Road tripping

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Tonight, we are headed on our first train ride for the summer.  We are headed down to the southern most part of Tamil Nadu.  We hope to visit with family and friends along the way.  Our friends who are visiting from the States will head down with us too.   Rumor has it that it is sweltering down south, so we are packing light and hoping to find enough respite as we negotiate the heat.

Pray for Leila as she embarks on her first train ride!   This should be a fun trip but it will pose different challenges for all of us.  We hope to be back in Bangalore on Friday morning (ish).   We’ll update you on the trip when we get back!

Here we go-go-go!

Good news!  Leila appears to be over her jet lag, which is a relief, and seems to be falling into a good eating/sleeping rhythm here.  Yesterday morning, however, she came down with a little cold.  While it hasn’t affected her mood too terribly, I could tell she was bothered by the runny nose.  Today it has moved on to stuffiness and a little cough.  I’m just hoping it all goes away before we head out of town by train next week!

Leila streching after a nap... yes, still likes to sleep with her swaddler

Leila streching after a nap... yes, still likes to sleep with her swaddler

After waiting several days for the technician to show up, we finally got the new washing machine up and running.  (In fact, I am washing a load of towels as I write!)  The washer works well, and has made me feel all at once helpful and slightly independent here.  Laundry has always been one of my preferred household tasks in America, and so it feels quite satisfying to be able to do our own laundry here as well.  One added bonus is that we hang the clothes out to dry on the clothesline here, which makes the clothes seem more fresh, and certainly makes our whites a bit brighter.  As I was hanging some of Leila’s white onesies (which were of course the ones with the residual “poop explosion” stains) I was thinking how helpful the sun would be in removing the rest of the stains, a handy tip I learned about “sunning” diapers to get stubborn stains out.  It made me think of how several American visitors have commented about how Indians manage to keep their whites so white, and for the first time I imagined that it was because they hang their clothes out in the every-day brilliant sun– something that was not possible when trying to sun Leila’s diapers in the Michigan mid-winter!

watching the washing

watching the washing

Ah, laundry... its good for the soul!

Ah, laundry... its good for the soul!

Our first group has arrived.  They are a family of four taking a mission trip together.  Dad, mom, one high school, and one junior high student.  Yesterday, of course, was the tough day since they came in around 2am.  It used to be our policy that no one got to got to sleep until bedtime of the night they arrive, though sometimes it was a very early bedtime, like 7pm.  Now we generally give the option, and many, like yesterday’s group, decide to take a nap in the afternoon.  That being the case, yesterday’s playlist was a compilation of eating, getting their bearings, and sleeping.  Today will be much more exciting since we’ll be headed to the shopping district, especially so the ladies can have some dresses (salwars) made, and then we have a program in the Girl’s Home (orphanage) later this afternoon.  No more lolly-gagging around!  It is go-go-go from here on out.  In fact, it is 9:45am here, and I can tell that JP just started the day off with motorcycle rides!

Sun sun SUN. Yes, Sun!

a sunny seat

a sunny seat

They say that sun is the best thing to help you overcome jet lag.  I would say that this is the best news I’ve heard all day, maybe even all month!  Leila has some pretty fierce jet lag, and has been very wakeful during the hours of 12am and 4am, which isn’t the most ideal time for JP and me, as you can probably imagine.  I’ve just been reading that the worst of jet lag can take 4-5 days for babies to get over, so we’ve a bit more time until we see the jet lag run its course.  The encouraging thing is that Bangalore is very sunny these days, and the more that we can bring Leila into the daylight, the more her body will understand the rhythms of the day here.  (This, of course, is true for parents as well, but I kind of feel like any jet lag that JP and I are suffering is mostly irrelevant at this point!)

Apart from sleeping as best we can, whenever we can, we have been enjoying time with family and friends.  (You can check out some photos of us below, playing in the sun.  Note that Leila looks so serious in most of them because she tends to be really out of it during the daytime hours.)  And, because there is always some sort of project taking place, JP and some of the men from the office here have been working on getting internet piped into the apartment.  It was only an all day project yesterday that resulted in it NOT working!  Then today, JP spent some time configuring the modem in the office so that we can get wireless in the apartment instead, which is how I am able to produce this blog now, while Leila naps.  Good thing I have such a cool, smart husband!!  (Too bad he didn’t try the wireless thing sooner.  There is now a large hole drilled in the apartment’s door frame!  Although, it was mighty entertaining to see the fellows drilling the hole–  though a nail!)

