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Friday, 27 June 2008

Back-breaker

A few weeks ago, I got out of bed and discovered I had a bad back. Well, shit happens, I thought; I'm not getting any younger. This old body isn't what it used to be, and believe me when I say that it wasn't much to begin with.

Such twinges tend to occur from time to time. After a day or so, they're usually gone. Not so, this one.

Depending on the day during the last few weeks, this lower back pain, somewhere in or near my sacrum, has been anywhere from manageable to quite debilitating. By that, I mean that even walking has been painful.

It's really been quite unpredictable. I go to bed each day with no idea how bad the pain will be when I get out of bed the next morning. Bending to pick something up, lifting children, walking: it's all been very painful at times, tolerably uncomfortable at others.

In such situations, Sarah usually nags me to go and see someone. I usually respond by ignoring her until the noise of her nagging becomes louder than the persistence of the ailment from which I'm suffering.

Earlier this week, it had become obvious that this rather painful problem wasn't going to go away on its own in the near future. With our long holiday starting just a couple of days from now, I couldn't allow myself to be incapacitated in any way, so I relented and went to see a physiotherapist.

Half an hour after going in, I was feeling worse than before. He had applied a technique that I'm going to refer to as violent massage, although the plaque on the door read 'medical massage'.

Yesterday evening, I finally started to feel a bit better, which was a great encouragement. I had another appointment with my torturer today, and again, I left his building brutalised and bruised. However, I did feel a lot better again.

The first visit didn't yield most of its benefit until yesterday evening, so perhaps it'll take another couple of days before I begin to feel the full benefit of today's treatment.

Anyway, I want to be fully over this backache as soon as possible. I can deal with having it in my daily home life, but I don't want it while I'm on holiday.

Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Opa Tony & Oma Bernie

It's been quiet on the blog front, as a few people have doubtless noticed. The days have been long and full, leaving precious little energy and time for blogging.

My natural father arrived in Amsterdam last Thursday, courtesy of a delayed Aer Lingus flight. We amused ourselves while we waited by watching Daphne Dekkers recording a segment for what was obviously some low-brow American reality show, because the production crew were all American. We were surprised by their arrogance, as they acted as if they owned the airport.

Anyway, Tony finally emerged with his wife, Bernie, just when I was starting to think they hadn't made it onto the plane. He was easy to recognise from his photos. In fact, he was easy enough to recognise from my own reflection.

Tony was clearly moved by the meeting. We hugged for what seemed like an eternity, the culmination of an almost 41 year search. "Long time, no see", I said

It's different for me. I obviously have no memories of him from the first few months of my life. I'm also not the one who has spent the better part of his life searching for a lost child, wondering what happened to him and whether he is dead or alive. For me, therefore, it was not the fulfilment of a drawn-out and agonising process. It was simply the meeting of a stranger, one with whom I happen to share an unusually large amount of DNA.

Which isn't to say I wasn't curious, of course; it's just that the reunion wasn't fulfilling a need for me.

That matter-of-fact attitude to the reunion pretty much set the tone for the stay. From the outset, the atmosphere was very relaxed. We played it by ear and engaged in small talk as much, if not more, as we did in discussions about the past.

As the days passed, we got to know one another better and, by the end of the trip, it felt as if we'd known each other a lot longer than we have. Chewing the fat came naturally, there were no pregnant pauses and it felt very comfortable to just sit in silence in the same room or out on the patio.

Opa Tony was certainly a big hit with Eloïse , too. Right from the first moment, he was running around with her and playing the jester, an approach that served to completely obviate any need she might have felt to first gain some familiarity with him. She fell for him on the spot.

Lucas , too, would beam from ear to ear every time that Tony went anywhere near him. He definitely has the magic touch.

And, lest anyone reading this wonder otherwise, it was a pleasure to have Bernie stay, too. I'm sure Tony is the person he is today in no small part thanks to Bernie.

The next step is to prepare for a car trip to Ireland, which will also take in my step-sister, Fenella, and her children, Eloïse 's cousins, on the way (well, they live in Cornwall, England, so it's kind of on the way). Not only will we meet my three half-brothers, Ronan, Shane and Jason, but we also hope to get around a sizeable chunk of Ireland at the same time.

Thursday, 12 June 2008

Father's Day

Today is the big one.

In just a few hours, I'll be meeting my natural father for the first time. You may recall the story.

The next week is going to be a very interesting one, as two directly related strangers attempt to bridge an unbridgeable 41 year chasm. We'll play it by ear see how far we get.

Their flight lands at 12:15 and Sarah and I will be at Schiphol to pick them up.

Thursday, 29 May 2008

The Storm Has Broken

I had a decent night's sleep last night, with only mild sweating. This morning, I awoke feeling tired, but thankfully free of headache.

The sickness therefore appears to be a thing of the past, but the healing is only now beginning. I have sores, scabs and welts all over my body; weeping wounds in places where I'd really rather not have them. Now I have to keep this lot clean and uninfected over the coming days, hopefully avoiding too much scarring in the process.

It feels good to be on the mend and have my energy mostly back. I was able to visit a supermarket and pick up Eloïse from play-school today: simple outings, but pleasurable for one who has not been outside in quite a while now.

Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Head In A Vice Again

Last night was difficult. I was exhausted at the time of going to bed and woke up every couple of hours, soaked in my own sweat. My head felt leaden and dull.

I eventually rose around 07:00, as Sarah was having a lot of problems with Eloïse . Lucas had had a fever all night, too, so we were concerned about him.

