Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Super soggy days

Thank goodness Harlan loves his wellies (he even wore them right through summer in South Africa), because we landed in the UK and just as I remembered, this place is seriously soggy. And cold. And soggy.

Despite my excitement to finally be getting out of 'limbo' and to be reunited with my husband after 6 weeks apart, I was overwhelmingly distressed at the thought of our upcoming flight to the UK - all 11 hours of it - with two small boys who have their own Life Equation now (check last week's post for the long explanation)...

Good grief was I worried!

But thankfully the flight was overnight and so it actually was simply smashing (see, I'm practicing my Proper English) - other than the fact that Harlan kept asking when we were going to get in the plane and he still refuses to believe that we flew anywhere at all, never mind to the other side of the world...

"But sweetie look," I gesture around the plane, "this is the plane. We are sitting in it."

"But where is it?" Sulky face. "Where?"

"Here... right here. Like all around us," Ummmm, and now?

So, despite the fact that Harlan doesn't believe we went on a plane and flew anywhere we are all doing splendidly (see, Proper English again) in one of the most beautiful parts of the English countryside where there must be about a gajillion trees (all very very pretty) and even then there still aren't enough of them to drink up all the water in the ground, so wellies are a must!

I think we are kinda like Vaalies at the beach in Cape Town, running into the freezing water simply because it's a beach, but all the locals know its crazy freezing? Well, we are kind like that - bundling the boys in warm jackets, gloves and hats and kinda pushing them out of the toasty house and into the freezing cold to 'explore' and 'get out' and other ridikilus things!

Here is a little taster in pictures :)





















Monday, November 18, 2013

Did I mention I hate goodbyes

I dreaded our last day... I packed like a woman possessed, I ran around, I sat on suitcases to get the zips to close and prayed they wouldn't pop open halfway through the airport terminal slog to the book-in counter... I did everything possible to shut out what I knew was going to happen: goodbyes.

I just don't like them - I never know the right thing to say, and I sometimes think I must come across callous because I am just so socially inept at this one area of life: goodbyes.

That, and I didn't want to cry in front of the boys. I didn't want them to think what we were doing was in any way sad or bad or whatever... I told myself I'd save my tears for when they were safely asleep on the plane. The reality is that it was so exhausting that as soon as they fell asleep I also drifted into an uncomfortable sleep that was nothing if not welcomed by my nerve endings (I actually imagined all my little nerve endings having a big hooray and hoopla at finally being let of the hook).

See?

I can't even express my goodbyes after the fact...

Of course there are so many more friends that we said goodbye to, but these are the ones that I managed to remember to photograph ;)


Goodbye to good friends

And to my colleagues...

at Mamas n Papas
 
Goodbye to besties (we love you Nathaniel!)

and to teacher Louise

And teacher Dia
 
Goodbye to Aunty Sheri (and the baby in her tummy)

Goodbye to great granny

And goodbye to our favourite cousin Aidan
 



Goodbye to the kindest woman and our super star Dolly
 
Goodbye to Grandpa, Nana, our favourite uncle Shaun and favourite aunt Sheri

And goodbye to Grandma too (although we'll see you soon)
 
Hello aeroplanes

See you soon

We are looking forward to our new adventure!

Monday, November 4, 2013

Touching South Africa

So it turns out I found my way to say goodbye to South Africa, and it was sweet and it was poignant and it touched me, marked me... and that makes me happy.

There is this little place called Clarens, nestled in the foothills of the Maluti Mountains that mark a line between South Africa and the mountain kingdom of Lesotho. Its become awfully popular as a tourist destination over the last decade, and no wonder, it's pretty much breathtaking scenery and small-town feel is a haven for artists, writers, young lovers, and happy families.

But I look at Clarens through the eyes of an 11-year-old girl, or at least that's the age I remember it with most clarity. My family used to spend most holidays in Clarens at the house that my father's business partner owned in the small village. I walked the dusty streets, attempted to climb the mountains, and made good and fast friends of the local children when Clarens still had only a single restaurant, a post office and a general store. We enjoyed Clarens in the summers when it was lush and green and warm, and we enjoyed Clarens in the winters when it was one of the very few places in South Africa to be blanketed in snow. But it was the autumns that were most beautiful, with the golds, reds, yellows and browns turning the landscape into an oil painting.