Hopefully now we’ll find plenty of time to keep you all updated on life here with stories and photos.

Check out our afternoon tea time, and afternoon sun…

the whole gang gathered

the whole gang gathered

Leila driving the scooter for the first time

Leila driving the scooter for the first time

Thomas (oreo) JP and James

Thomas (oreo) JP and James

playing in the afternoon glow with Tata

playing in the afternoon glow with Tata

sweet little Judith

sweet little Judith

off to nap time

off to nap time

Once upon a time we went to India

MIss Monkey Business

Miss Monkey Business

It is 5:10pm, and I’m drinking sweet, sweet coffee from a stainless steel tumbler.  It is 87 degrees.  Leila has bare legs and bare feet.

All is well.

Our flights came in exactly on time.  All of our luggage arrived- all six checked bags, and all 4 carry-ons.  Leila even managed to sleep nicely in her bassinet on and off throughout the international flights.  We LOVE Air France.  And generally speaking, people couldn’t have been nicer. Having crossed the oceans with a 5 month-old, we’re feeling triumphant and relieved.  We’re more than grateful that everything went as well as it did.  We’ll do it again, though not in a heart beat.  I think we’ll stay awhile.  Yes, maybe two months.

Perhaps the best part of being here so far was getting to meet the newest Sundararajan, James and Anita’s baby girl, Judith.  At 5.5 lbs she’s so tiny that holding her is like holding feathers.  Leila looks like a big chunk-er next to her, and Leila is a pretty average size for 5 months.  Judith has lots of hair, and big alert eyes.  She is darling.

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Travel Update

Hey Everybody!

Here is a short update on our trip so far.   We made it to NYC with a few hiccups along the way.  Leila still struggles to nap on air planes but she has been making a lot of friends along the way.   Our NYC stop was fun.  We got to meet with our dear friend Tom who hosted us and showed us everything we could possibly see in New York City.   It feels funny but being in NY actually makes us feel like we are no longer in the US.  We also got to meet my (JP’s) long time friend Saida for breakfast at the diner that is prominently featured on Seinfeld.   You all know how big a fan I am off the show!

Anyway, we are now at the gate waiting for the Paris connection.   Since I got upgraded to the Silver Elite status (which will also be upgraded after this trip), I have begun to enjoy the perks.  Our suitcases were specially tagged …  and people took care of the security check for us.   Plus, with Leila…   I feel like we are beginning to enjoy the warmer side of people’s hearts.   Lots of smiles, lots of people who want to come and talk to her… and she is mostly happy to oblige with a smile.

We did get the bassinet for the flight.   Please do continue to keep the rest of our trip in your prayers.   Long way to go yet and we REALLY hope our little one learns to sleep on the plane, and that the cabin pressure doesn’t ruin the trip for her.   We’ll hopefully continue to update you as and when we are able!

JP

Here is what Katy wants me to add… she is dictating as she feeds the baby.

“I just want to thank the following people.  My parents, for chauffeuring us.  Teresa, for bringing our stroller to the highway to us when we forgot it.  Heather, who told us that we didn’t have to bring with us the car-seat receiver (one less item to carry).   Tom, who graciously hosted us in NYC.   The guy, at the Air France ticket counter, who was not only helpful but kind.   And finally, all those people who smiled at our baby and made us feel ok about traveling with her.”

Contest #2: Travel and Packing

JP and I have both done our fair share of traveling, and the subsequent packing that accompanies all travel.  Nonetheless, we are always looking for new and helpful ways to simplify and better our travel and packing.  On our recent trips to Seattle and Iowa/South Dakota, we tested the waters of traveling with a baby.  Things went relatively smoothly with both trips, but I imagine we could have been even more well-prepared.  Would you like to help us out as we prepare for India (and a lifetime of travel…) by offering your best travel and packing tips (with OR without kids)?  You can win a prize…

** Leave your travel or packing tip(s) in the comment section.

** You may leave more than one tip, but please leave each one as an individual comment.

** Each tip is considered a valid contest entry, and you may enter as many times as you have good tips to offer.

** Deadline:  WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2009 12:00pm- noon- EST

As for the PRIZE..

My sister-in-law has begun her own small business making small craft items.  I fell in love with the baby hats right away, and immediately deemed them the next contest prize.  If you offer the very best travel or packing tip (according to JP and me) you will receive one adorable “Rocketman Fleece Baby Hat,” for a baby sizes 3-9 months.  I have a picture of Leila wearing the hat here.  You’ll notice it is a little big on her, but that is because she is just entering into the 3-9 month size range.  CUTE hat!!!