Within minutes of being awake, yesterday's brain-pounding juggernaut made a prompt return and had me all but incapacitated again. The headache continued to worsen until, at about 08:30, I was forced to go back to bed, where I slept until about 10:00.

Things were no better when I rose for my second attempt at the day. Given that this headache was so painful, now into its second day, and persisting long after classic chicken pox symptoms had all but disappeared, I began to reluctantly suspect some kind of secondary complication.

The fact that my head was pounding over the entire area of its upper hemisphere, rather than in one localised area, led me to conclude that there was probably pressure over the surface of my entire brain. With this in mind, I suspect that the symptoms of the last couple of days have actually been those of mild encephalitis. That's my belief, anyway, as the circumstances and symptoms match perfectly.

Some time before noon, I was forced back into bed yet again, where I fell asleep for somewhere between two and three hours. When I awoke this time, however, I was a little less sweaty and my head felt somewhat lighter.

Since awaking that final time today, the force of my headache has been stable and manageable. I'm optimistic that the end of the illness is in sight, but I won't know for sure until I see how well I sleep tonight and how I feel tomorrow.

Lucas 's fever has been fairly stable throughout the day and he doesn't seem to be in too much discomfort. Poor little fellow, having to deal with chicken pox so early in life. He won't even get immunity from the experience. At least I can rest easy after this is over, secure in the knowledge that this particular illness can't afflict me again.

So, we're less concerned about Lucas now, which is a worry we can really do without.

Hopefully, tomorrow morning will bring the realisation that I've enjoyed a good night's sleep, awoken amidst dry sheets, and am free of headache and itching. I'm optimistic about my chances.

Tuesday, 27 May 2008

Another Change Of Pace

Each day seems to bring with it a new phase of illness.

After being plied with various gels, ointments and powders yesterday evening, the itching was more or less under control when I went to bed at midnight. I had started to feel tired only an hour or so earlier, which struck me as strange after just an hour of sleep the previous night.

Sarah gave me a homeopathic pill (Rhus toxicodendron) as I went to bed. The next thing I knew, it was 05:50 and I was waking up to pee. I couldn't believe I'd slept without interruption for almost six hours, which immediately forced the realisation that I was no longer itching at all.

I peed and went back to bed, sleeping for another couple of hours.

When I finally got up, full of optimism, things took a turn for the worse. I felt drained of energy and a headache was quickly coming on.

Within a hour, the headache had become a real brain-burster. My head felt like a watermelon that had been thrown off a cliff onto a lava field. The same headache has had me incapacitated for most of the day. I'm enjoying a period of respite as I write this.

The spread of welts seems to have slowed to a crawl, perhaps even stopped. Maybe that's because there's nowhere left for them to go. I have a couple on my fingertips and elsewhere on my hands. They've also made it down to my ankles and even between my toes. I didn't know chicken pox ever went down to the extremities like this.

The welts on my fingertips are very small and aren't quite breaching the skin's surface. They feel like splinters or very minor burns.

Buckets of sweat have been coming out of me today. The diarrhoea was also back this morning. The symptoms at this stage are thus very similar to the first couple of days, when I still thought I was coming down with stomach flu. Maybe the virus is withdrawing with the same force with which it took hold.

I'm cautiously going to say that I'm probably over the worst of this now, but who knows? Some of the blisters are looking opaque now. Yesterday, they were transparent. Hopefully, they'll all start to scab over soon. The ones that had burst or been scratched open are already starting to crust over.

I still look like the arse-end of a mangy dog and that's not going to improve overnight. I just hope I can emerge at the end of this without too many scars.

Monday, 26 May 2008

Scratching The Itch

The pox continues.

All other symptoms have now given way to unbearable itching.

The welts continue to appear and are spreading to new areas of my body. Imagine the worst possible place for a bloke to develop itchy, inflamed sores that ooze sticky moisture if you dare to touch them. Yes, I even have them there.

I managed only an hour of sleep last night. The itching was light when I went to bed, but developed into a raging onslaught after just a short while. I made several attempts at going back to sleep, but just moving around in bed was producing enough friction and therefore also skin irritation, that sleep remained somewhere beyond my reach.

I eventually got up at 04:00 and lay on the couch, watching TV. I wasn't any more comfortable, but at least my mind could contemplate something other than the state of my skin.

I'm not sure how many more days of this I've got ahead of me, but it's probably at least a couple more.

I'm a frightening sight at the moment, it has to be said. If I am disturbed by what stares back at me when I look in the mirror now, imagine how I must look to perfect strangers. I look like a monster.

My body, too, looks repulsively diseased. It really is a disgusting sight.

On the positive side, at least the splitting headaches and dizziness have stopped, although I actually preferred them to the itching.

Praise goes to Sarah, who is currently single-handedly holding this household together. Not only I am unable to help, I'm an extra person that she has to help, so she's quadratically busy.

Thankfully, she was able to get some menthol talc and calendula cream today, which actually does help calm my tormented skin.

All I can do is continue to kill time until the virus has had its fun with me.

Thursday, 8 May 2008

Lightning Strikes Twice

It's taken me a while to write this entry, as it's about something quite different to the usual trivia that I either extol or grizzle about.

Can lightning strike in the same place twice? It appears so.

The story begins with my uncle Paul. My uncle Paul died of cancer a couple of months ago. Nothing unusual about that, you might say; thousands around the world die of cancer every day. We weren't close, but it was quite a blow for my mother. My uncle lived in Winnipeg, Canada and I hadn't seen him since my wedding. Before that, I hadn't seen him in some 25 years. That's how the Macdonalds are.

