Check out The Oracle of Starbucks.
I don’t promise accuracy (apparently based on my favorite drink, I’m likely to be a stripper), but it’s funny.
Try decaf triple nonfat espresso…
Check out The Oracle of Starbucks.
I don’t promise accuracy (apparently based on my favorite drink, I’m likely to be a stripper), but it’s funny.
Try decaf triple nonfat espresso…
Yankee fans will miss The Scooter…
We spent a long weekend in Newport, RI. This was Jazz Fest weekend, an annual event for us, but the first with Victoria.
We drove up on Thursday. It’s a bit of a long drive. You can do it in about 3 hours and 15 minutes with no traffic. But no traffic on I-95 means you are driving at 3 am.
Friday was supposed to be a rainy day, so we were planning to go to a nearby (sort of, about 45 minutes) aquarium. Plenty of indoor things to look at. And it rained hard. But not just rain, it was freezing. We get there and the minimal time you have to be outside was too much. Everyone was freezing. We get to one big indoor exhibit and I walk around with Danielle while my wife stays with Victoria.
This became a tricky day because Victoria had diarrhea and Danielle had attitude. Danielle is clearly going through an adjustment period. She loves her baby sister, but she’s acting out in different ways. On this day she was a handful.
But Saturday was another day. This was the day we went to Jazz Fest. And the weather completely turned around. We couldn’t have had a more beautiful day. It was about 75 degrees, not a cloud in the sky, a nice breeze coming off the water. The Newport Jazz Fest is in a beautiful spot on the water. The music wasn’t as great as last year, but everything else was. Good food, weather, stuff for Danielle to do. Just a perfect day. Tori was over her diarrhea and Danielle was over her attitude (well, mostly).
We’ve moved directly from adoption mode to moving mode. There’s a lot to do. We gave our nanny this week off as a vacation week, since my wife and I knew that we’d both be home. Plus we are going to Newport, RI, Thursday through Sunday (it’s jazz fest weekend) so it seemed like a good week to give her off.
In hindsight it may not have been the smartest move. Did I mention there’s a lot to do?
Danielle has been spending a ton of time lately with her friend Cordelia. They are truly best friends. So on Monday she actually stayed with Cordelia while we went to our storage place to get the last of the baby stuff that we needed. That was very handy.
Today we were hoping to do the same. I needed to wait at our new place for the cable guy (four hour window: 10 – 2) and my wife was meeting with a decorator to help figure out what to do with our new place.
I would have never considered a decorator until we got this place. I love the space, but the main living/dining area is just a huge rectangle. The rooms aren’t really delineated. It’s the classic blank piece of paper problem. What do you do? There are too many options. So given that my wife and I both had things going on, Danielle being with her best friend would be very helpful.
But this morning New York got hit with major rain storms, flooding and tornados (well, at least one tornado, which is very unusual for New York City). Every subway line was affected. So Cordelia’s nanny couldn’t get to work and all plans went haywire.
In the morning, the new plan was to get Victoria to take a nap, I’d go to the new place and wait for the cable guy and my wife would be with Danielle and wait for the decorator. Only Danielle decides she wants to be with me.
Let’s consider this decision. Going to our new place and waiting for the cable guy. Following the rain storm, we are having the hottest, most humid day of the year. We haven’t installed air conditioning in our new place yet. There’s no furniture, toys, food, TV (at least until the cable guy gets there). So why exactly does she want to go with me? Because she’s four.
So I grab a couple toys, a small soccer ball, a couple snacks and my laptop (need to be able to test the cable modem). Danielle is surprising good in a very boring situation. We play some soccer in the apartment (hey, no furniture, you have to take advantage). I’m able to pirate some WiFi, so we play some computer games (nickjr.com – mainly Blues Clues). I order a pizza for lunch. I brought some Play Doh so she plays with that.
Did I mention that it’s really hot? We are both drenched with sweat (maybe soccer wasn’t such a good idea).
The cable guy finally gets there. That’s good because once he’s finished we have TV. The decorator has already arrived at our old place (to see our existing furniture) and is on her way over to the new place with my wife and Victoria.