YOUR PRIZE... Rocketman Fleece Baby Hat

YOUR PRIZE... Rocketman Fleece Baby Hat

Oh yeah, I'm so cool in this Rocketman Hat!!

Oh yeah, I'm so cool in this Rocketman Hat!!

I’d encourage you to check out Heather’s website to see the other goodies.  Tiny House Crafts on Etsy.com, check out her site for a direct link.

Here is the hat we picked out for Leila, which was perfectly sized (0-3 months) for her head.  We’ve gotten many compliments!

Tangerine Dream

Tangerine Dream

www.heatherwing.com

Click here!

i love my hat!

i love my hat!

PLEASE SEND US YOUR TRAVEL AND PACKING TIPS… You might win the cute Rocketman Fleece Hat for a baby you know and love!!

Seattle

Baby + Baggage & still smiling
Baby + Baggage & still smiling

OK, so traveling is not as simple as it used to be.  Gone are the days of minimal luggage and tiny carry-ons.  Gone are the opportunities to explore the airport shops, or kick up my heels on the nearest seat and sip a coffee.  Instead, we pack to the gills, bring four carry-ons and a baby, and quick nurse then cram some food down our throats, just in time to hop on the  plane.  Despite these changes, we had a fantastic trip to Seattle with our little Leila.  She is a charmer, and everyone in the airports and on the planes loved her.  Probably the most difficult thing is that she needs/wants to know what is going on at all times, and thus refuses to sleep.  On our trip out to Seattle, she managed to skip two naps, sleeping for only 20 minutes as we landed.  It threw off her schedule for a couple of days, but even then, she was a dear and seemed to love being in Seattle with her Amy “Chithi” and Kyle “Chithappa.”

smiling at her aunt and showing off her "first flight" certificate
smiling at her aunt and showing off her “first flight” certificate
a bit of jet lag the first day...
a bit of jet lag the first day…

whee!!
whee!!
Leila adores her Chithi and Chithappa
Leila adores her Chithi and Chithappa
YAY!
YAY!

Back in 1998/99, I lived in Seattle for a year while I did junior high youth ministry at University Presbyterian Church.  It was a remarkable year.  Though I had already moved a number of times with my family, and  lived in another country for six months,  Seattle was different.  I had committed to a year’s worth of ministry (at least,) and I didn’t know a single soul living on the west coast (minus one friend in San Diego.)  There have been a couple of times in my life that I have agreed to do things seemingly on a whim, and realized after the fact that it was all God’s plan.  Moving to Seattle was one of those things.  If I had been in my right mind, I would never have gone, but God’s call on my life was fierce, and I went.  At first I was oblivious to how new and difficult everything was, but then I realized that I didn’t know anyone there, I wasn’t sure how to do my job, and I had to use public transportation because my car broke down right before I left Michigan.  It took at least three tough months of transition time and significant adjustment, and then I began to fall in love with Seattle.  I began to embrace the gift from my host family of an old Subaru stick shift, and learned to drive it and parallel park on the hills!   I even learned to appreciate the hours of time I spent in traffic between West Seattle and the U-District.  I learned precious things about ministry-related gifts that God had blessed me with, and just how grand my affection for junior high students would become.  I learned not only what “teriyaki” was, but how much I would crave eating it.  I learned to pronounce my “o’s” properly.  I knew on which horizon I should look for Mount Rainier, and a favorite past time became picking over the stones and sea glass on the shores of the Sound.  Coffee became a good, good friend.  As my year ticked away, Seattle became my heart’s home, and leaving there was one of the hardest things I ever did.  It is harder than hard to have my sister and kindred spirit, Amy, out there, but it is a rich blessing at the same time.  If Amy and Kyle didn’t live in Seattle, I don’t know that my pocketbook would afford the trips.  It isn’t the same thing as living there, but visiting there makes me feel full and alive.  It was GOOD to be in my heart’s home.

If you know Amy and I at all, we like food.  We like to talk about, create, and eat food in equal proportion.  So, as you already witnessed in JP’s blog entry… we eat good food in Seattle.  This trip’s theme would certainly be donuts, but we enjoyed lots of other great meals too.  Perhaps the very best was the home-cooked steak dinner with “Pink Fantasy Cake” for dessert on Valentines Day.  (Thanks to Amy and Kyle for letting us crash your first V-Day as a married couple!)  I’ll include some photos of the foods we ate, and a few links to some great places to check out if you’re ever in Seattle.

final touches on the "Pink Fantasy" Cake

final touches on the "Pink Fantasy" Cake

Yes... we managed to fit in Top Pot as well...

