Monday, March 19, 2018

Travel and visitors--long overdue post!





Even dogs can drive here--just kidding!

Greetings, friends and family!  I am finally crossing this off my "to-do list:"  getting my blog caught up.  Hopefully it won't be too long--maybe go get some caffeine before you start to read!  We've had a very busy 7 weeks since my last blog.
Feb. 4 weekend we flew (one hour flight) up to Da Lat in the highlands to attend/take part in Bob's cousin Drew's wedding to Tran.  We found out in December that he was planning to marry a Vietnamese woman in her hometown!  We'd been to weddings in Ho Chi Minh City already, and found that the rural wedding experience was quite different.  Her family was warm and friendly to us and we are pleased to welcome Tran into the family.  Drew hopes to bring her to the USA when her visa paperwork is completed.
A large tent was set up in Tran's family's front yard for the wedding festivities.  We began with a dinner Friday night, followed by dancing.

Tran and Drew in their "western" clothes:  tie-dyed T-shirts!


Saturday began with pictures taken: these are traditional Vietnamese wedding outfits.  Tran's parents are by her side.  She ended up wearing four different dresses the day of her wedding!  (I'm glad that's not a custom in the US since my daughter is getting married this summer!)



After a change of clothes, the bride and groom enter the tent and come to the stage.
The stage set up for dancing later
You don't know what we ate but everything we had was delicious!  So much food we couldn't even try the last course, we were so full.  Plus, we kept getting pulled out onto the dance floor.
Having fun during the meal.  Tran's uncle on the left, Bob on the right.
It was a happy day for Drew!  P.S. Check out the guy in the background--he had some good dance moves!  As did all the people in the village!  We learned we need to brush up on our ballroom dancing moves...
Next trip!

The weekend after the wedding, our 2-week holiday from school for Tet began.  We had planned a long weekend to Singapore (2.5 hour flight) to visit our colleague from last year, Dr. Hui Hiang Koh.  Her polytechnic university in Singapore didn't give two weeks off for the lunar new year, but she still found time to tour around a bit with us and show us the city.  Singapore is a sovereign city-state and island country.  (Brief history lesson coming up because it's good for me anyway:) Colonial Singapore was founded in 1819 as a trading post of the British East India Company.  In 1963 it gained independence from the UK by federating with other former British territories to form Malaysia, but separated two years later over ideological differences, becoming a sovereign nation in 1965.  It is a   global commerce, finance, and tranport hub.  We found it very clean and saw people of many nationalities.  English is the first of its four official languages.  One morning at breakfast I saw a newspaper in English and it struck me that it's been a long time since I've seen that!!  It's the little things in life...



Gardens by the Bay with Supertrees in the background
The Merlion (fish body, lion head) is the national personification of Singapore
Such a tourist!  Hui Hiang said this photo setup is a "must do."
Selfie with Hui Hiang in front of a lion head display for Lunar New Year inside the Flower Dome at Gardens by the Bay.



We love museums!  We spent most of a day at the National Museum of Singapore.


We also visited Jurong Bird Park with Hui Hiang and saw a lot of beautiful tropical birds, got some shopping in along some of the famous shopping streets, and spent an afternoon at the Chinatown Heritage Center in Chinatown which was fascinating!  We walked the streets of Chinatown in the evening.


We arrived back in HCMC on Feb. 13, two days before Tet eve.  We were invited to three homes to experience some of the special Tet foods that are eaten during the holiday.  By the way, don't call it "Chinese New Year" in Vietnam!  It's called the "lunar New Year" or "Tet."
One of our pre-Tet meals at the home of Phuong and her parents.  We sang karaoke after the meal!
One of the Tet traditions is to give "lucky money," usually to children or to people who help you in life, i.e. our apartment security guards, or our secretaries at the university.  At our meal with our friend Sammy and her parents, her mom gave Bob a lucky money envelope.  He protested that she shouldn't give him lucky money but Sammy said, "just open it!"  They know we tease about having "a million dong" (because a million dong does NOT EQUAL a million dollars, but it's fun to say!  1 million dong=$44 USD), so the joke was now Bob could say he has a HUNDRED TRILLION DOLLARS in his possession!  Of course, it's from the Bank of Zimbabwe which no longer uses the Zimbabwe dollar as currency as of 2009!  Outstanding accounts could be reimbursed until April 2016.  Darn it!  It's only a fancy piece of paper!!  Haha!


