I've been a little too inquisitive recently, wondering about things that I've never wondered about before. I haven't been into any books as of late because I'm working on a baby blanket, so that's what I've been doing when I have any downtime. Apparently, though, I need something to think about, otherwise my mind starts getting off track.
Somehow, one night Andrew and I got on the topic of female genital mutilation (FGM), a rather archaic, tribal ritual done in parts of Africa, most popularly Sudan and Egypt. There are varying degrees of FGM, some less severe, others quite life-altering. Oddly enough, studies have shown that if women view the experience as positive then it doesn't negatively impact their life, whereas if women view the experience as negative it does negatively impact their life. With a full infibulation women have to be operated on to be able to birth a baby because there is, in essence, no birth canal. And then, after having the baby, some women want to be closed up again.
Anyway, although FGM is present in approximately 95% women in both Egypt and Sudan, full infibulation is more common in Sudan. (FGM is not condoned by Islam--it is considered a "tribal" ritual--and is illegal in Egypt, but only since the mid-1990s so many women still have/had it done).
That's one of my pregnancy nightmares, actually--coming home from the hospital after delivering the baby to find that instead of just having my perineal tearing stitched up, I've been fully circumcised.
It's kind of an illogical dream to be having since I trust my doctor (he studied in America thus probably doesn't support FGM), and besides, it's completely illegal for a medical doctor to perform such a surgery, anyway. I'd for sure rat my doctor out to the government if he did. And he probably knows that because Westerners typically aren't pro-FGM.
Still, it's a horrible dream when I have it.
Anyway, after reading about all these statistics, we were out walking last night and a group of Sudanese children walked by. I couldn't help but wonder what percentage of those girls were circumcised. I asked Andrew about it after we had passed them and he admitted to wondering the same thing, or at least he was able to guess what I was wondering about on the first guess...so chances are he was already thinking it.
We continued our walk and our talk smoothly transitioned to chickens...somehow.
I've always thought it would be nice to be a bird and have my offspring gestate outside my body. But then I started wondering a whole lot of things about chickens. I've never been very interested in chickens before, so I don't know very much about them. I had a lot to wonder about.
The egg is hard when it comes out...how does that work? How does the hard part form on the outside? How long does it take the egg to form? What exactly is the yolk? How many eggs does a chicken lay at one time? What happens if the egg gets stuck? Could an egg break inside a chicken? Would that kill the chicken?
Wow. There are so many questions about chickens and eggs. Who cares which came first? Let's just deal with how we get the egg out of the chicken in the first place!
I spent quite a bit of time learning about chickens and eggs today. I never knew there were so many chicken farmer forums out there on the world wide web! I shared some of what I learned with Rachel and we drew pictures of chickens...and octopuses (octopi/octopodes/whatever you prefer) because, did you know, female octopuses are called hens. Also, female lobsters.
A chicken egg takes one day to form. One day! Certain species of chickens may lay up to 300 eggs in one year when they're in their prime, although they'll only ever lay one per day. Her goal is to get a "clutch" of eggs (approximately 1 dozen) so that she can "brood" them (aggressively and tenderly protect them).
No wonder we get so many negative words like "hen-pecking" and "brooding" from hens. Can you imagine if teenage girls ovulated every day and not just once a month? Yikes! So that's reason #1 I'm glad I'm a human and not a chicken.
Another reason is because humans only have one baby at a time...or two...or six. My point is that our body eventually tells us to stop reproducing and start incubating. Even if we continue to release eggs, the chances of them becoming fertilized and/or implanting after the first few weeks of being pregnant already are slim. And the eggs are so small that it really doesn't crowd out the uterus if we release one or several.
Not so with a chicken. If delivery is tricky and an egg gets stuck inside a chicken, she'll keep producing eggs, and then she'll get "eggbound." It is not pretty. If you haven't noticed, chicken eggs are kind of huge. Can you imagine having 12 whole eggs stuck in your stomach going nowhere? Neither can I. And I don't want to.
I'm still not sure exactly how the eggshell forms around the yolk and white, but over dinner we were talking about how that must be for the hen to push out something as hard as an eggshell (we did not have eggs or chicken for dinner, in case you were wondering). And then I realised that I shouldn't pity the hen any more than should I pity myself.
"After all, I pushed out bone," I pointed out to Andrew.
He dropped his fork in surprise. "You did?!"
"Yes," I said, knocking gently on Rachel's head.
"Oh, yeah..." Andrew said.
"Mama--knock my head!" Rachel accused, rather offended.
"Sorry for knocking your head, Rachel."
I also wondered how it must feel to have a hard thing growing inside you, but then I realised that I do and for the most part it's okay...except for when she kicks to much...and eventually when she'll get lodged in my ribcage. Those are when it would be nice to be a chicken. Chickens don't get kicked by their eggs, nor do their eggs encroach upon their ribcage. Unless, of course, they are eggbound.
I learned that eggs can break inside a chicken, and the pieces of eggshell can cause internal damage. I suppose that's kind of like a chicken miscarriage, though there are many ways for a chicken to miscarry...they can lay rubber eggs, too, for instance, when the shell doesn't calcify correctly. It's much better for a rubber egg to break inside a chicken than for a well-formed egg to break inside a chicken, for obvious reasons.