I remember how much I loved Clarens, it's beauty, it's scenery, it's energy that was almost magical. Even when we used to arrive after dark, my parents knew to wake me up if I was sleeping so that I could see the glowing sandstone outcrops as they towered high above - then I knew we had arrived. In my young mind anything was possible in Clarens, no dream was too big and no day was long enough... I fell in love with the earth, the land, and to this day I feel a spiritual connection to the place, which is why a short trip to Clarens with my parents and the children felt like a homecoming... and a home-leaving.

And it was magical. And it was cathartic. And it was a rare moment in the past six months where I was actually able to sit and really drink it all in... no - I am corrected. It was more like sucking the marrow from a bone... every. last. drop. I was able to sit on the patio in the evenings and know 'this is the last time' (in a very long time) - the last time I will enjoy such majestic South African sunsets, still warming my skin as the last of the light fades. I was able to sit by the poolside and watch my boys splash around in the kiddie pool and know, 'this is the last time' (for a very long time) that they will be able to enjoy water like this, with the sun turning their skin brown, splashing and shouting Look Mom! Look at me!

Aaaahhhh - Clarens was good to me and my family, as she always has been.













Monday, October 28, 2013

The Big Thing


 
 
So I got news today that our UK settlement visa applications have been completed and are enroute back from the UK to the visa application centre in Pretoria, and I’m like WHOA… (in caps, yes)

 

This means that technically we could meet our initial flight bookings for the 6th of November, which is like tomorrow… pretty much… almost… ok not really, but it feels like tomorrow. And I’m all like – wait a minute, don’t I need to do things, finish things, see people, get a good haircut in rands, buy new bras and stuff? And what about The Big Thing? The Saying Goodbye to My Country Thing?

 

Because although we’ve planned this whole immigration – thought it through like the responsible adults and parents we are – the whole thing has only taken about six months from our decision to, well… today. And I’ve been so busy planning a trans-continental-and-hemisphere move that I’ve forgotten to actually process The Big Thing.

 

Because while I know this is a good decision for Malakai’s present and future – can’t argue with that – it’s not like we hated our lives over here. Not by a long shot. We were happy, we were finally coming out of a very long and sleep-deprived journey as new parents and entering the phase of ‘not-so-new, not-so-tired, hey-let’s-have-a-braai-at-our-place parents’… and then we leave. We walk away from the promise of an actual social life, a rekindling of old friendships, and a pretty friggen awesome neighbourhood (holla Centurion!), for the cold, drizzly, unknown of semi-rural England.

 

And suddenly – even though I miss my husband, and my children are pretty much aching for their father with their entire little bodies – I am not so excited about boarding that plane… I am scared. I am not really ready to say goodbye to my home and my country. I feel like I need to release some balloons, or write a note and bury it, or plant a tree or do something with profound meaning (that is not quite Grade 9-ish in character). But what?

 

Well, I’ve got like a day or two to figure something out. I think. But still – how do I say goodbye? How do I leave and possibly never return (unless it’s on a friggen awesome Pound-based holiday)?

 

I’m not sure. For the entire six months it’s been about the planning the move, finding the money (much too much of it), conversing with the immigration lawyer (without sounding neurotic), the visa applications, the mind-numbing paperwork and forms, packing up an entire house, dropping my Dolly (the boy’s nanny and my right-hand-woman) at her new job without crying openly in front of anyone, while still maintaining some kind of normalcy for the children – but it’s never been about saying goodbye. Not until now.

 

Now I actually face saying goodbye – I actually have to do it and I just feel so unprepared for this. So totally unprepared. Maybe I think too much; people move all over the world all the time, every country is filled with foreigners making lives, meeting people, and having a good time. Hell, I love to travel, and off we go in a few days’ time! So what’s the big deal about The Big Thing?

 

Could it have something to do with the way in which South African’s subconsciously judge those who choose to leave? Faders. Sissies. They obviously don’t have what it takes to make it in Africa – and whatever, because we know it rocks here. The weather, the people, the spirit, the sport, the landscapes, the beauty, the big sky, the wildlife, the stars, the bravery, the can-do attitude. Those who want to leave are ‘giving up’ on South Africa and we secretly hope they’ll hate where they’re going to more than they hated South Africa.

 

But you see… sometimes people don’t leave because they’re running away from something. Sometimes people leave because they’re running towards something – and there is a difference. We are not leaving because we hate our country, because we think it’s a horrible place, because we are scared for our futures here (ok, well we are terribly scared of Malakai’s future here – that’s totally true). We are leaving because we are going towards something – the best education we can offer our child with special needs, and the best for his future. That’s what we’re running towards, that’s our driving force, because South Africa simply cannot offer it. It just can’t. Not right now anyway.