She needs both me and my wife for various decisions. OK, let’s recall. I’m a guy. I want the place to look nice, but I’d be perfectly happy for my wife to decide and inform me what is happening. Frankly I’d pay extra to be left out of it. My wife knows this. She’d like me to be a part of it, but when Danielle starts to get restless (she’s now been in this apartment for about five hours) she tells Danielle that she can leave with me.
Now Danielle wants to stay with her Mom.
Honestly, my daughter is just making crazy decisions. She wants me when that means going to the hot boring place and she wants my wife when it means staying longer at the hot boring place. But there’s no arguing with a four year old. Well, that’s not true. There’s actually lots of arguing with a four year old. It just isn’t very logical.
Finally Danielle decides to leave with me. We go back to our nice cool place. At this point I’m hot, tired and irritable. I take Victoria as well so I can feed her while my wife finishes up with the decorator.
I get Danielle some dinner and I start to feed Victoria. She’s just starting solids, so this can be an adventure but she’s been doing pretty well with it. Not tonight. She doesn’t want to open her mouth, she’s not keeping food in her mouth, finally she does a nice huge spit up all over her clothes. I’m just not happy at this point.
I come out of the bathroom where I’ve disrobed Victoria and cleaned her up and Danielle comes over to me. “Papi, I have something for you” she says. And she gives me a big hug. “That’s because you’re having a hard day”.
No matter how bad your day is, when your four year old gives you a hug to cheer you up, life is good.
This is a convention that I would love to attend but would so clearly be out-geeked at. If you aren’t familiar with it, it is a convention for serious hackers.
One amusing thing that happened was that they busted some Dateline producer who tried to attend without a press pass so that she could get some hidden footage of hackers talking with federal agents. It is a well known fact that feds attend the conference to learn tricks of the trade. DefCon apparently holds a “spot the Fed” contest, which is supposedly a good natured thing.
But this Dateline producer was not treated like a good natured thing. She was basically booted and filmed and they tried to turn the tables and make her answer questions the way Dateline would. Kind of amusing.
First of all, this is what she looks like:
Oh yeah, she looks a lot like a hacker. Please. One YouTube commentator joked:
“She was probably really easy to spot, since she was probably the only girl there.”
If you want to see the video, it’s here.
But what I found most amusing was the description of the DefCon network during the convention:
“It would be fair to describe the network as “hostile”. It has been described as ‘the worlds most hostile network,’ but such descriptions are just attempts at flattery. It is recommended that if you want to connect to the DEFCON network pretend that you are sharing out your entire hard drive to 5000 hackers. You may want to bring a ‘clean’ computer that you don’t mind being infected/hacked/etc. It is considered very poor form to attempt to DoS the network; while the DEFCON staff may not do anything about such attempts it is reasonable to assume that ‘peer justice’ may be meted out. If you’re unhappy about the possible risks associated with connecting to DEFCON networks there are a couple of options: refrain from computer use for a few days or connect using another network elsewhere in Vegas (another hotel or something)”.
lol.
Seriously, this is the perfect age for adopting. You are going through so much craziness, international travel, etc. But 8 months is a relatively easy age.
She’s not mobile yet. She can roll over, but you can pretty much put her in one place and not worry. She’s not overly fragile. She’s sleeping pretty well (last two nights she slept through the night).
Maybe we just got lucky and maybe it’s because she’s our second so we know the drill, but this is a good age to start with.
And she’s a very happy baby…
OK, here’s the full story of our trip. This will be a long blog.
We start out early on Thursday morning, flying to Guatemala City via Houston. The flights aren’t bad, though we sat for an hour on the runway in Houston waiting out a storm. We arrive in Guatemala around 12:30 local time. We gained two hours because Guatemala doesn’t observe Daylight Savings Time.
The airport was very interesting. They are doing major renovations and it looks like it will ultimately be pretty nice. They are billing it as soon to be the best airport in Central America. Maybe it will be. But for now it means that due to construction there is only one exit. Everyone is herded (the only appropriate verb) through this very narrow gauntlet. It’s literally about six feet wide, with taxi drivers, family, vendors, whatever on the other side of a fence. So if one person stops to tie their shoelace, the whole procession is halted. And this one exit leads to one street where every bus, taxi, shuttle, etc. must drive by. So it’s just total chaos. Welcome to Guatemala.
