Thursday, October 20, 2011

.......................A great Thursday

Palm Trees?




Okay, so I don't protest to be the best horticulturist in the world...but...palm trees?  along the coast of the Black Sea?  in Bulgaria??  The cluster of trees you see in the center of the photo are definitely palm trees...but...why?  Fake, of course, ...but why put fake plastic trees in such a pristine beautiful spot??  Couldn't they think of a more "natural" way to get man-made shade???   hmm...but...from being in the local shoppes, Bulgarian's are pretty big on fake flowers.

I had a lovely breakfast this morning in Mr Sanchoff's villa (he is the founder of Karin Dom) with an Italian archeologist, a French teacher, 2 Bulgarian administrators from Karin Dom, one Peace Corp worker (Sara)....and a partridge in a kiwi tree!  Actually, I just discovered that kiwi grow on supported vines, much like grapes, and Mr. Sanchoff has a whole slew of them to be picked at the villa.  Breakfast was fascinating....and much too short.
I gave a brief presentation for parents this evening, then had dinner with many of the staff at a local restaurant.  I had my favorite....Thai rice!
I will finish the training tomorrow and head out on the midnight bus for Sophia for the LONG trek home.  I'm really gonna miss this place!

Kindergarten News:
 Hi Friends,
If you lived in Bulgaria....you might eat olives and cheese at breakfast, sausage (that looks like the letter S) and cold cucumber soup for lunch, and peppers stuffed with rice and meat for dinner.  (or...your mom might just cook you something else).  You probably wouldn't have Kraft Macaroni and Cheese (because they don't sell it here) and children don't eat peanut butter sandwiches.  Oh my goodness....Ellie might starve!

This is the last computer journal entry that I will write to you since I will be traveling tomorrow (Friday) and I will be home on the weekend.  I can't wait to come to school sometime soon and meet all of Ellie's friends.  Thanks for reading this and learning some new things about Bulgaria!
Today's Bulgarian word is....."priyatel" which means "friend."
Goodbye, my "priyatel!"

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

........................I've lost track...what day is it?

Beach View!
Great day..The weather has finally cleared and I took a walk with Sara after school along the sea garden.  That's where I spotted this cozy little villa (okay...mansion) with a view of the Sea.  Can't you just see me there?  ...and I could walk to work!  haha.

The Black Sea.....is SOOOOO Blue!
We walked to the Center of Varna.  The sea garden walk is a lovely trail along the upper cliff of the coast and behind the main city street.  The best of both worlds.  Everyone was out today after the incessant rain. 

Training went well today...and I'll be preparing soon for tomorrow's training on "problem behavior."  Saving the good stuff for last.  I've been showing lots of videos, which the staff seem to enjoy.  I didn't have any for today...so I just had to embed cute photos of Ellie every 5th slide or so.  It worked!

BTW...for my Coltsville friends, don't ever sign the word "bathroom" in public.  Apparently, our thumb in fist sign for bathroom means something ENTIRELY different in Bulgaria (let's just say something like...oh... a middle finger).  Thanks Sara for letting me know AFTER I used the sign to demonstrate a point about teaching kids more than one way to ask for the bathroom!


This one's for you, Cooper!!!  
Little skate board park along the sea garden walk.        




Congratulations on taking first...AGAIN....in your recent cross country meet.  Miss you!!!!
















Kindergarten News:
Jenna
 Hi Friends,
Today....I found a Bulgarian MacDonalds.  Look closely at the red sign and you will see how MacDonalds is spelled in Bulgarian.  No, I didn't stop in for some fries, but it did smell good!  