The eggs on our dinner plate are typically not fertilized, just in case you were wondering. This was something I already knew. I quite enjoy the fact that the eggs we buy in stores aren't fertilized because there is no guarantee with farm eggs. And, oh, do I ever have a story about farm eggs! *gag*
At the end of the day, I'm pretty glad I'm not a chicken...I was thinking I could almost go for being a penguin, though. One egg per year, and the daddy penguin incubates. Sign me up!
I'd miss my babies, though. I kind of like it when they move around, I like feeling them grow, and getting to hear their heartbeat. I kind of missed being pregnant after I had Rachel in my arms. I had to hold her all the time, otherwise I felt empty. I missed her squirmies and hiccups.
Not that I wasn't glad to be finished being pregnant, just that I missed it a little (like when she was screaming and wouldn't stop--sheesh, I never had to deal with that when she was in-utero). I did eventually get used to having her on the outside instead of on the inside, though. Motherhood is great, but we do put up with quite a bit of mistreatment from our babies, don't we?
Maybe I'll tell you tomorrow what Andrew's been wondering about...he has some pretty bizarre questions, too, regarding gestation (mainly of the human variety, though, not chickens). He just finished The Hunt for Red October...he can read during his commute time, lucky guy...maybe I'll pick that up since he seemed to enjoy it so much...and then I can think about the Cold War instead of FGM and chicken reproduction. That sounds like a much safer dinner table topic to me.
Thursday, July 09, 2009
I need to read a book
What are you doing?
Our upstairs neighbours killed our internet connection yesterday. While they were hanging up their laundry over the balcony they dropped a pair of red shorts, which landed on our phone line, pulling it apart at the various places it's been broken apart and twisted back together. Heaven forbid they solder anything together here when twisting it back together works just fine...until your upstairs neighbour drops a pair of red shorts from their balcony.
So I didn't have internet at home all day.
When Andrew got home he asked me what I did all day without internet.
"The same thing I do everyday with the internet," I told him.
He volunteered to fix the phone line again, by twisting the wires back together again. Who needs to solder? The chances our neighbour is going to drop another article of clothing that will land on our phone line is slim, right?
While Andrew did this, he got a dose of what I do all day long, with or without the internet. Rachel followed him around everywhere.
He went onto the scary balcony to find the problem. Rachel didn't want to go out there; she's no dummy--she knows scary when she sees it.
"What are you doing?" she asked him.
"I'm fixing the phone," he said.
"Oh." she said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm fixing the phone," he said, while thinking, Didn't I just say that?
"Oh." she said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm fixing the phone," he said, "What are you doing?"
"I"m standing up," she said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm fixing the phone," he said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm standing up in the kitchen," she said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm fixing the phone," he said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm standing up in the kitchen watching Daddy," she said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm fixing the phone," he said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm standing up in the kitchen watching Daddy fix phone," she said, "What are you doing?"
"I'm coming back inside," he said, "Because I'm finished out here."
"Oh," she said and followed him from the kitchen to the toy room where he moved my desk out of the way so that he could access the hole in our wall where the phone line comes through (yup, it's a hole, and a great entrance for mosquitoes and ants and things), "What are you doing?"
I think you get the picture. The only thing different about my day with the internet, as opposed to a day without the internet, is that I can chat to Andrew when Rachel does little cute things, like using the broom as a "tripod" for her "camera," or when she does little annoying things, like throwing fits because I sang Pease Porridge when she only wanted porridge and not peas. And I can post what I write to the blog instead of saving it to my computer. It really doesn't change my day at all. My day is as repetitive as Rachel, herself, usually.
"Elephant, elephant, elephant, elephant, elephant, elephant!" she's saying right now.
"Yes, that's an elephant."
"Yup!"
And she's gone, only to come back a few minutes later.
"Help me up, help me up, help me up, help me up, help me up!"
"How do you ask nicely?"
"Please may I more holding you?"
Now she's up on my lap, holding me and the elephant she earned for staying dry x-amount of nights in a row, asking if we can all watch Winnie the Pooh together...again...that poor DVD has been watched so many times it's not even funny.
But at least I can chat to Andrew that his daughter put her blanket over her head to "hide" and then walked around. And then started clapping her hands, too, and said,
"Wear blanket-hat...and clap hands!"
She was so excited to be multitasking. Must be her father's daughter. They both love to multitask...anything...just to say they can multitask.
Maybe that will be my new answer for Rachel's never-ending interrogation about what I'm doing at any given moment in the day.
"What are you doing, mama? What are you doing?"
"I'm multitasking."
"Oh."
(For the record she just asked me what I was doing and I told her I was typing...
"No," she said, "You're using mouse!"
Oh, yup, I hadn't even noticed I'd switched).
Posted by
Nancy
at
10:16 AM
2
comments in my chatterbox
Labels: home life, life abroad, Rachel, technology
Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Playing in the churchyard
The church villa has an awesome backyard and we try to make it out there to play together every so often. Sometimes it’s awkward because we can see people watching us from their windows, whispering to each other.