 

So is part of my fear of leaving that I don’t actually want to leave, that I’m not running away? Maybe… So there’s only one thing to do Loren Stow! Look forward, run towards an amazing inclusive and empathic education system for Malakai. I’m a-runnin’, but I still need to process this step, this Big Thing, this very difficult goodbye.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Closing the door

Now is as a good time as any to just come out and say it - weareimmigratingtotheuk...

I can't say why I don't want to talk about it - am I embarrased? Do I secretly think people who immigrate are cowards? Do I feel like what we're doing is unfair? Well, yes and no.

I have avoided the subject of our impending immigration because I don't want to face the reasons we are leaving, or at least not out in the open for everyone to see and judge. I feel safer keeping our reasons to ourselves and avoiding the whole damn thing until I say one day 'Cheers! See you later!'

But of course I have to face the reasons, and share them. So I will try to do just that in this post.

We are immigrating to the United Kingdom in an effort to give Malakai the support, intervention, possibilities and freedom that he simply cannot get in South Africa.

There. I said it.

I love my country, I love the people, I love the big skies and the weather, I love the Any Day is a Braai Day attitude, I love the way those who have nothing give more than those who have everything, I love my black friends, I love my Afrikaans friends, I love my Indian friends, I love the way South Africans see possibility, connect and move forward. I love the fact that we have the Big Five and the wild landscape because where on earth can you get that other than Africa? I love melktert and niknaks. I love biltong and Mrs Balls. I love so much about my country.

What I don't love is the way in which mothers have to tie their mentally handicapped children to poles in order to keep them safe from wandering, because they simply have no other choice and no other support.  What I don't love is the way that one day our government preaches about inclusive education and the next they're back stepping like Michael Jackson doing the moonwalk - do they think I get my child ready for inclusion in a matter of days or weeks, well Mr Minister of Education, it takes years!!! His whole friggin life so far, in fact! What I don't love is the way in which our private schools will not accept my son because he has special needs and their sole focus on the 100% pass rate which drives their fees and profits up, up and away... What I don't love is the way in which our special needs organisations are fragmented, demi-god-like information-nazis that want to control the very people they serve. What I don't love is the way that I have to downgrade my son's therapies to a minimum because I simply cannot afford to pay his therapy and medical bills, seeing that I receive absolutely no support - financial or otherwise - from the country to which I hand over my hard earned money each and every month.

Wow - that was a load off! *exhale*

We have chosen to go to a place where families like us are supported, where they understand we are a little more cash-strapped than normal, where my son will be swept into a river of tried and tested policy and procedure like a leaf that hits the water and floats along supported by the current of 'what is'. I am tired of fighting and forging ahead like a modern-day special needs voortrekker. I just want to slide into a comfortable place - one where I know my son is going to get everything he so deserves, and not because I've demanded it or begged for it, but because it is the way things are. Simple.

However, I have this kind of 'quitters guilt', like I should be sticking it out in a country with my fellow special needs families, fighting and making this place better for our children and all the differently-abled children to come. Surely I should be ashamed to just cop out like this - and I certainly do feel my cheeks flush. Which could explain why I've held the news of our immigration so close to my heart, revealing as little as possible until the last possible moment.

Unfortunately, the way forward for special needs in South African is rather overgrown, and a path needs to be beaten into shape by the feet of hundreds if not thousands of families - and I have to ask myself, do I try to make a difference for my country or do I try to make a difference for Malakai?  Because I know if we stay, we will not be able to give Malakai what we could in England.

I choose my son.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Roadtrippin'

Nothing beats some time off, a change of scenery, and a good old fashioned road trip. Boy I love it!

The drive from Pretoria to Durban, leaving before the birds start to chirp, watching the sun rise as you leave Johannesburg behind you... it is something that nourishes my soul like a bowl of steaming vegetable soup warms my body on a winter's night.

Gliding along the vein-like roads that cover the land between my home and the South Coast, I feel as though I am crossing God's land - because in my mind God has never lived in a church, or in a book, or even in my heart - for me he lives in the land itself. In the fields, atop the glistening bodies of water that nurture the animals, radiating from the softest hills to the most jagged of outcrops. When I go on a road trip I encounter God.

Then of course, at the end of the road trip is the seaside holiday. And what I love most about the sea is the simplicity of it's never-ending entertainment. My children can spend hour upon hour at the beach and never tire - it is like nature's way of saying 'come, let's play!' And boy did my boys play!

Oh how I loved our roadtrip!