The evening before Tet we could watch a 30-minute long firework show from our apartment window!
The pedestrian street ("Nguyen Hue") downtown is filled with flowers just before and during Tet.  A lot of sculptures featured dogs since this is the Year of the Dog (in the 12-year cycle of animals from the Chinese Zodiac).

Tet, or the first day of the lunar new year, began Friday, Feb. 16.  We had a lion dance set up right outside our apartment building that we could watch!

Before the dance, a photo opp for several of the guards from our building--and a few residents too.
This little guy is handing some "lucky money" to the lion.  The lion also (pretended) ate the fruit offering you see in front of him.





This year is the first year I saw the elevated dance.  Two young men perform some brave acrobatic feats on those little platforms with only a thin pad under them to break a possible fall! 
Feats like this--being airborne and landing on the columns properly!
The lion-up-high also accepts lucky money envelopes.

Late Saturday night/Sunday morning (after midnight) the first of our visitors arrived!  My brother Randall and his wife Maria came in from Chicago.  It was nice to share our Vietnamese experience with them as well as do some tourist things with them since we had the week off school for the Tet holiday.



We did a cooking class for half a day (after a guided visit to the Ben Thanh market to see the interesting foodstuffs available here) to learn to make some good Vietnamese food.

The menu
Another day we did a tour on the Mekong Delta and saw the floating markets, a bee farm, some rice processing, a fruit orchard, a fresh market, and a folk music performance.

Lunch was included on the Mekong tour--some very fresh fish presented artfully!

 We also made sure they had some good Vietnamese coffee and some pho at least twice.  They left to go home to Chicago and we had a few days to rest up and prepare to meet our next guest, Dick Gross from Traverse City.  He is the lab manager of the Essilor lab (think Varilux progressive lenses and high quality lens coatings) we used when he had our practices in Michigan.  After we gave him a couple of days to get on the Vietnam sleeping schedule :) I invited him to share his knowledge with my 2nd year students since we are studying about progressive lenses at this very time in our curriculum!  Dick graciously spent a whole day sharing with 4 groups of students.  They listened respectfully and I told them that I even learned a new trick or two from our guest lecturer!



One of four groups of my second-year students


More second year students.




Third group of second-year students.  I forgot to set up a photo with the first group of four!  This group LOVES getting their pictures taken.




In our Academic Vision Center with some senior students and our secretary Thao and Dr. Robert.  Notice the Crizal sign behind; Crizal is an Essilor product!  Essilor does have a presence in Vietnam but we were unable to coordinate a tour of the Essilor facility while Dick was here.
We can't let a visitor leave without a motorbike experience on the streets of HCMC!

Dick did some touring on his own while we had some work days; he went on the same Mekong Delta tour we had taken with my brother and his wife, and also went on a Cu Chi tunnel tour as well as seeing some of the museums here in HCMC. Before he went back to Michigan, we welcomed our next set of visitors!  Bob's sister Dana and niece Ashtynn arrived after midnight on Saturday (Sunday) March 3. After we gave them one day (lol) to get over their jetlag, we had them take a market tour and cooking class.  Ashtynn really wanted to see Ha Long Bay while she was here, and since Bob had gone on a tour there last fall in conjunction with a meeting he had in Hanoi at the medical university there, he booked us on the same tour.  I was able to take a few days off my teaching/clinic schedule to see the sights with them.

