Friday, December 27, 2013

An Ivanyenko Christmas!

Aside from this year, I've only been away on Christmas once in my life.  In 2007, I spent Christmas in Vietnam while on a mission trip.  It was a weird experience to be honest, nothing like Christmas at all; the palm trees, the tropical heat, the absence of a family atmosphere, all of this distracted us from being away.

This year, I wasn't sure how I was going to handle it, because it was a very different story: I was in a family now, with their own holiday traditions and way of doing things.  I wasn't sure if this was going to make it harder or easier for me to be far away from my family.

God is good.  Being with the Ivanyenkos on Christmas was wonderful; of course I missed my family, but I was also overwhelmed with thanks to God for the family he has brought me into in Russia; a family that loves me and treats me like their own, that supports me, teases me, laughs and cries with me, and a family that I was truly happy to celebrate Christmas with.

The family Christmas Tree in our cozy new kitchen

Uncle Ilya repeatedly demanded to be photographed with both the duck, and his woman

The stove-top doesn't work, but the oven sure does!  Grandma is Queen of the Kitchen

All fancy for Christmas

And lest we forget what Christmas is about, here's my homemade nativity scene
For most Russians, of course, the biggest holiday of the year is New Years; they typically don't celebrate Christmas until January 7th, which is Christmas according to the Orthodox Church's calendar.  Everyone worked and went to school on the 25th, it was so bizarre!  Tomorrow, everyone's two-week holiday vacation starts, and the country basically shuts down.

I've got New Years with friend to look forward to, and on the 2nd, English camp begins!  We're starting the year off with a bang, and I can't wait to give a full report once I've recovered.

I hope you've had a wonderful Christmas with your loved ones.  Enjoy New Years (and Christmas again if you feel like it!) and God bless you in 2014!

Пока ребята, Russian Jane

Friday, December 6, 2013

Grandma moves in; my second expat Thanksgiving

A lot has happened here in Russia in the last few weeks!  Our little region is going crazy getting ready for Sochi (which is a mere 280 kilometers away) and at our little house, changes are underway.

First things first, Grandma Vera has moved in!  Tanya's parents lived in a big house with a big garden in a town about 5 hours from here, where the Ivanyenkos are originally from.  When Grandpa died a couple of years ago, the house became too much for Grandma to take care of on her own.  She put her house on the market and finally, after about a year of looking for buyers, the house sold! 

Enjoying tea on moving day

Grandma came with a mini van packed full of stuff.  Aside from the usual things like clothes and furniture, she brought her refrigerator complete with a freezer full of food, light fixtures, fruit trees and plants from her garden, and dirt.  I kid you not, the woman brought bags of dirt from her garden.  Tanya was in a panic about all the things Grandma Vera was bringing and kept saying, "it's going to be like a train station in our house!" but Baba Vera is nothing if not industrious. 

See the fridge back there? Full of food

Kostya and Tanya hard at work

Baba Vera's moved into Masha's room; Masha is in my room until her room is finished

Boxes upon boxes

Grandma's washing machine headed up to my room


She immediately brought order and food to our household.  Her biggest joys in life are feeding people and spending time in the garden.  She's already planted most of her garden (yes, in December, because the climate here is a dream) and busies herself cooking and cleaning.  Grandma is a wonderful blessing for such a busy household, and as a girl who misses her own grandmas very much, having her here is a great encouragement.

The next big even was last week: Thanksgiving.  Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday, and I'm not about to sit around and mope because I can't be with my family!  This is the second year I've whipped up Thanksgiving dinner by myself, and I really do get a lot of joy out of cooking.  And feeding people, I love feeding people! Baba Vera and I are not so different after all...

Photo courtesy of Nastya
In attendance was the Ivanyenko family minus the boys (Tima was in India serving the Lord, Kostya was in another town getting his driver's license), my dear friend Vasil, Kostya's girlfriend Nastya, two girlfriends from English club, and a couple friends from Masha's church that were in the right place at the right time!  We all thanked God for what he's done this past year and enjoyed the feast together (in the new kitchen, by the way). 

Left to right: Nastya, Baba Vera, Alina (Russian Jane and Uncle Ilya in the background)

My friend Katya and her little baby Toma

(I brought gravy packets from the US specifically for Thanksgiving this year, and I have to say, what a difference gravy makes!  It's the one thing I just can't get right from scratch.)

Camp is just around the corner, in less than a month.  Andree, my boss, had emergency eye surgery this last week (a few months ago he had a really serious injury and almost lost his eye), so we've been getting ready for camp without him, which is a little scary!  He won't be able to look at computer screens for a while, so I'm in the process of teaching myself Photoshop.  Instead of little books for English Camp like we usually do, we're making a map.  I'll be sure to show you the finished product!

That's all, friends!  It's a beautiful day out, 43F if you can believe it!  I may go on some kind of excursion today, it seems like walking weather to me!

I hear it's freezing cold in Montana; bundle up!


Пока ребята, Russian Jane