, so I think it was a good idea. We won't do it all the time, but it was fun nonetheless. I'm looking forward to another family game night the next time we all sit together for dinner!
After dinner, Ine brought out some presents for Leah--she had gotten her an apron, chefs hat, and backpack at a fairy tale park in the Netherlands that is akin to DisneyWorld. They all have the same princess on them. Leah fell hard and fast in love with the goodies, and really that was all she needed to turn it around. Ine is now her best friend again. haha After that we went for a walk around the neighborhood and Leah wore the hat on our excursion. She was quite a sight to see, rolling down the hill on her pink scooter with her pink hat!!! She also traded in her old Disney Princess backpack for the new bag Ine gave her and is using that for school. She is extremely disappointed that no one has noticed her new bag, however. So when I took her into school on Friday, she made darned sure that her teacher admired it!!! Which cracked me up.
Thursday night there was a party for the international students at Fredericksburg Academy. It was hosted at one of the host family's houses here in town, and the international students and their host families all came to enjoy each other's company and get to know each other better. The house was lovely and they had a barbeque for everyone to enjoy. They had a bocci ball set, so Leah decided that Ine and Jana and I would play and she would be the referee. There were other young children there, so it didn't go that well, as the balls kept getting swiped and disappearing, but we managed to play for a while before Ine and Jana took off to play basketball with Jana's host father.
We had a lovely dinner and I sat and visited with Jana's hostmom, Karen, who is taking the girls dress shopping for Homecoming today. We were able to compare hosting notes and discuss how everything is going and enjoy a meal together. I really like their family, and it is a great resource for families--we get an orientation before the kids arrive, and then we are left to our own devices to figure it out after that. Of course we have AFS and our liaison we can contact at any time, but it's nice to sit with the other families and connect and talk.
Mastering the paper cutter |
Ine had yesterday off school, and spent much of the day working on homework, while I was out and about meeting friends for my morning walk, going to the dump, and following up with my surgeon. When I got home, I put Ine in the car and we went to see about getting her a cell phone that she can use to call or text me or her local friends. I agreed to spring for the phone and the first month's service, and after that it is up to her, and we didn't want to spend a whole lot of money doing it. Ultimately, we went through several different plans until we came up with an AT&T plan that will allow her to do unlimited texting plus 250 minutes of calling for $25 per month. She didn't want a separate phone from her iPhone, so we decided to buy a Sim Card and I'm proud to say we got it working and I was able to text her and she was able to text me back, so I have to believe it is working. We put her sim card from Belgium away someplace safe so that it doesn't get lost and now she has her phone connected to WiFi for data, but connected to AT&T for texting and calls, so she's in good shape. It is a relief given that she is starting to go out on her own more and I would like to have a basic way to get ahold of her and know when she's coming home, so this works out well for everyone.
Last night, we had Leah's school fall festival. We headed over at 5:00 and it was a gorgeous night, just warm but not too hot, breezy, sunny, and lovely. Leah had a great time seeing her friends, playing games, winning prizes, and doing little art projects. Afterwards we went into the cafeteria and had dinner--they had either hot dogs or nachos and then I decided to have a little fun with Ine. When I was in London last month, my friend and I bought a bunch of different kinds of junk food and had a taste test. The PTA at this festival had bought a bunch of bizarre flavors of potato chips, so I got one bag of each and we had our own little taste test. We tried ketchup, creamy dill pickle, onion, buffalo and blue cheese, and red hots.
Ine trying a buffalo and blue cheese curl |
...because I figured after spending 2 hours at the elementary school, Ine needed a happy adventure as well. So I decided to take her on my infamous night time tour of DC. We drove up around 7pm and arrived in DC at 8, smooth sailing. I started out at the US Capitol building, the dome of which is unfortunately being refurbished so is under scaffolding.
As you can see, Leah has now decided that she likes Ine and she is going to be in every picture and hold her hand. Which makes my heart very happy.
After we left the Capitol, we went to the World War II Memorial. It is just a gorgeous memorial and a quick walk to the Lincoln Memorial along the reflecting pool, which lies between. My plan was for us to do the typical stroll through the park between the two, climb the Lincoln, and then head back to the car, go to the FDR and MLK memorials and head home.
Unfortunately, as soon as we got to the WWII Memorial, it started POURING rain. It held off long enough that I could get a halfway decent picture of Ine in front of the Virginia column, so she is now an official Virginian, but you can see, her coat is already zipped up, and we were expecting the worst. That morning, I had been out walking with friends and it had started to sprinkle, and we kept walking, so if it was just a sprinkle, I'd have said, "Oh well, we won't die", but this was a really good, heavy rain. Leah was whining about it, so we got back in the car and drove to the Lincoln Memorial, which is something of an affront to my tourism sensibilities, but a mom's gotta do what a mom's gotta do. I asked Leah and Ine where they had seen the Lincoln Memorial before, but neither one could tell me it was on the back of the Penny. Then I asked them if they knew what Abraham Lincoln was famous for, but neither one could tell me that either. So I gave them a brief history lesson and then we decided to part ways--Ine wanted to take the stairs up but Leah was afraid it would be too slippery and opted for the elevator. We met inside the statuary chamber for another picture.
After that, I decided we would just come back another night for the other memorials. Right near the Lincoln Memorial are the Korean War Veterans Memorial, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Independence Island, and the WWI Memorial, but we really couldn't get to any of them in the rain--the stone is very slick and slippery, so I didn't want to chance it. I wanted to also go to the FDR and MLK, as I mentioned, but they are both outside, and I didn't think it would be good timing given the rain. So we drove home. Leah was sound asleep within about 2 minutes. And frankly my butt was dragging--the last 15 miles of that drive were WORK. I was tired, it was a busy day to say the least.
So that brings everyone up to speed on where we are today... Things are getting smoother and smoother here, I'm proud of Ine's accomplishments, proud of the fact she is making plans to go out with friends and participate at school, happy she is doing more with Leah and me, and we are enjoying her. She is a lovely girl.
In the coming weeks, we will venture to NYC, go to the Virginia State Fair, Ine will go to a theater festival, we will enjoy a fall festival at a local farm, and more. I'm so glad fall is here, it is my favorite time of the year! I will enjoy sharing it with both girls.
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