Dana and Ashtynn and me on the plane to Hanoi, the entry point for the tour to Ha Long Bay.

A welcome juice and fruit and beautiful lilies to greet us at our small boutique hotel in Hanoi.


Saigon Special is the HCMC "local beer," so we had to try Hanoi Beer in Hanoi!

The morning after we arrived in Hanoi we took the 3-hour bus ride to Ha Long Bay.  We had an interesting guide who taught us a lot about Vietnamese culture and he answered our questions about the rice paddies we saw along the way and farming techniques used.
An iconic Ha Long Bay picture.  We took a motorized boat ride through the limestone karsts in the bay as well as a smaller boat (rowed by a Vietnamese local) to enter into some of the caves on the water. 

The next morning we headed back to HCMC and were able to attend a Vietnamese wedding that evening!  My dance fitness/Zumba instructor from last year had invited me to her wedding to an Indian man and I asked permission to bring 2 guests along to share the cultural experience with them.  Xuan generously agreed and Ashtynn and Dana could experience a Vietnamese wedding event!


The menu even had English subtitles so we could know what the dishes were called.
The bride Xuan in traditional Indian wedding dress and groom Chandra in background.
The next day we toured our university and clinic.  Here we are in my office.
My second year students were excited to run into us, meet my relatives,  and take a photo outside the Vision Clinic.
A last bowl of pho at Bob's favorite pho restaurant.
How to get to the pho restaurant?  Motorbike of course!  Ashtynn on the back of Bob's bike...
...and Dana took a Grab bike that I booked for her motorbike experience!

Sunday morning March 11 we saw Dana and Ashtynn off to the airport and now we are caught up!  Back to (somewhat) "normal" with our teaching duties and life in general here in HCMC.  We've had a day of testing our senior students on clinical skills, a planning meeting, a visit from a Boston optometrist who was born in Vietnam and lived here until she was 17 (and so speaks Vietnamese and English!  A future resource for the program here or in Hanoi possibly?), some clinic days, and my last couple of lectures and labs in Applied Optics.  Soon we each will start a new topic (Visual Perception and Neurophysiology for Kim and Occupational and Environmental Optics for Bob) as well as continuing to help with Clinical Optometric Procedures.  

Our next visitors will be our daughter and her fiance, in April.  We were excited to watch by livestream (and their video call to us) last weekend their residency match from Saginaw, MI!  Elaina and AJ matched as a couple to the same hospital our son works at as a psychiatry resident!  They will be family practice residents at the hospital, in Livonia, MI.  

This blog has gotten long enough so it's time to end.  I warned you that you might need some caffeine to finish!  ;)  Thank you for checking in on us and keeping us in mind.  We miss our family and friends but do feel as though we are doing some good over here.  Until next post!

Sunday, January 28, 2018

I'm/We're back! First post of 2018...

Check out the outside air temperature while we flew above Greenland!  -84 degrees F!!
Hi Everyone!  We arrived back in Ho Chi Minh City on January 11, just after midnight.  We've been on the go ever since, it seems.  Of course, Bob has been here since September so he is settled in already.  We're in a different apartment (but same building as last year) so the layout is a little different (kitchen smaller, no oven for baking, but yes to a microwave, and we have a gas stove instead of induction which is much better to us!).

We have finished 2 weeks of teaching since we've been back.  The first week consisted of several testing sessions of practical skills (and practice sessions beforehand), as well as listening to and grading student presentations since the students are finishing their first semester and beginning semester 2 before Tet (the lunar New Year) this year.  Tet last year fell in January, so it falls later this year.  It's similar to how Easter for us can vary between March and April.
Dr. Bob giving advice regarding different illumination techniques during a slit lamp (microscope) practice session with 3rd year students.