Fast-forward to 30th March just gone. Lucas is born. In the evening of the day of his birth, I call my mother in Florida to inform her that she now has a grandson. After hearing my news and congratulating me, she tells me that she also has some news for me.

It turns out that the funeral parlour that handled my uncle Paul's death recently received a letter from afar. The letter was accompanied by a request, that an enclosed letter be forwarded to my uncle Paul's widow, my aunt Charleen. This request was duly honoured and the letter sent on.

When Charleen received the forwarded letter, she was surprised by its content. Amongst other things, it politely requested that a further letter be forwarded to my mother, wherever she may happen to be.

Upon reading the letter, Charleen called my mother to inform her of its existence and let her know that she would be sending it on.

The letter had not yet arrived in Florida when I called my mother to tell her about Lucas ' arrival. Nevertheless, because she had had it read to her over the phone by Charleen, she was familiar with its content and could at least give me the gist of it. I was rather surprised to learn of the author's identity and the nature of the letter.

I asked my mother to scan the letter and send it to me via e-mail as soon as she received the physical copy. A few days later, it arrived in my in-box.

The letter was handwritten and metrically arranged, i.e. written in rhyming couplets. This made an already unusual missive even more improbable.

The words told a melancholic tale of one man's quest to locate two people who had inadvertently disappeared from his life almost 41 years ago. They painted a tragic picture. I was left with a strong impression of a man tormented by his past, such that his past had become an inseparable part of his present and the subject of an ongoing quest into the future.

At the foot of the letter, the man had signed his name and given his contact details. His address, his e-mail address, telephone number and even his mobile number were there.

If you haven't already guessed, I am one of the two people he had spent 41 years searching for.

I was suddenly struck by the power I now wielded over this man's life and emotional well-being. By the simple act of picking up the phone and dialling the number at the foot of the page, I could end this man's fruitless, four decade search with a single, swift mercy-blow. Alternatively, I could shrug off the opportunity, do nothing and leave the man to suffer. If I chose the latter course, the man would likely spend the rest of his life not knowing what had become of the two people whose destiny had somehow slipped through his fingers.

The man in question is my biological father.

All I've ever known about my natural father is that he was very young when I was born. I also knew his name, but I've been apt to forget it for months on end over the years.

From that last statement, you might correctly surmise that the identity of my natural father has never been a topic of great interest to me. I've certainly never felt the need to go in search of him. I was adopted at a very young age by my grandparents, so as far as I was concerned, I had a mother and a father.

Unlike most people in a similar situation, it just never mattered to me that I did not know anything about the man who had helped to bring me into the world. The fact that I shared some DNA with him did nothing to distinguish him in my eyes from the billions of other strangers roaming our planet. In my case, blood most definitely did have the same viscosity as water.

Possibly, that (lack of) reaction stems from the fact that I've never been close to anyone in my family. It's my observation that the Macdonalds are a pretty distant bunch of people (and not just geographically). Without our blood ties, it's unlikely any of us would ever have chosen to have anything to do with any of the others. We're not the only such family, but most people don't care to admit their kin are this dysfunctional.

My grandmother, who raised me, would complain at regular intervals that her children, having left the parental home, would barely even bother to pick up the phone once a year at Christmas. Visits from them were, by and large, an even more infrequent occurrence. By the time I reached puberty, I felt a strong desire to fly the nest, too, so I had some understanding of this behaviour.

My grandmother loved me and, at some level, I must have loved her. Her love, however, was somewhat pathological in nature. She needed me to fill an otherwise unbearable vacuum in her life, a chasm of festering, unfulfilled desire that frequently bubbled to the surface to be vented in the form of rancorous bile towards what seemed like the rest of mankind. Me, my grandfather, the neighbours, British people, protestants... anyone would do if she needed to vent some anger.

My grandmother was one of those people who talked incessantly to her television set, as if the people on it could hear her. She rarely had a good word to say about anyone and I think slagging off other people might actually have been her greatest pleasure in life, albeit a not terribly fulfilling one. She had few other pleasures to speak of, save for a gin and tonic, so it's not that far-fetched a claim.

My grandmother's embitterment probably contributed to her children staying away from her. It certainly can't have done much to endear her to them. And so I turned out to be no different. Once I managed to get out from under her roof, I rarely called or visited. I had some warm feelings for her, but our relationship was so antagonistic that if we had only spent five minutes per year in the same room for the rest of our lives, neither of us would have been able to use the time for anything more constructive than berating the other.

My grandfather was a decent bloke, but by the time I was adopted, he wanted little more out of life than to retreat behind his newspaper, coming out only once my grandmother had gone to bed, to watch the snooker. He was a mild-mannered fellow, but I was never really able to respect him, because of the shameless way he allowed himself to be derided and emasculated by his wife. Consequently, we didn't have much of a relationship, either.

I therefore left home with little concept of family. The only family I had known had appeared not to particularly like one another. Birthdays were not celebrated and, to this day, I still don't know my grandparents' dates of birth. We were a group of highly disparate and incompatible people, who -- for no good reason I could fathom -- had chosen to live together in the same house.

So, it's fair to say that I had little interest in family when I left home. I certainly wasn't about to go in search of more of it. Whoever my father was, he had his life and I had mine.

