Hastalanmak (v.: to become sick)

Ooof!  (Another wonderful Turkish expression, often followed by “yaaa…” basically means exactly what it sounds like.)

Hastalandım (I got sick).  I knew it would happen eventually with the weather going back and forth from cold to not so chilly to snow to sun.  Like most unpleasant things, just because you know it’s coming doesn’t make it less unpleasant when it gets there.  Thursday night I was getting sick and knew it.  Scratchy throat, chills and hot sweats.  Yuck.  I fought it though.  I slept in a bit on Friday (and gave in to adding extra layers before going out when my cleaning lady insisted since she knew I wasn’t feeling well). But I knew it couldn’t last forever… my immune system was weak and giving up the fight!

And so I finally succumbed to the sick this weekend.  I taught my Saturday morning yoga class (thanks to everyone who came and brought tons of donations!!!) and then changed back into pajamas and cuddled on the couch with hot tea while passing in and out of sleep.

Today I’m feeling a bit better, but my symptoms seem worse… as tends to be the case with head colds.  I’m hoping to be less snotty and coughy and phlegmy tomorrow.

In other news, I got all my photos from my photo shoot with my friend A.  Actually, I got them a while ago, but I finally put together my website and am so very excited about it.  If you’re in Ankara and interested in yoga or classes or are just a creepy stalker, let me know and I can send you the link to the other site.  I’m seriously considering adding a blog section to it that is all yoga-focused.  And yes, that means you get to avoid some of the yoga-ness here!  What do you think?  Would that be cheesy? (The blog part, not the website part… it’s too late for that.)

Ankara’dakiler dikkat: Amaçlı Yoga! (Attention Ankara Peeps: Yoga for a Cause!)

santa yoga

image borrowed from the good folks at yoga dork. check them out: yogadork.com

Excuse the shameless promotion, but hey!  Almost free yoga?  And for a good cause?  You know you want to know about this…

Live in Ankara? Want some *free* yoga? Join us this Saturday (Dec 8th) from 9:30 to 10:30 for yoga (in English!).  Bring that stack of things you’ve been meaning to donate — warm clothes, blankets, & diapers are especially appreciated right now! — but any gently used items will be graciously accepted in exchange for a lighthearted, fun work out to flow through and sweat away your holiday tensions. We’ll end with some relaxation, and tea or cocoa. Donations will be distributed among the refugees of all nationalities and all religious denominations during weekly distributions in Ankara and Kirikkale.

Interested? Send me a note for details!

Makarna (n.: Pasta) A short adventure into my history

I did it!  Making pasta from scratch was on my 30 in 30 list in part because I wanted to add fun cooking-related things to the list and in part because, as a (non-Jersey Shore) Italian American kid I thought it would be good if I were able to make a pot of pasta on my own.  What I did not expect was for it to turn into a trip down memory lane of thoughts of my grandmother.

cook book, computer, wine

Ready to attempt pasta… armed with my honeymoon cookbook, williamssonoma website, and a bottle of wine. You know, just in case.

Both of my parents come from mostly Italian roots, but my mother’s mother is the one I remember having fresh made pasta and sweets ready for us when we were kids.  I should mention that while they both came from tight-knit Catholic families — the kind that stay in the same houses for generations, the kind that have 11 children (yes. true story.) — when I was a little kid my parents moved us across the country.  At the time it was tough, more for my parents than us, but over time I can say it was the best thing for us.  It taught my sister and I to be independent and to know that no matter how far we were physically from our families they were always with us.  Which having lived an ocean away for over three and a half years now has been a wonderful lesson to have learned.

Edith in the kitchen.

Edith in the kitchen.

So growing up, my parents shipped my sister and I back to the northeast to visit our extended families for a few weeks each summer until we were old enough to be ‘too cool’ for that.  The great thing about it was that since we weren’t around all the time like our other cousins, my grandmother would always indulge us and pull out all the stops.  We could have pasta every night and even her world famous nut roll (and it wasn’t even Christmas!) if we asked lovingly and would offer up hugs and kisses.