Students practicing skills on each other
I had my first lecture in Applied Optics this past Thursday with second year students, 26 new (to me) students to learn names and attempt proper pronunciations!  We also had 2 practical sessions (we split into two groups of 13) to teach edging of rimless lenses because 26 students can't all use the two available edgers at the same time.  Bob has begun his Contact Lens 2 classes with the 3rd year class, as well as helping in the Academic Vision Clinic when his schedule allows.  Currently the 4th years cover clinic 3 mornings a week with a local ophthalmologist and Mr. Long, our headmaster.  We are a bit understaffed presently without Dr. Koh who was here last year but has gone back to her job in Singapore, and without Ngan, one of the other Vietnamese optometrists, who is home with her new baby for a little while yet!  We have acquired another "foreign lecturer" (since November) from Ghana: Kwame, an optometrist who has been teaching most recently in Fiji.  He left last week to return briefly (we hope) to Ghana to bring his wife back here.  However, he is having some issues with his Vietnam visa and we hope he can get the issues ironed out soon and he can come back in a timely manner!  I don't have any pictures yet with Kwame because I only met with him once or twice in the week we overlapped here.  Hopefully soon!

Things don't seem quite as "crazy different" as they did when we first arrived so sometimes things that I used to think were strange are just normal here.  Part of me thinks this post is somewhat boring but I have had people ask me to keep up my blog!  (Thank you for being interested!)  We have had a couple of fun social experiences lately or things I do note while being out and about, so here they are:

Because I don't nap during our 2-hour lunch break and I like to be outdoors (yes, even in this 90-degree-ish heat), I usually take a half hour walk or so on my lunch hour.  Going "around the block" the university is on takes about 30-40 minutes.  BIG NEWS, a big mall is going in on the street behind the university!  Bob is very excited that there is a B-Dubs going in!  Starbucks fans always notice the Starbucks first. 

I rejoined my gym the weekend I arrived and it's been fun to have people recognize me and welcome me back.  My Saturday morning aerobics ladies promptly invited me out for breakfast after our first 7 am aerobics.  You know, you have to put back all those calories you've sweated out!
I really work on getting names right:  Phuong, Tuyet, Song, Linh, Binh, me, Huong.
Bob plays futsal (5-on-5 soccer) on Wednesday nights and some of his male students have joined in playing also.  He usually plays hockey Thursdays except for the last 2 weeks there has been some conflict between the Canadian Chamber of Commerce who organizes the games and the rink's charges, so there has been no hockey to his great disappointment.

One of my gym friends invited me to her daughter's wedding this past Friday and because we try to say "yes" to things to experience the culture, we went!  Weddings here are very different from US weddings.  The part we see is the reception basically, since the marriage part is done at the home of the bride and then the groom, traditionally.  The reception is a nice dinner in a wedding hall that will have more than one wedding party happening.  This was our 3rd wedding experience here and this one had a ballet dance and a magician on stage!  Always something new...
The wedding venue was called "Riverside Palace."

The ballet dancers

Little angel ballet dancers joined in--so cute!

The magician was amazing!  He produced a dove from handkerchiefs, etc. several times and ended with producing a chicken!
My last photos have to do with Tet.  The first day of Tet, the lunar New Year, is on Feb. 16.  Businesses are decorating already including having elaborate paintings done on their doors, and wiring small flowers on trees. This year is the "year of the dog" (last year it was the rooster, in the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar), so pictures usually include a dog.  Tet here is like Christmas/New Year's back home.  Many people travel to visit family in their villages/provinces.  We have no classes on the 9th but will have a program of dance and celebration at the university put on by students and faculty.  Then we have 2 weeks off.  We are looking at a small trip early in the week then are excited to host our first visitors, my brother and his wife from Chicago!  It will be fun to show them our big city and favorite food places.
This is the painting on the doors we enter to get into our apartment lobby.

Last year's Kentucky Fried Chicken (around the corner from our apartment entrance) is now a King BBQ restaurant, and here is their painting with the door open.  The flowers are 3D, tissue glued on to the window.
That's all my news and update for now!  As always, thank you for following our adventures.  Until next time!