Perhaps surprisingly, I've kept that attitude most of my life. I long ago realised that if I were going to have any close family relationships, I was going to have to engineer them from scratch and create some new human-beings with whom to surround myself.

Sarah has spent the last eight years attempting to grind me down and mollify my stance on this matter, She was, from the very beginning, wildly curious about my natural father. She forced me to ask my biological mother questions about him that made me feel uncomfortable, because I didn't care about the answers and didn't want to create the impression I did.

When Eloïse was born, however, the issue of who my father was ceased to be a matter for just me. My father was, after all, Eloïse 's grandfather. At the very least, perhaps there was important medical information to be had. Perhaps my father's side of the family had some hereditary illness, knowledge about which might prove vital to the health of my children in the future.

So, I very slowly started to soften towards Sarah's insistence that I should make an effort to trace my biological father. By the time Lucas was born, I had only very recently reached the stage that I was prepared to write a letter to the popular Dutch TV programme, Spoorloos, to see whether they could and would assist in trying to locate my father.

How could I have known that, within a matter of a few weeks, my father would surface under his own steam?

I decided almost immediately after reading his letter that I would contact him. On humanitarian grounds alone, it deserved a call. The man had already served a life sentence.

The weekend following the receipt of his letter, I made contact with my father via the telephone. You can imagine what a shock it was for him when I told him who I was. I was waiting for the dull thud of him passing out and failing to the floor at the other end, but it never came.

Just like that, one evening in early April, 41 years of searching came to an end.

He still lives in Ireland, near Dublin, which is where he met and got to know my mother. He told me that he has often stopped in front of the house where the Macdonald family lived in the mid-sixties, imagining my mother, a teenage girl at the time, at the window. I wonder how many times he's stopped in front of that window in the course of the last 41 years.

I can't imagine what it must have been like, to be haunted for 41 years by the few precious memories of your newborn son, to be regularly confronted by the sight of the places you used to walk, hand-in-hand, with your long-lost first love. Imagine not knowing what happened to either... One day, they're just gone; without a trace.

I find it poetic and poignant that my mother had to lose a brother in order for her son to be found by his father. It's the stuff of a naff soap-opera, but however far-fetched this plot line happens to sound, it's perfectly true.

My father's name is Tony and it turns out that I also have three half-brothers. None of those has any children yet, however, so Tony not only made the acquaintance of his first-born son during that first conversation, but also discovered the existence of his first two grandchildren (and little Lucas was still only a week old at the time): rather a lot to take on board in one evening.

Apparently, my uncle Paul's death was announced in an obituary in a local Winnipeg paper. Jason, Tony's youngest son, found the obituary using Google and showed it to his dad, who must have muttered something along the lines of, 'My God, it's them!'

Tony only recently told his other children about me. They were enthusiastic and wanted to help him with his search. If Tony had told them a few weeks earlier, my uncle Paul would have still been alive and they wouldn't have found his obituary. If they had been told a few weeks later, the obituary would have already been removed. Thus, there was a relatively short window of time in which their search would have yielded the desired results.

I don't believe in fate, but fate is making a pretty good case for itself in these circumstances.

And so it comes to pass that the company known as Google exerts its mighty, life-altering influence on me for the second time. Lightning strikes twice, indeed.

I'm still reeling from the realisation of just how profoundly Google and, by extension, the Internet, are able to influence and affect our lives. There must be thousands of people out there with stories like mine. Even back in 2001/2002, we were already receiving e-mails from people who had found lost family members or diagnosed their own illness and managed to save their own life. Amazing.

Since our initial telephone conversation, Tony and I have exchanged a few e-mails. Whilst he has my blog and our photo gallery to tell him what kind of person I turned out to be, Tony is still something of a mystery to me. The first photos from his side arrived in my in-box only a couple of days ago, so I've only just discovered what he and my half-brothers look like.

There's definitely a strong resemblance between Tony and me. There's an expression on his face in those photos that I've seen spread across my face in photos of me.

The initial telephone conversation was quite relaxed, all things considered. Any initial nerves soon subsided. However, I think if we were to continue the communication by telephone, things might soon become rather stilted. After all, we don't know each other at all, so it would be a bit forced to call each other up and attempt to chat as if we had the slightest clue about the daily grind of the other's life.

It's therefore important that we meet up soon and consolidate the contact we've already had. The plan is for Tony and his wife, Bernie, to come here on 12th June and stay with us for a week.

Assuming that contact goes well -- and I can't imagine that it wouldn't -- we will then head off to Ireland during the summer holiday to meet the extended family.

The idea of an initial meeting in a smaller circle is appealing. There's a lot of catching up to do, and many questions to be asked and answered; on both sides. Much of that will be better suited to a small group, as it would be difficult to focus on a lot of this personal history with a wider audience, most of whom weren't born when the events being discussed were unfolding. I suspect it may also be easier to speak frankly in a smaller circle.

30th March was a memorable day. Not only did I gain a beautiful son, but I also learnt that my biological father was looking for me. I had expected to gain a child that day, but it came as a rather large surprise to also gain a parent.

Life is bizarre; it really is. I thought the turbulence of my youth had finally been left behind when I turned my back on Silicon Valley and headed home to sleepy Amsterdam to raise a family. Little did I know that precisely that very concept -- family -- was soon to send such huge ripples radiating across the placid waters of my life.

Even when your life is as peaceful and seemingly uneventful as mine, the next surprise is always lurking just around the corner, right when you least expect it.

Amazing.