Eventually the van for our hotel arrives and we get there. The hotel is nice. We call the person from our agency and she says they’ll be over in an hour with the baby. Meanwhile, all Danielle wants to do is go to the pool.
So an hour later, the foster mother and the person from our agency show up with our baby. She looks good. Not as skinny as we thought from the pictures. She goes to my wife with no issues. She sits on my lap and I give her a bottle while Danielle also sits on my lap.
My wife spends about 20 minutes talking with the foster mother in Spanish to get all of her likes, dislikes, habits, etc. Then the foster mother gives her a kiss, cries and they leave. The whole thing was less than half an hour. It kind of felt like, “here’s your baby. See ya.”
But Victoria was totally fine. I really thought that she would be freaking out, being held and taken care of by total strangers. But she had zero issues. She’s a happy, sweet baby. Honestly, Danielle will be the one making the bigger adjustment. She’s very happy with Victoria, but going from being an only child to having a baby sister is a big change for her.
We did discover one interesting fact that we didn’t know before. We were under the impression that the birth mother was simply a poor single woman who couldn’t keep her baby. That isn’t the case. The birth mother is married with five children. The problem was that her husband is not Victoria’s father. A Guatemalan soap opera. Apparently she couldn’t keep the baby and keep her marriage going. So sometime down the road Victoria may be very curious about her siblings.
Next we had to wait for our driver/facilitator to come to the hotel to go over the forms we needed for the embassy appointment the next day. At this point we couldn’t keep Danielle from the pool so we went for a swim while we waited for Hugo. He went over our paperwork by the pool.
Hugo was going to pick us up the next day around 7:45 for our 8:00 embassy appointment. So we ordered some room service and tried to get some rest, since we were all exhausted from traveling. There was just one problem. Victoria (Tori, as I shall henceforth be calling her) apparently goes to sleep at 10:00, with the TV on. 10:00 feels like midnight to us given the time change. So this was a challenge. Our first task with Tori will be getting her on a better schedule (and no TV to fall asleep).
The next morning we are ready to go. We’ve been warned that you can’t take much into the embassy, so we’re traveling light. We’re waiting for Hugo. And waiting. At this point I started to think that perhaps Guatemala was one of those countries where nothing happens exactly on time. Hugo shows up at 8:05. We’re probably at the embassy and through security by around 8:30. I now see why being exactly on time isn’t that important.
This isn’t an “appointment”, it’s a mob. There are about 80 families in the embassy looking to adopt a baby. I am not exaggerating. It might have been more. There were two jam packed rooms. Hugo took our paperwork (and fees) to one window and told us to wait, then we’d be called to window 10 and then to either window 8 or 9. We’re at window 10 about an hour later. A woman asks us a few questions and tells us to wait. About 45 minutes later we’re called to window 8. A different woman asks us to raise our right hands and swear that we will be telling the truth (she was amused that Danielle did it as well). She asks a few more questions, says we’re approved and we can pick up the Visa on Monday after 3:30. That’s it.
So now it’s about noon on Friday and we have nothing to do until Monday afternoon. Actually Hugo is going to pick up the Visa for us, so all we have to do is be at the hotel. And we’ve basically been told to be very careful walking around because we are obvious targets and to definitely not walk anywhere at night. So what do we do for the next few days?
The pool.
Really, that was about it. Danielle loved the pool. My wife would take care of Victoria, bring her down to the pool some, and I would be in the pool with Danielle, trying not to fry my skin. I think an earlier blog posting mentioned the weather forecast calling for rain every day. Thankfully that wasn’t even close. It was 80 and mostly sunny every day. But the funniest part about being at the pool was that it was adoption central. At any given moment there were a half dozen adopting families at the pool. Some families were just there for a visit and some were like us finalizing the adoption. And we stayed at the one of the two recommended hotels that was supposedly “low key” in terms of adoptive families. The other hotel was supposedly even more filled with adopting families.
So you meet people very easily. It’s perfectly obvious that you have something in common. Two American parents with a Guatemalan kid. Hmm, what do you think is going on? And Danielle wanted to meet every baby so we got to meet many families going through the same thing we were going through.
