Tuesday, July 20, 2010

New phone

Yesterday, Big Boy did something that is so Big boy. He dunked my 3-month old Nokia in a mug of steaming coffee. Of course, I got really annoyed not at Big boy but at Mr. Big who left his coffee where he shouldn't. I tried to wipe it clean but it wouldn't turn on anymore so we all went to the mall to have it fixed. It turned out without any surprise that the damage was really bad and trying to fix it meant that I would have to pay almost as much as buying a new one. Also, the repair guy made no assurances that it could be fixed.

So that's the story of my new phone (which actually doesn't look new because I chose the exact same model...yes, I'm a colossal bore!). I know that I should stop being so annoyed about it (after all, it's just a phone and I did get a new one!) but I lost a lot of phone numbers because of it, and eventhough it wasn't that pricey, I hate the fact that I had to throw it out.

Yes, [bow] I'm cheap. (Hey, I'm not from the Philippines for nothing!)

Monday, July 19, 2010

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Sultan's Birthday

Last Thursday, July 15th, was Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah's 64th birthday. It was a national holiday, but Mr. Big and some of his co-teachers had to bring some of their students near the palace early in the morning to greet the Sultan with flags and banners, along with thousand others.

Weeks before that, shops and other establishments everywhere put up their greeting banners. Some busy roads had big birthday greeting signs from popular companies.

According to the news, it was also a lucky day for the babies who were born on that day. They got lots of gifts and souvenirs, including prams and $100!

Now that's a happy birthday!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Usual Family Sunday

Unless there's a special occasion or we're not home, we try to keep our little family tradition every sunday...

1. Pancakes for breakfast. Mr. Big likes his with honey, while Big Girl and I like ours with extra butter and a sprinkle of sugar-cinnamon powder on top. Big Boy will eat whatever you give him.

2. Meat-vegetable tomato-based stew for lunch. Everybody loves it, and best of all, I get to use the vegetables in the fridge before they go bad. Thus, the ingredients vary everytime. I use whatever is available, as long as it will keep the stew tasting like stew. Today we had chicken with baby corn, snow peas, sweet potatoes, and cabbage. Yum!

3. Swimming in the afternoon. Our great attempt at exercising! The kids love it though. Plus, it makes them really tired, which makes sleeping time afterwards a breeze!


Saturday, July 10, 2010

I spy...

an Eagle!

Yes, just saw an eagle hovering near the house.

Welcome to our life in Brunei! :-)

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

While having a pap smear...

After seeing the doctor bring out a metal tool (called the "speculum", thanks toWiki)...The clinic had no stirrups, just the usual check-up bed, and the doctor was not nice at all.

"Oh, are we using that?"

"Yes!" [incredulous tone] "I thought you had pap smears before? What? They don't use this in Korea?"

"Sorry, I just didn't know. I was up on the stirrups so I didn't see. "

"Stare up? You can stare up!"

Friday, July 02, 2010

School Break for Big Girl

Big girl's school break has started. It's too bad that her daddy doesn't share the same vacation time, but that's okay, there are tons of activities for her to do anyway.

Mr. Big's company has a summer camp for a month at the RBA (Royal Brunei Airlines) club. That's 4 weeks of swimming, small fieldtrips, and other fun stuff. Most of her friends in school are joining as well, so she's very excited about it. Plus, once a week she'll have art class and ballet.

The summer camp costs almost nothing, but the art and ballet classes are surprisingly very pricey. It costs about USD 50 a month for 4 lessons in art class. In Korea, we paid about USD 100 for 20 lessons a month plus they pick the kids up and bring them back home for free. Same thing for ballet. It costs about USD 65 a month for 4 lessons. In Korea, we paid about USD 85 for 12 lessons! And again, the school bus is included.

Considering how most necessities (water, petrol, food, electricity) are way cheaper here than in Korea, we really didn't expect to pay this much. My guess is it's because there isn't enough competition around. There are only 2 ballet schools to choose from and the art school is probably the only genuine one here.

Big girl really loves making art and dancing ballet though. She actually wants to go to these classes more than once a week! We'll see, but I guess, we really don't have a choice. As the Visa commercial goes:

Art class: 50 dollars
Ballet class: 65 dollars
Driver: 100 dollars

Big Girl's happy face: Priceless!


Big Girl when she was 3 years old