Wednesday, 30 April 2008

Koninginnedag 2008

Koninginnedag 2008 is at an end for us, although the rowdy hordes continue to listen to really bad Dutch music -- spot the pleonasm -- on the Museumplein.

The rain that was predicted didn't materialise and the temperature remained cool, which was nice for us, but kept the numbers down. Reports say that half a million people were out and about in Amsterdam today, as opposed to 600,000 last year. The lower numbers meant that we could actually walk fairly normally through the Vondelpark and even push Eloïse 's buggy in front of us.

The Apollolaan, too, seemed quieter than usual. We didn't buy anything except Belgian waffles and hot-dogs this year, but the waffles were great, so I'm happy with our purchases.

We avoided the centre entirely today. I've seen enough Koninginnedagen that I really didn't feel the need. I was too knackered, anyway, thanks to all of the early mornings being forced upon me. It was nice to just stay local for once and just experience the neighbourhood celebrations, especially the Vondelpark, which is really all about the children.

Eloïse watched a young girl play the accordion and announced that she'd like to learn that instrument later. When we passed a boy playing guitar some minutes later, she said she'd like to learn to do that, too.

It's amusing to me that Princess Maxima, wife of Prince Willem Alexander, is by far the most popular member of the royal family in this country. How typically Dutch to love the royal who isn't even Dutch. Wat je van ver haalt is lekker. The royals were up in Friesland today, visiting a couple of small towns there.

It's also funny to see the children of Prince Maurits and Princess Marilène on TV with their parents. On normal weekdays, we often pass these young children biking up and down our street as we're walking home with Eloïse from the peuterspeelzaal. The family lives just a few doors down from us.

It's on days like today, when the neighbourhood is absolutely packed with cars and people from all over, that I'm extra appreciative of being lucky enough to live where I do. I live in a beautiful house in a beautiful neighbourhood and that's a real privilege. I don't think there's a day that goes by that I don't spend a few moments feeling consciously grateful for what I have, but that sense is heightened on days like today.

Thursday, 24 April 2008

Here Comes Another Bubble

This funny clip is still doing the rounds. If you know Silicon Valley and you haven't seen this yet, it may make you laugh.

Friday, 28 March 2008

Odds And Sods

Lots has been done. Lots is getting done.

Work on the garden steadily continues. Our electrician removed lots of old underground cabling from the garden yesterday, clearing the way for new cables to go in. We still have to pick out new lighting fixtures, though.

The garden path is mostly laid now. The bricks look really nice, composed, as they are, by four subtly different colours.

I've completed and submitted our taxes for 2007. Like last year, I commend the Belastingdienst for making a Linux version of the income tax return program available.

The new wireless Sonos zone that I set up in the conservatory last month is now wired. Our electrician got into the crawl space under the house today and pulled a cable to hook up the second network port. The Sonos ZP-100 is now plugged into this, providing a 4 port switch at the back, into which Sarah can now plug her laptop and enjoy faster, reliable network use.

A clock thermostat has been fitted in the main bathroom. This avoids having the floor heating turned on all the time. I've no idea why the previous owner of the house didn't have one fitted. The floor heating on the ground and second floors has always had clock thermostats.

The crosstrainer I ordered is apparently in short supply. The Dutch distributor doesn't have one to send to the shop where I ordered it, so my unit was unfortunately not delivered today. Hopefully, it will arrive next week.

I've started programming in earnest again. It feels good. I'll write more on this separately another time, as I'm under the weather and about to go to bed.

Monday, 24 March 2008

Fat Bastard

I'm a fat bastard. There's just no denying it. Why would I even bother to try?

I lost a fair bit of weight after leaving the USA, but I've put it all back on again. No longer can I blame Google's double-dipped chocolate malt balls (that's whopping great Maltesers, if you didn't know), whose close proximity to my office and completely free nature (apart from the obvious cost to my waistline) turned me into a helpless slave to the kitchen sugar snack bins.

Digression: why did (does?) Google stock sugary snacks on the first floor, where the engineers worked, but healthy snacks downstairs, where the non-technical people worked? Was it a cynical ploy to increase the productivity of the already fevered geek brains?

All I know is that I must have eaten my weight in M&Ms and malt balls while I worked for Google.

Anyway, as I said, my current lifestyle is just as sedentary as it was in the US. In fact, it's worse, because I don't even have to bike to work any more. And I'm getting older, so the weight is becoming harder to shift.

Google also had a gym, where I used to work out, but I'm too lazy to sign up for a local gym here. Well, the signing up isn't the problem; it's dragging yourself out of the house when you really don't feel like it. Consequently, I find myself in a nasty catch 22 situation: too lazy to go to the gym, which means I don't exercise enough, which makes me indolent and with too little energy.

Since I'm not yet so lazy that I won't go upstairs, the solution is to bring the mountain to Mohammed or, in this case, the gym to the house. In other words, I'm going to put a piece of gym equipment in the room next to our bedroom.

Specifically, I've ordered a Tunturi C85 crosstrainer. It should be delivered and assembled on Friday, at which point -- assuming no other deliveries on Friday! -- I'll be able to start working out on it.

I'm actually looking forward to it, as it has enough gadgetry to keep me amused whilst using it. Most gym equipment is terribly boring to use if you have no distractions. It will be interesting to see, for example, if the T-Road feature (basically a video of a road or path along which you progress by exercising) is a novelty that soon becomes tiresome, or whether it can hold one's interest over a prolonged period.