We did do a tour of Antigua one day, which was the Spanish capital way back when. It has since been destroyed by volcanoes and earthquakes so there are only a few really old things to see. Hugo took us and two other adopting families. As tours go it was fairly touristy, but it did get us out of the hotel for a day.
The adoption demographic was interesting to me. I originally thought it would be mainly childless couples, but that isn’t the case. We actually fit the demographic very nicely. We saw mostly older couples, with one or more children. I suppose that makes sense. International adoption isn’t cheap, so an older more financially secure couple makes more sense.
I mentioned in my previous post that I would have an update on Spanish Wiggles (if you are not familiar with the Wiggles, skip this paragraph). The hotel had decent TV channels, but almost all in Spanish. We had Playhouse Disney, Discovery Kids, Nick, etc. For the most part they just dub Spanish voices over the regular show. But not the Wiggles. The Wiggles is apparently an international franchise. They have all the same characters and the four Wiggles have the yellow, blue, red and purple shirts. But they aren’t Greg, Anthony, Murray and Jeff. As my daughter put it, “Jeff is a girl”. No, there’s no cross dressing here, there are just four different people. True Wiggles fans will recall Fernando and little Fernando, who sang Mexican songs. Little Fernando has grown up and is the yellow shirt Wiggle.
So on Monday we get the Visa. Tuesday super early (we wake everyone up at 4:00 am) we leave for home. We are so ready to go at this point. The pool was nice, but taking care of two kids in a hotel room gets old. Going to the airport in the morning is a lot easier than arriving. Much less chaos.
The flights are good. Danielle sleeps on the first one, but not Victoria. In Houston we have to go through immigration. This is the big deal. You go through the regular US citizen line and then they take you to the interview room. There you wait for a while. We hadn’t taken this into account when we planned our itinerary. We had a fairly tight connection. As we waited we started to get the feeling that we were going to miss our flight.
Finally we are called for our interview. It consisted of, “ok, you’re fine. She’s a US citizen at this point, but you have to go to immigration and fill out a form. Good luck.”
So we’re off and running to our flight. We still have to get our bags, clear customs, recheck our bags, go through security and get to the gate. We have 30 minutes. But everything goes fast. We’re flying through security. There’s only one problem. I have a money clip that also holds credit cards. It has metal in it. So I always remove my money and put the clip in a bin to go through security. In my haste I forget to collect it. We make it to the plane, get to our seats and I realize what has happened.
Too late to go get it. Damn, I’m screwed. Driver’s license, credit cards, etc. all gone. What a pain. Then just before they close the airplane door, someone walks on the plane, “Is there a Stephen Fischer here?”. They found it, saw the driver’s license, checked what flight I was on and got it to me in time. Totally incredible.
So that was the final story in our grand saga. Tori is doing well. Her sleeping at night is a bit erratic, but otherwise she is a sweet, happy baby. Life is good.
Here’s a link to more pictures
I’ll post a longer blog tomorrow. We’re exhausted after traveling all day. Victoria Dallas Fischer is home and is a US citizen (pending some minor paperwork). Everything went great and she’s doing really well.
There’s lots to tell about the entire process, including an update on Spanish Wiggles. But I’ll save that for tomorrow or the next day. For now I’ll leave you with some pictures.
Victoria:
Danielle with Victoria:
Watching the Wiggles together:
I won’t be blogging for a while. We leave tomorrow morning very early for Guatemala. Today is full of last minute stuff. Think of all the things you need to bring if someone is going to hand you a baby and you have to take care of her in a hotel for five days.
It will certainly be an adventure. We’re staying here. The weather forecast doesn’t look that promising. Scattered thunderstorms pretty much the entire time we’re there. We really need the pool as entertainment for Danielle, so I’m hoping Guatemala is one of those places where it often gets a thunderstorm in the afternoon, but there’s still plenty of dry time.
We also finally got true possession of our new place. We did the final walk-through and got the keys. It doesn’t seem real until you have the keys.
I’ll be back in the US on the 31st. You can expect pictures posted sometime after that.
Funniest thing I’ve seen in a while…