Add caption
And....something very cool about about the school that I am working in here....is that they have a dog!!! Yep...her name is Jenna and she is very friendly.  She loves children and she went for a walk this afternoon with me.  Maybe...your class could write Mrs. Dessert some letters and ask if Kearns school could have a dog like Jenna.
The word for "dog" in Bulgarian is "kuche."  ...and dogs in Bulgaria still say, "bow wow."     
Caio,
Ellie's mom

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

.........................Day 7

Arch Street
The hurricane winds have subsided and it's turning cold, but tomorrow is supposed to be sunny!  I have a feeling if it is....people will be out on the streets everywhere!  Only a couple of children actually showed up for therapy at the Center today.  It was much like a New England snow day.  The training went well, and I ventured out after the rain stopped for groceries.  I have some potato chips and diet coke for movie time tonight  Aaron showed me a site where I could stream movies...for free....even better than Netflix.

Speaking of, I don't know if any of you have seen the BBC documentary about the institutionalization of children in Bulgaria.  It is heartbreaking and overwhelming.  The documentary illustrates the human paradox: such capacity for malice, and such capacity for kindness.   If you are interested in the link, go to You Tube and search Bulgaria's Abandoned Children Revisited.  It is a 6 part series which totals approximately one hour.  p.s.  not for children.

Kindergarten News:
Hi friends.  Soccer (called "football" everywhere in the world besides the United States) is a popular sport in Bulgaria.  The country has a professional team and they also compete in the sport in the Olympics.  "Topka" is the Bulgarian word for "ball."  I am always yelling at Ellie's brother Cooper to "Stop kicking the soccer "topka" in the house!

Monday, October 17, 2011

..........................Day six

Sara's Classroom
I'm writing tonight's update with 45 mi/hr winds, flooding rains and downed tree limbs outside.  ugh!  But it was a fun night....I went to Sara and Aaron's for dinner!  Sara cooked a yummy veggie and cheese dish in an oven crock and chocolate brownies (what's not to love with that combo?)  I also had a chance to straighten out the problems with my return flight (fingers crossed) and watched some of a BBC documentary on Bulgaria's institutionalized children.  At a later date, after I've watched the entire program, I will post the link.  It is very difficult to watch....but for adoptive parents it really drives home (to an extreme) the detriment that institutionalization and pure deprivation can reek on a human being.  Any human being. 

Training went well today.  A lot more discussion.  Funny, but I think some people really sat up and listened after I said, "If you're not taking and looking at data, you're not using ABA."  I'm also now scheduled to speak to parents from the early intervention outreach program on Thursday evening.  They have billed me as "the specialist and ABA therapist from America!"  Sounds impressive at least.
And I don't know if you are following this Andy, (maybe Kathy will send this to you) but I had a speech therapist comment to me today after training that "ABA is a lot like PECS!"  I have been pleased to discover  how professional...caring...and motivated the staff at Karin Dom is.  It is a pleasure to work with them....it will be hard to leave!

The weather doesn't look like it's going to improve until Wednesday...with sunshine through the weekend.  But some schools have already cancelled first shift for tomorrow morning.  Don't worry Cooper, I told Sara to sleep with her pajamas inside out and a spoon under her pillow to ensure at least a late opening in the morning.

Asking for cookies...because I don't want apples!

Caio


KINDERGARTEN NEWS:
Hi again friends!
I'm beginning to see some pumpkins for sale at the market.  Some are large and green and some are orange...but I am told the pumpkins here in Bulgaria are much thicker and harder to cut than the ones we have in America...so making jack-o-lanterns is much trickier.  I'm wondering how many of Ellie's friends already know what they are going to be for Halloween...

The Bulgarian word for "paint" (the messy liquid you see here) is "boya."  If you want to say, "I want to paint" then the word is "boyadisvane."


Maybe Mrs. Spellman will let you "boyadisvane" on Apple Thursday!


Caio for now,
Ellie's mom
 

Sunday, October 16, 2011

............................Thanks!

Just received a new donation from the Wineman family.  Thanks so much!!!!  I'm also trying to find some info on the "football" team from Bulgaria.  My flight from London to Sophia was packed with guys attending the Bulgaria vs. Whales match.  What a rowdy bunch of men!