Friday, 7 December 2007

Sinterklaas, kom maar binnen met je knecht

Yesterday was 5th December, a big day in the Netherlands. The occasion is Sinterklaas, which is the eve of Saint Nicholas, the patron saint of children. The name Sinterklaas is a contraction of Sint Nicolaas.

Sinterklaas also provides the basis for the North American figure of Santa Claus, although that personage is distinct in Dutch culture and is known as de Kerstman.

The celebration of Sinterklaas is still much more popular than Christmas in this country. Many more people give presents on Sinterklaas than at Christmas, although more and more are giving presents on both occasions these days.

Sinterklaas is assisted in his giving duties by Zwarte Piet (Black Pete), a colourfully dressed figure with a black face. Opinions differ on whether this historically represents a person of African origin (originally, it was intended as a depiction of the devil). Some of those who believe it does read further into the role of Zwarte Piet as the servant of Sinterklaas and find unacceptable racial stereotyping. I find this reading to be naïse and largely the product of oversensitivity to the modern plague of political correctness.

Anyway, Eloïse 's playschool obviously celebrates this nice tradition and so we snapped a few photos when we went to pick her up.

Pepernoten, taaitaai decorated by the children with hagelslag, toddlers made up as Zwarte Piet and wearing colourful costumes, presents galore; it was all there.

Sinterklaas has now returned to Spain on his steamboat, but he'll be back again next year.

Before he went, he found time to ring the doorbell of the house yesterday evening and deposit a few more presents in Eloïse 's boot. Papa also wrote a poem about Eloïse , which he read to her great disinterest after dinner.

A phone conversation with Opa rounded out the day and Eloïse went to bed, a very tired little girl.

Today, Eloïse has been talking about the presents that Sinterklaas gave her. It's clearly made a big impression on her and it's a joy to see her imagination working overtime.

Saturday, 24 November 2007

Popular

After purchasing my new mobile phone on 9th November, it finally rang for the first time on Friday, 23rd November; that's a full two weeks later.

Oh yeah, it was a telemarketer on the line.

Friday, 9 November 2007

Afrika! Afrika!

I must just give a plug for the Afrika! Afrika! circus, currently stationed in Amsterdam after successful runs in Germany and Austria. This animal-free, mostly African circus is well worth the price of admission and guarantees you a night out that won't soon be forgotten.

Everything's there, from acrobats to unicycling basketballers, from contortionists to jugglers. The live music, too, is excellent and will have you swinging in your seat.

Sarah and I had a great time, while Eloïse fell asleep on the couch at home with Oma and Opa. It was an experience to savour, a night out together as a twosome, essentially our first since Eloïse entered into our life.

Sunday, 21 October 2007

Comings And Goings

Peter and Chantal have been visiting us this week. It's Peter's third stay with us; Chantal's second. For both of them, however, it's been their first time in the new house and it's been fun.

The nice thing about good friends is the comfort that one feels in their company. There's no obligation to do anything in particular. Consequently, we haven't done very much at all in the last few days. Trips to the Hästens shop and a hearty pancake down in the Bos at Boerderij Meerzicht this afternoon were notable exceptions.

On Thursday evening, Brian and Victoria came over for dinner with us, too. That was a prelude to the following day's 3rd Annual Amsterdam Lunchops Burger, a continuation of the grand tradition started way back when we were all employees of Google in Silicon Valley and would go for lunch on Fridays to Clarke's for a well-deserved burger and whinge. It all seems so long ago now.

Peter and Chantal leave us tomorrow as they head further on their travels, taking the train to Copenhagen via Duisburg, then on to Stockholm.

In a couple of weeks, Sarah's folks fly over for a rare autumnal visit. It's their 40th wedding anniversary, so we're going to take them to Iceland for a few days. We'll spend a couple of days in Reykjavík and then take in some of the Golden Circle sights. It should be a nice, easy trip.

Monday, 8 October 2007

Dames en Heren, Appels en Peren

The title of this entry is what Wanda (of peuterspeelzaal fame) sings to the children when they're changing from one activity to the next, in case you were wondering.

This entry isn't about Eloïse 's playschool, however. It's about our family trip this afternoon to De Olmenhorst in Lisserbroek.

De Olmenhorst is an organic orchard about 25km outside of Amsterdam. After parking, we grabbed a couple of carrier-bags and headed for the apple trees. Jonagold, Jonagored and Elstar are the three varieties that were literally there for the picking. We stuck to Elstar.

Eloïse had a great time, walking up and down the aisles, finding low-hanging fruit, grabbing the stem and tilting the fruit until it came free.

All of the pears had been picked the day before, so we had to select those from some crates rather than pluck them ourselves.

After loading the car with our hand-picked fruit, we went for lunch, played in the playground and then finished up with a few purchases at the organic shop.

On the way back home, Eloïse had fallen asleep in the car, so we stopped at Pisa for an ice-cream.

Dinner was -- what else? -- an apple bake: plucked by Eloïse and baked by Sarah.

Thursday, 30 August 2007

Cotton, Paper, Leather, Silk, Wood

5 years since we got married. Wow. It really doesn't seem that long ago.

That's because so much has happened. Our lives have changed an awful lot in those 5 years.

I think the next 5 are going to be very interesting, too.

Tomorrow, we reward ourselves with a nice anniversary present.

Saturday, 25 August 2007

Four Eyes Are Better Than Two

Old age comes to us all (if we're lucky) and, as of today, I display another outward sign of the encroachment of the years on my life. Yes, at age 40, I finally wear glasses.