Yes... we managed to fit in Top Pot as well...

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Top Pot website

"The Bullseye"

"The Bullseye"

Pike’s Place Market is a favorite stop for us in Seattle.  It was a CHILLY, but sunny and beautiful Monday morning that we poked around the stalls.  Also, the first EVER Starbucks is right across the street, and it was my “touristy” request to stop in.

Blue Sky Monday

Blue Sky Monday

ah, the colors!

ah, the colors!

something new... Lemon Drop Plums

something new... Lemon Drop Plums

the sign said Lobster Tails for Grilling

the sign said Lobster Tails for Grilling

note the "shrimp caviar"

note the "shrimp caviar"

fennel

fennel

The First Starbucks

The First Starbucks

Leila eyes her first Starbucks

Leila eyes Her first Starbucks

Well, this is getting long, and there is still more food to mention…  Check back again soon for another Seattle post.  And, stayed tuned for contest #2!

I love donuts!

Toward the end of my high school days, my brother James and I discovered the wonderful world of donuts.  Donuts took a while to make their mark in India but we were hooked from our first bite.  We ate donuts whenever we could.  I remember, even during my boarding school days in Chennai, taking road trips to check out different donut places.  I found one on my way to tutorials I had to attend for my State exams.   It was perfect.  I could have a chocolate donut for about 15 rupees and it was right behind my bus stop.

The USA did nothing to quell my desire for donuts.  In fact, my desire for these wonderful things increased exponentially.  Even today, whenever I can have a donut for breakfast, I leap at the opportunity.  And if I know my brother James (and I think I do)…  it is no different for him.  Poor James.  When he did come to the US, he bit into a pumpernickel bagel thinking it was a chocolate donut.  Now, I know bagels are great but if you bite into one thinking it is a donut, you are in for some disappointment.   Some of my favorite donuts in the US come from the special chain called Krispy Kreme.   I remember doing road trips during seminary with Katy and her sister Amy (some habits die hard).   I had my favorite donut joints in college too (Casey’s Bakery is one of my favorite stops).  That list keeps expanding…

Anyway…  Seattle has some wonderful donut places for me to sink my teeth into.   Besides the Krispy Kreme we enjoyed on day one, there is also Top Pot (which I hope to sample before I leave), and some sweet little places downtown by Pike’s Place.   I had the biggest donut of my life and the smallest one.  Needless to say, it was the best morning yet.

Home.

We’re home.  Leila is taking a break from the car seat and sleeping in the pack-and-play.  She was a good traveler, and that made the trip go as smoothly as traveling with a 3-1/2 month-old can go.   As the parents of said child, we were grateful.  Some of Leila’s new tricks include “standing,” and spinning around (on her back) while playing on her exercise gym.  She is just a cute as ever, and won over many hearts in northwest Iowa and South Dakota.

"Standing"

"Standing"

A few highlights from the trip…

As I anticipated our travels, I was most nervous about when, where, and how I would feed Leila and give her some necessary wiggle time along the way.  By far, our favorite stop, and most random, was “Krista’s Kitchen.”  It was our first day on the road, and it was fast becoming our lunch time, and Leila’s lunch time.  We searched the Garmin (still LOVE that thing!!) for food options, and we chose a cafe/diner option in Portage, Wisconsin, but as quickly as we chose that, we began to see billboards advertising Krista’s Kitchen.  The signs drew us in, and while we actually did drive by the Garmin-specified diner, we kept on going until we reached the nearby Krista’s Kitchen.  We were so pleased with our decision, breathing a sigh of relief practically as soon as we walked in the door.

a favorite stop... Portage, WI

a favorite stop... Portage, WI

http://kristas-kitchen.com/

It was a small town spot, filled with kindness and good food.  We arrived just as the major lunch rush had passed, but it was still happily bustling, and the sun was pouring lavishly through the windows.  Each and every person we talked to was helpful and courteous.  The food was simple and delicious.  JP believes that they have the best quiche (Lorraine) that he’s ever eaten, and I had the California Turkey Sandwich with 5 Seed Bread.  Yum.  Double yum, actually.  After I finished eating, Leila was very ready to eat.  I was able to sit in a discreet corner and nurse the baby while JP ate, and not only did no one seem bothered by it, but  one of the servers actually gave me a thumbs up!  We highly recommend this cute little place if ever you’re passing though (or live nearby).