Untitled

Making pasta is tougher than I thought… though super delicious!

My grandmother was the first generation of Americans in her family (which is to say she was born in the US, but her parents were not) and she grew up with the ways of the old country.  She even grew up speaking Italian at home and only learning English in school.  Edith, the Americanized form of the popular Italian name ‘Aida’, was an amazing chef.  She somehow managed to feed eleven kids on virtually nothing — though they will all admit that those days the food wasn’t as good — and I deeply regret never learning her recipes from her before she passed away.

Close up of ravioli

Close ups of food make me hungry. Maybe I should pull out some leftovers?

It came as quite a surprise to me that somehow in the middle of attempting to roll out pasta dough into perfect paper-thin sheets — a much more difficult feat than you’d think when you see some of those old ladies do it! — I begin to think of my grandmother.  It isn’t that I don’t think of her often this time of year, I think we all think of those who aren’t here to celebrate the holidays with us this time of year, it was just a surprise at how easily her memory came to me during such a simple act.  I suppose to say I was thinking of her isn’t quite accurate either. I’d say I was channeling her or felt connected to her across time and space as though she were in my kitchen with me.

A young Edith.  Before marriage, kids, and all of us grandkids...

A young Edith. Before marriage, kids, and all of us grandkids. What a beautiful woman!

I’m not saying the ghost of my long-dead grandmother is haunting my rolling pin, but I believe that we’re all connected in ways we don’t fully understand (string theory anyone? yep, the yogi in me is showing!) and that maybe through my attempt to reconnect with my Italian heritage I connected with my grandma on a level I hadn’t before.  And more than that, I almost felt as though I were connecting with generations of women who had spent hours rolling out dough just as I was doing.  It was such a wonderful, calming feeling that I may even be willing to do it again.  But not anytime in the very near future, because my recipe made enough pumpkin raviolis to stash some in the freezer for a rainy day – just like Gram did!

empty plate pumpkin ravioli

Best evidence that it was not only edible, but delicious? An empty serving plate!

“You poopy face butt head!!!” or My 30 days without swearing

Funny Reminders Ecard: I do not spew profanities. I enunciate them clearly, like a fucking lady.
That’s right folks.  I fucking did it.  Yes, that f-bomb was totally gratuitous swearing right there but you know what?  I can do things like that now.  Because I made it 30 days without swearing.  And the best part is that I don’t really feel the need to add the extra potty words now which was the whole point of the exercise.  Right?  It wasn’t just to torture me… right?

If you remember correctly, I started trying this whole 30 days straight about three months ago.  I had to restart quite a few times which is why it’s taken SO long to make it 30 days straight.  The biggest culprits for the restarts?  Drivers.  Either as a passenger or as a pedestrian, I cannot tell you how many times I’ve let a swear word out while dealing with the drivers here in Ankara.  I’ve heard it said (by Turk and foreigner alike) that Turks are some of the warmest and kindest people… until they get behind the wheel of a car.  And it’s true!  The utter selfishness and lack of awareness of the average driver here is mind-blowing (and f-bomb inducing).

My other hang up was that we added extra words to the swear words list that I was to avoid using.  Specifically, the use of “douche” or “douche bag” as a profanity.  Apparently it was one of my go-to’s because it caused my restart twice.

I did however begin to use some creative replacements like ‘cupcake’ as a condescending term and reverted back to the first grade by using phrases like ‘poopy face’.  Overall I found that by keeping myself from using swear words, I was also able to somehow keep myself calmer.  Maybe because I knew that getting worked up would cause the swearing or maybe because in lieu of a swear word I’d breathe deeply and try to calm myself.  Either way, I’m pretty happy that I did it.  And I’m happy I don’t have to start over every time I utter a swear word now!