Not all the time, mind you. They're just for reading and whenever I feel particularly tired. I'll primarily use them for computer work and reading the newspaper.

A while ago, I had some code that wouldn't run. I was getting a syntax error, but couldn't find the problem, even after spending several minutes staring at the line of problematic code. Eventually, I noticed that I had a full-stop where I should have had a comma. That was my first hint that there was a problem.

While Sarah and Eloïse were in the USA, I caught myself squinting and tensing a lot of facial muscles to read the newspaper over lunch. The problem even seemed to get worse over the three weeks they were away, so I had my eyes tested as soon as they returned.

Sure enough, they needed correction, so I picked out some frames and the first pair was ready to pick up today.

After four decades, I'm finally sporting the distinguished, erudite look that has eluded me all my life.

Tuesday, 14 August 2007

The Girls Are Back In Town

My girls are back home after three weeks in the US. It's good to have them home.

Their return trip was a bit of a nightmare. They nearly ended up stranded in Washington, after missing their connecting flight to Amsterdam through no fault of their own. United Airlines really is a shitty company.

They were then supposed to fly via Frankfurt, but for some reason that will now never become apparent, they weren't allowed to board that flight.

Eventually, after pleading with another member of staff, Sarah was able to secure two seats on a flight to London Heathrow. That's the flight they eventually took, followed by a British Midland flight to Amsterdam. The diversion caused them to arrive in the middle of the afternoon instead of the early morning, so they were absolutely frazzled.

To top it all, one of their bags had been mislaid, so Sarah had to file a lost luggage form before she could leave the airport. When I called the company the next afternoon, I was told that the bag had been located at Heathrow and would be arriving that afternoon. I made an appointment to have it delivered to the house that evening and, thankfully, it managed to make that leg of its journey as scheduled. All's well that ends well.

It was wonderful, but also strange to see Eloïse again. Even though she'd only been away for three weeks, she appeared to have grown and looked slightly older. Any concern I might have had that she would have forgotten about Papa was soon allayed. She bounded up to me and showered me in hugs and kisses.

Back home, in the days that followed, it became extremely apparent just how much her linguistic ability had improved while she had been away. She can now form quite complex sentences, and her vocabulary must have doubled since I put her on the plane. I'm amazed by some of the words and constructions she now uses.

Unfortunately, the gap between her English and her Dutch is now greater than ever, primarily because she hears so much of the former and Sarah's Dutch still isn't good enough that we can converse in the language. That inevitably means that Eloïse 's primary exposure is to English, a situation that will become less pronounced when she starts attending peuterschool in November.

Speaking of which, she's already nagging us that she wants to go to peuterschool. You see, in an attempt to familiarise her with the idea that she'll soon be going to nursery school, we've started telling her how nice it is there, what she can expect to do, etc. Unfortunately, this cunning ploy has backfired somewhat, as she has immediately taken to the idea. She's rather put out that we wouldn't take her there today, in spite of the fact that she's not yet old enough to attend and it's closed anyway because of the summer holidays.

Oh well; we'll just have to hope that her level of interest continues.

Yesterday, we went walking in Nationaal Park Zuid-Kennemerland over by Bloemendaal. It was nice to get out into nature and wander over the dunes, although the scenery was duller than I remember it. It's a large park, so perhaps we just needed to enter elsewhere and see other parts of it. We finished with dinner in Laren, the other side of Amsterdam in Het Gooi.

Whilst in the bath with Eloïse this evening, we discovered a tick burrowed into her shoulder, so I called the on-call doctor's line, explained our findings and was told to bring her in. So, we all drove over to the Rivierenbuurt, where Eloïse had her unwelcome guest removed with a pair of tweezers. She was as good as gold for the doctor and didn't flinch as he examined and pinched at her.

Now we have to keep an eye on things to make sure that no symptoms of Lyme disease develop. Happily, most ticks don't carry the disease and we caught this one quite quickly, so we're not too concerned.

Sunday, 22 July 2007

The Cat's Away...

...and the mice are playing, although the sensation takes some getting used to.

Sarah has flown off to Chicago for the La Leche League 50th Anniversary Conference and taken Eloïse with her. Hrmph; she's only two and she's getting to see a city I haven't been to.

Well, I didn't want to go. I'm all for breastfeeding, especially where babies are concerned (bitty, anyone?), but a conference dedicated to the subject is a bit much for me. I mean, I like ice-cream, too, but I don't feel the need to immerse myself in the subject or socialise with other eaters. As long as my missus is free to breastfeed our children for as long as they need it, that's good enough for me. On the other hand, I applaud Sarah's ongoing interest in the subject.

After a week in Chicago, she'll be spending a further two weeks with her folks. For three whole weeks, I'm a bachelor once more.

So, the Sonos is in party mode (which means it's playing the same music in all zones throughout the house) and I'm taking advantage of the freedom and quietude to relax and get some programming done.

A couple of days ago, I went out with Garth for a meal at Los Pilones, followed by a visit to the cinema to see Quentin Tarantino's latest film, Death Proof.

The meal was good, as always, although also invariably not as good as the Mexican food we enjoyed back in California.

The film was fun, too, if lacking much in the way of a story. As always with Tarantino, it's more the sharp dialogue than the story that attempts to hold your attention and it's been a long while since Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, so the characteristically unrealistic, snappy, larger-than-life dialogue is wearing thin on me now. All of his characters sound like they grew up as part of the same nuclear family.