Most of our other highlights involved renewing and enjoying relationships with churches and individuals in Iowa and South Dakota.  It was busy.  JP went to college out in Orange City, IA and has many connections in and throughout that area because of college and numerous churches that support us in the region as well.  Leila and I got to meet whole bunches of people that only Daddy has ever known.  Leila was a star wherever we went.  JP is a remarkably good story teller and preacher, but people love smiley babies, and since our Leila is very generous with her smiles, JP had to get used to sharing the spotlight.  Not that he really minded showing her off!!

Daddy, Showing off his "little" Leila

Daddy, Showing off his "little" Leila

A few years ago, I read Dakota:  A Spiritual Geography by Kathleen Norris, which I really enjoyed.  It was a book that helped me to discover how important “Place” is in my life.  Perhaps I’ll write more about that another day.  For now, I mention the book because our drive from Orange City to Platte, South Dakota brought it to mind.  In particular, there is a chapter called “Sea Change” that I especially enjoyed.  I’d like to share an excerpt from that chapter…

In journeying on the inland ocean of the Plains, the great void at the heart of North America, I’ve discovered that time and distance, those inconveniences that modern life with its increasingly sophisticated computer technologies seeks to erase, have a reality and a terrifying beauty all their own.

Like all who choose life in the slow lane- sailors, monks, farmers- I partake of a contemplative reality.  Living close to such an expanse of land I find I have little incentive to move fast, little need of instant information.  I have learned to trust the processes that take time, to value change that is not sudden or ill-considered but grows out of the ground of experience.  Such change is properly defined as conversion, a word that at its root connotes, not a change of essence but of perspective, as turning round; turning back to or returning; turning one’s attention to.

Our drive was long and quiet and “Plainly” beautiful.  It was good for my soul.  I’m into slowness of life, and for a number of years I’ve been trying to harness slowness.  I haven’t had much luck, but then I guess maybe the slow life can’t easily be harnessed by someone with one foot in the fast life.   Norris goes on to say that to be a good citizen of the Plains life, one has to choose that life consciously.  I would completely agree with her.  I’m sure I’ll continue to yearn for life in the slow lane, and perhaps that it where it has to begin anyway, with a yearning.  I’ll continue to work toward this slowness, of course.  It will always be my choice.  It is how I’m wired, and I’ve begun to realize that it will partly always be my responsibility to help other people in the fast arena of life to remember that there is another option.  I did that at Hope College, and now I think I will do it for my husband and my kid(s) and the people in and around our life…  …There’s lots more to say about all of this, but I would imagine that most of you have other things that you need to move on to 😉 so I will save the rest for another day.  Just chew on that excerpt for awhile.

And so it begins…

I still cannot believe sometimes how crazy our lives have been.    Take 2009 for example.  The year had barely dawned when I took a team of 10 and headed to India.   It was for Western Theological Seminary’s Inter-cultural Immersion.   It was pretty sweet to engage this crowd in deep discussion using India as the lens.    I was in India for 10 days exactly and then headed back to my women and the 70 degree temperature drop!   Here is a link to a slide show I made of the trip.

Last week, I finally finished my laundry from the trip and I put the suitcases away.   And strange as it might sound, our travels are actually going to get crazier now.   Katy, Leila and I will be taking a long trip out to Iowa and South Dakota tomorrow.   We have not done a trip of this magnitude with the little one.   So, today, we pack again.   Fortunately, we have wonderful people along the way who will provide wonderful respite for us.   Even so, keep us in your prayers.

We hope to get back to Michigan sometime next Tuesday.   We have a week or so to again get our laundry done and get us adjusted back to Michigan.  Then we are off to the west coast.  We are going to take Leila on her first plane ride out to Seattle.   That should be interesting.  We get to spend some time with Amy (Katy’s sister) and her husband Kyle.  We also get to visit some other friends of ours.   This will be good on many levels but mostly, it should be a good dry run for us as we prepare for the whopper of a trip coming up in March when all of us head to India for a couple of months.   It will be interesting to see how Leila handles cabin pressure, how she handles jet lag, and most of all… how we handle all of it with her.    🙂

So there you go…  a typical three month stretch for the Sundararajans.  Like I said before, I still cannot believe how crazy our life can get.