I have been formally studying Bahasa Indonesia here for the past two months. It's a simple language in many ways, like the verbs have no tenses. You would say "I go today" or "I go yesterday" instead of "I went yesterday". It is still challenging because I have never really studied another language (latin in high school doesn't really count), bahasa is not latin-based so almost all the words are totally unfamiliar, and many words have more than one meaning based on the context.
For example, I may think I've learned a word like baru to mean "new". On my box of crackers in the kitchen it says RASA BARU! (literally flavor new, so new flavor in English) But then I read a sentence that says "Aku baru selesai mandi" and I know the other words mean I, finished, and bath. How does new fit in there? In this context, baru means "just". I just finished a bath. Tricky, tricky.
But I found this little lesson pretty timely last week when Ben asked why I call Texas home and our house here home. I always do believe that wherever I'm sleeping in my own bed, it's home, but Texas will forever be my home, so when I use that word the kids have to figure out which home I mean. I think we're pretty lucky to have two places to call home in any context.
It is amazing how quickly the time has gone and that we've already spent 3 months in our house here. It certainly has its quirks but it's a pretty great place and feels so much like our home now that we're finally completely unpacked and have our things up on the walls. Come have a look...
The entry way
Out to the left of the entry is the guest room and then the main living area. Right now this is just a huge open space but eventually we'd like to get a table or something in the middle.
The other side is the kitchen and dining room.
Dining room
Kitchen
Living room
Alex's room
Alex's study area in his closet
This was a piece of furniture that came with the house and it's a pretty awesome lego table - all four shelves slide out! Finally, they have a place for their Minecraft kingdom where I won't ask them to move it.
Ben's room
Ben's study area - he chose this bedroom because his desk can face the window.
The upstairs game room. The kids love this, too, because I rarely go in there so they can build stuff and leave it for weeks.
Our bedroom
We waited several weeks to hang things on the walls because I was having quite a bit of framing done. The prices are pretty amazing here and I was so happy with the quality of work. We bought this painting and another about 8 years ago but I never wanted to cough up the money to frame them. I'm so happy to finally enjoy it!
Ben is excited to have some cross-stitches that my grandmother made decades ago. The original frames were in pretty poor shape and there was quite a bit of duct tape on the backs (thanks, Papa!), so they got a face-lift, although I was careful to match the style almost exactly so Ben wouldn't be upset.
On Mondays, I usually meet Ben at school after Tae Kwon Do so he doesn't have to wait around for the late bus. It was a rainy afternoon and he was beyond thrilled that we caught a ride home in a tuk-tuk.
What would have been a 10-minute walk took just a minute, and it was worth all 75 cents it cost to get dropped off right in our own garage!
Alex and his friend Minan have signed up to work at the school store once a week and I had to drop in and see them. So cute! And such a great idea to get the students to help out. (Plus, they were good little salesmen...I bought more than I had planned!)