Nevertheless, it was fun and a rare visit to the cinema for me. The last time I went was in December 2005. Some people are virtually incredulous of this when I tell them, and they seem to regard going to the cinema is an essential element of modern living. I find this to be a peculiar view.

The Tour de France, too, is good for killing endless hours, especially today's Pyrenean mountain stage, which is being broadcast in its entirety and will last a good six hours. Thank heavens for MythTV. I must remember to leave the house occasionally.

I sometimes think that my family is what anchors me to the earth. When they're not here, I descend into reclusion and lose my ties with the outside world (not that I have many). The days start to fly by, with no events or even minor interruptions to punctuate them and perturb the perception of a vast plain of time.

That said, Jules is coming over Wednesday evening and staying the night. I haven't seen him in ages, so it will be fun to catch up. I'm sure I can find some other reasons to leave the house, too, and not just for lunch at Casa e Cucina.

Sunday, 15 July 2007

Aqua Zoo

With no summer holiday planned for this year, we're continuing to make the most of the lacklustre Dutch summer by making the occasional day-trip. The weather for Saturday was forecast to be good, so we all piled into the car and drove north, crossing the Afsluitdijk to the Frisian capital of Leeuwarden (or Ljouwert, as it's known in Frisian).

Our destination was Aqua Zoo Friesland, a place that I recall visiting about ten years ago, when I'm pretty sure it was just an otter park. These days, however, it's evidently a significantly expanded affair, with beavers, seals, turtles, raccoons, primates, birds of many different varieties, and many more species of animal that I can't recall at this late hour. In short, it's now a fully fledged zoo.

We had a fabulous day there and the weather cooperated, too. Eloïse thoroughly enjoyed herself, although she was constantly changing her mind about whether she wanted to walk, be carried on papa's back, mama's back or mama's chest. Thus, we were constantly putting on the sling, removing the sling, putting on shoes and socks, removing shoes and socks, etc. It drives you mad, but that's par for the course with a two-year old who doesn't yet know her own mind.

We left the zoo mere minutes before closing time, so it made sense to drive into town and have dinner in Leeuwarden, which we did at Spinoza.

As planned, Eloïse was well and truly knackered by the time we left the restaurant, so she fell asleep in the car within minutes on the way home and was easily transferred into bed upon arrival.

Sarah and Eloïse fly to Chicago for a few weeks next Thursday, so I'm hoping we can have one or two further day-trips before they go.

Tuesday, 10 July 2007

Sprookjeswonderland

This has to be shaping up to be one of the wettest Dutch summers on record. It seems to rain every single day and not just a little bit, either. It regularly comes down like a monsoon and is frequently accompanied by thunder and lightning.

The quantities of precipitation have been such that we've had some water in our cellar on a couple of occasions now; nothing too bad, but any water seeping into your home is unwelcome water. Still, this is Amsterdam and there's not much you can do. Life here is a constant battle against water, as it is in most of the country.

Anyway, Sunday just gone offered a rare period of sunny skies in between predictions of doom and gloom on either side. Normally, we'd avoid any popular weekend destination in favour of a midweek getaway, but one can't make any assumptions about the weather at the moment, so we took the car up to Enkhuizen yesterday to visit Sprookjeswonderland.

Sprookjeswonderland is a children's park with fairy-tales forming the underlying theme of the various attractions. Children can enjoy everything from boat and train rides to mechanised fairy-tale figures twitching to piped music. Some of it was a lot of fun; other bits are a bit naff and showing their age. That didn't stop the crowds from descending in droves, however.

In general, it was a great day out, because Eloïse loved virtually every minute of it. In fact, we had a hard time getting her out of there at 17:00, when the park was closing. She'd run around so much that we felt certain she would fall asleep in the car on the way home, but she amazed us by remaining alert not just for the ride home, but also well into the evening once we got inside.

I hope we can do a couple more day trips over the coming days, but the weather forecast is looking pretty dire again.

Picking Berries

A week ago on Sunday, we seized a dry, sunny moment and drove over to the neighbourhood of Oud Osdorp, a lovely area of rural tranquility on the outskirts of Amsterdam and not at all representative of what comes to mind when one hears the name Osdorp these days.

The reason was the organic farm De Boterbloem, where Eloïse got to pick her own delicious strawberries from the vegetable garden. While we were there, we were also able to pick some flowers to brighten up the home.

It was lovely to be able to offer Eloïse the opportunity to pick her own fruit, thereby giving her her first indication of where the stuff actually comes from. It doesn't just magically appear in the supermarket and it's good for her to understand that a lot of time and effort goes into the stages of planting, cultivating and harvesting before she can pop a strawberry into her mouth.

And how pleasant that all of the produce is organically grown. The farm has a calming atmosphere about it, with a nice wooden barn in which the shop is situated. It reminded me a bit of the dog sleigh farm in Maine that we visited last autumn.

Friday, 4 May 2007

A Moment's Rest

Geoff headed back to California yesterday after an enjoyable visit, affording us 36 hours of respite before Sarah's folks arrive from Providence. That means another early day for yours truly to pick them up from the airport tomorrow.

The car has been repaired and you'd never know it had been damaged. Let's hope the insurance claim is processed smoothly.

The dry, sunny spell that has seen the city picnicking in the park every day for the last month and a half is coming to an end, they say. Sunday will supposedly be our last warm, sunny day for a while and some much needed rain is heading this way. As sad as I'll be to see the return of normal spring weather, Mother Nature will be happy, so there's some consolation to be had.

Thursday, 26 April 2007

Reversal Of Misfortune