Friday, October 25, 2013

“Our House, in the middle of the street, Our House”

Sooo… (I say in a long dragged out ‘so’ due to the fact that I am weary and will be acknowledging weaknesses in my communication) here I am trying to blog again. Why, you say does it take me so long  to write something? Well I am finding life a bit weary in the physical sense due to climate change, work and broken sleep (Sarah is up to 2 months of waking up multiple times at night. She did this in Africa too but hoping it wouldn’t happen here) and therefore my brain doesn’t seem to work as well when I get home at night. Coffee has become a mainstay of fluid intake. Sooo, I say sorry for the delay and I will try to rectify this weakness

In my last blog I said I would show our apartment to give you an idea where we live. Our apartment is around 1400 ft2 and is quite spacious compared to others we looked at. Constrained by money and Buddhist Lent (bad luck to rent or buy) we initially were going to take a 900 ft2 3 brm apartment that had grey wall-papered walls and décor ceilings. Thankfully someone we have befriended here, who has lived here many years, found the apartment we are now in at the last moment. 
Although it too has an interesting wall design with tiles and carpet, quite vertiginous causing, it is large enough that it doesn’t seem too small during the long rainy days or the long hot days. However a couple of months on it is easy to get cabin-fever, but this would be the case in any place. We have good landlords and the head security guy, Johnny, practices his English with us every day.

We do miss our Murgwanza view and freedom and there is homesickness for what we have left but we are getting use to city life, traffic congestion and the constant honk of horns and we can see a tree from our window!



Lucy's room

Sarah's room

Kitchen - bench oven, gas stove


Back verandah view

front verandah view






5 comments:

  1. Interesting wallpaper! Sorry to hear that Sarah is waking so often. Will keep you all in my thoughts and discussions with our Father.

    Hope the water and electricity and gas are 24/7 now?

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    1. Water Ok, gas in a bottle but electricity sadly not as good as Murgwanza.

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    2. That is sad. :( Having practiced with intermittent electricity in Murgwanza, you would have strategies for coping? Is gas expensive there?

      Just thinking of what you can do, and if there is anything I can help with.

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  2. Great to see where you are and be able to imagine you "at home". Regularly in conversation about you!

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  3. Dear Kleins, my rather lovely friend Meewon (who started the sewing group) will be in your area (I think) staying at the Summer Palace Hotel (Kamayut) from 28th Nov to 30th, then back in Yangon 2nd to 6th Dec. I think the second part of her visit will be more relaxed. Her email is the best contact. I have emailed you so perhaps you know this already, but I'm not sure I have the correct address. Hers is Meewon.Yang at buv.com.au I hope you can meet at some point as she is good at brightening up the world, and is wise in her care for people. Love Jennifer

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