Playing in backyards isn’t exactly normal here since there aren’t many backyards around. I always wonder what they’re whispering…
Today Andrew and I played some volleyball together while Rachel ran around screaming that the ball was hers (and it is, but it was our turn). We also kicked it back and forth between all three of us. We blew bubbles, we spun around, we turned somersaults, Rachel did a whole lot of jumping, we found a snail, and we took a whole bunch of pictures.
We also learned that when we hit the ball into the plumeria tree it gets stuck rather tightly. The leaves are so big and thick that they just sucked the ball right in and held on for dear life. We had to use a broom to hit it out of the tree.
This was our first time bringing a big ball to play with and it was a lot of fun. If only we could find a volleyball net to rig up somehow…then the neighbours would really have something to watch!
Not that either of us are actually any good at volleyball…
Posted by
Nancy
at
10:26 PM
2
comments in my chatterbox
Labels: Cairo, home life, life abroad, Middle East, sports
Starts with ‘b’ and ends in -reeze
Rachel was gifted some well-loved books from Sam when he moved. I’ve been fixing them up a bit because I’m a bit of a librarian and it breaks my heart to see books, even well-loved books, looking dog-eared. And since I was the head of the conservation diagnostics committee when I worked as a librarian, I decided that I could keep that title in our household.
I spent a few evenings fixing the books up—my waterproofing was done with packing tape, which I realise is against everything that book conservation stands for, but I have limited supplies here!
Oh, and they’re baby books. I fully expect them to wear out by the time we’re finished having children; my goal was simply to make them a little more fun for Rachel now, and for Miriam in the future.
A few weeks ago I drew and attached a new cover for the Curious George book. It’s not perfect, but I think it’s pretty good since I don’t really consider myself and artist, per se, and all I had as a reference was a picture off Amazon.com.
I put off doing Toes, Ears, and Nose for quite a while; I actually hid it on my desk for a few weeks, but Rachel found it and we’ve been reading it a lot lately. I haven’t wanted to fix it yet because it’s a lift-the-flap book and some of the flaps were missing and it just seemed like more work than I wanted to put into it.
Furthermore, we weren’t even sure of what the words were. We thought it was supposed to be a poem, but we couldn’t figure out a rhyming pattern or if there was any sort of canter to the words.
It didn’t help some of the words were printed on flaps that were missing (or partially missing) so we were making things up as we went along.
We agreed on mostly everything that was missing, for example, it was obviously that under the hat were two ears since there were two flaps missing directly above the ears.
There was one part of the book that Andrew and I always read differently, however.
My blue jeans protect my knees.
My coat protects my back.
And keeps my…
“…belly button out of the way,” is how I would read it. But Andrew read it as “…belly button out of the cold.”
When it came time to fix this flap we had a bit of a debate. I thought we should do what Rachel was used to hearing, so I read it to her and let her fill in the blank. She filled it in with “way,” which proves that I read this particular story to her more often than Andrew.
Clearly, I won (of course I do have the advantage of being home with her all day long, so you shouldn’t feel too bad, Andrew (but you still lose)). But he said that my answer didn’t make sense since the book deals with scarves and mittens and things. His answer was by far the more logical choice. Obviously it was a cold-weather book.
I let him convince me and wrote “cold” down on the flap, but that didn’t seem long enough of a word because the text was supposed to be centered and with plain, old “cold,” it wasn’t.
Air, I wrote down next to cold.
And keeps my belly button out of the cold air. That kind of makes sense. But then I read over the text again.
Fingers…toes…ears…nose.
Elbows…knees…back…cold air?!
That just wasn’t working for me, but neither one of us had any idea of what to put in its place.
After putting Rachel to bed I read the book through to myself for the first time, ever. No stopping to lift up flaps, or to count fingers, or to discuss whether the author should have used the word shirt instead of coat (it really bugs Rachel that the word in the story is coat; she thinks it should be shirt; I kind of agree). I just read it through quickly and said the first word that came to my mind.
My blue jeans protect my knees.
My coat protects my back.
And keeps my belly button out of the…
Quick! What rhymes with “knees?” Breeze!
It’s a little embarrassing that it took us so long to find the right word for the story, truthfully. I mean, Andrew is halfway through his master’s degree and I have a bachelor’s degree. You’d think we would be able to think up a word the rhymes with knees. But, no. It took us weeks and weeks to figure this out.
I was actually rather elated when I had my “breeze” epiphany. Looking back, I’m not sure it was completely sane to be that excited over it. The things motherhood does to your brain…
A place for everything…and everything in its place
Sometimes when I’m finished making dinner my kitchen floor looks like this:
My washing machine looks like this:
And our “pantry” looks like this:
When I opened the door of the cabinet to get out a container for leftovers after dinner, I learned that our Tupperware breeds little plastic animals. Unfortunately those disappeared before I could obtain photographic evidence. I wonder where they’re hiding now.
I assure you this isn’t the way I originally intended my kitchen to be organized, but at least it keeps Rachel occupied while she’s underfoot.