Saturday, October 15, 2011

...........................Days four and five in Turkey

Beautiful!  
 Just returned from a two day trip to Ogden, Turkey with some of the staff from Karin Dom.  The reason for the trip was to visit two Centers in the city of Ogden, that provide therapeutic services to children.  One was located on the campus of a large University, and the other is a private facility in town.  The directors of both centers were extremely nice and welcoming, and very proud of the programming that they provide as it is highly regarded in the area.  That being said....I can't tell you all how fortunate we are to live in the United States.  It is too disheartening to post the photos that I took on this blog.  It will have to be enough to just know that the people who are working with these children do care for them dearly and the kids still have more at these sparse, outdated centers than they would if left in institutions or at home with no services at all.






 

 
Look Mom!  I went to Church!

We also had time to do some touristy things....like visit a beautiful old Christian Orthodox Church, visit a Mosque (Tracy....I covered my head and brushed the dog hair off my pants, just like your dad would want me to) and went to the Turkish Bazaar.  Not incredibly different from a Kazakh Bazaar.  We enjoyed the local fish mongers, bread makers and produce sales, as well as the cheap tacky China inports.  I tasted "helva" which is made from ground sesame and tastes like...hmm...sesame seed peanut butter?  Had a lovely cup of chi with Sara and found some treasures for my kids.  Glad to be back at Karin Dom though, and again impressed at how much Karin Dom has done in the region in the area of special education.  They are truly a wonderful model for other developing programs in the European union.



 Kindergarten News!
Good morning Mrs. Spellman's class.  I hope everyone had a wonderful weekend.  I spent mine in Turkey.  (Not the animal, but the country!  See if you can find it on the map).  While I was there I visited two schools for children.  Neither was as great as Kearns school!  This is a picture of what a typical street and homes in Turkey look like.  The children wear uniforms to school and the color of the Turkish flag is red with a yellow crescent moon.  It was fun to visit another country but I am happy to be back in Bulgaria again.  
Today's word in Bulgarian is "Dobro"(sounds like "doe-brey") and it means "good."  So......"Dobro utro!" (Good morning!)

Thursday, October 13, 2011

.............................Day three

First some weirdness...I found this "tomb" thing in the back edge of the garden when I was walking yesterday.  At first I thought it was some type of old ghoulish mausoleum or something (it's October...)...but I don't think the family would have been so irreverent to the dead.  I found out today that the estate had actually been taken away from the family under the Communist regime and was taken over by the military.  This is part of the remains of an underground bunker system....very cool.  Part of me wants to go look around for cool stuff....but a much bigger part of me is totally creeped out by the thought of spiders and rats so i'm not going down there.

Busy day today in the classrooms and then again with training.  I saw some really "fun" kids.  Wish I could take them home!  Training was on response and stimulus prompting....and fading.  They've got full physical prompting down...it's fading it.  Also spoke a lot about compliance versus task skill.  It's funny but it's definitely a divided crowd of women.  By the third day I have the first two rows leaning in, asking questions and taking notes.  The back two rows (they've self segregated themselves by now) yawn and shake their head in disbelief that they are listening to such a silly american, when they could be cleaning something.  I don't even think a Lady Gaga video would work at this point.

Waking at 4:00 am tomorrow for the trip to Turkey. ...and that's only giving myself 45 minutes to shower, dress, down a cup of tea and haul my butt into a taxi.  It should be fun though.  Magi, the training director, said that "we are stopping two times for shopping." ...I'm thinking Kazakh Bazaar....

KINDERGARTEN NEWS!!
Hi friends,
How was your trip to the Bushnell to see The Little Red Hen??  I walked through the garden here at the school today and found this statue....and thought of you!
 
The word for "chicken" in Bulgarian is
"pile."  It sounds kindof like "pie."
Just like in America, the preschool children here are taught the names of animals and the sounds they make.  But the word for "kangaroo" in Bulgarian....is still just "kangaroo!"


I wonder if any of you will eat some "pile" for dinner tonight.  I bet Ellie's Grandmother is cooking up kangaroo!
love,
Ellie's mom.