y2kitty
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2009
- Messages
- 1,770
Yeah Crasru. Come and tell us more.Date: 2/7/2010 10:21:30 AM
Author:y2kitty
You haven''t been here very long but your posts intrigue me. I love hearing about Russia and the birth of Communism and what it was like to live during it. Care to share more?
Date: 2/11/2010 7:03:49 PM
Author: IndyLady
Are you a scientist like your husband? Do you have hobbies besides gems? I''m also in line to hear more!![]()
Date: 2/7/2010 10:21:30 AM
Author:y2kitty
You haven''t been here very long but your posts intrigue me. I love hearing about Russia and the birth of Communism and what it was like to live during it. Care to share more?
Date: 2/12/2010 1:01:08 AM
Author: MAC-W
wow, amazing story and so interesting. It must have been such a hard time for your grandparents who could presumably remember a time before the revolution, or did they think the revolution made life better? I guess for you who had as you say a fairly privileged upbringing (in comparison to a lot of other USSR citizens) it wasn''t too bad. by the way did you think of your self as ''soviet'' or ''russian'' back then?
When did you guys decide to leave USSR/Russia and what made you decide to do that? was it difficult to do i.e permits etc? Were you quite young at the time or were you already established as a psychiatrist in Moscow?
Sorry for the questions - I just find this really interesting to get different viewpoints. My ex-husbands wife is also russian, from moscow as well, she had a piano scholarship and also did some training with the Russian Ballet. Then she hurt her back, not badly but enough to lose her scholarship so became a journalist for one of the state papers, before moving to work as a journalist for a science publication and doing part time translation assistance for visiting businessmen which is how she met my ex. I know the paperwork they had to do to get Vera permission to leave the country was phenomenal and that was in 2002
Date: 2/12/2010 1:01:08 AM
Author: MAC-W
wow, amazing story and so interesting. It must have been such a hard time for your grandparents who could presumably remember a time before the revolution, or did they think the revolution made life better? I guess for you who had as you say a fairly privileged upbringing (in comparison to a lot of other USSR citizens) it wasn''t too bad. by the way did you think of your self as ''soviet'' or ''russian'' back then?
When did you guys decide to leave USSR/Russia and what made you decide to do that? was it difficult to do i.e permits etc? Were you quite young at the time or were you already established as a psychiatrist in Moscow?
Sorry for the questions - I just find this really interesting to get different viewpoints. My ex-husbands wife is also russian, from moscow as well, she had a piano scholarship and also did some training with the Russian Ballet. Then she hurt her back, not badly but enough to lose her scholarship so became a journalist for one of the state papers, before moving to work as a journalist for a science publication and doing part time translation assistance for visiting businessmen which is how she met my ex. I know the paperwork they had to do to get Vera permission to leave the country was phenomenal and that was in 2002
No, they are not nosey. I would like to know more about fellow PS-ers.Date: 2/13/2010 1:35:59 AM
Author: MAC-W
ROFL''vegetarian'' communism - I like it![]()
It must have been very hard to be apart from your son for those 3 years. Were you able to go back to Russia at all in that time?
Earlier in this thread you said kids plural. How many children do you have and how old are they? What do they think of Russia? Do you take them back there very often? Did/do your parents come to visit you in America? Do you have brothers / sisters? and are they in Russia or also left?
Nosey aren''t I LOL? if any of my questions are too personal or you dont want to give out that sort of info, just tell me & I will understand. I dont want to make you feel uncomfortable when you are gracious enough to tell your life story.
No, no, no. You haven't told us what made you chose Psychiatry and how you met your husband and whats your favourite food. There is so much more to learn about youDate: 2/14/2010 4:51:35 AM
Author: crasru
So, my older kid is now 20 and has been to Russia many times. My father has been coming to stay with us almost every year. He never wanted to move to the US because he is too old, doesn't know the language and has no friends here. My mother is buried in Russia and I think it is another reason why he doesn't want to move. It is hard, and we have to travel to Russia several times a year, but he has someone to look after him and so far it has been working fine. Another reason why he never wanted to move is because he was working till very recently, lecturing and teaching, and he was very busy and had a full life.
My older son is now a student, does very well at school and is majoring in economy and mathematics.
He always considered himself a Russian and had this dream that one day he would come to Russia to work for a Russian company. One of my relatives is VERY rich and my son expected to work for him, I presume. But when he visited Russia in 2009 he suddenly understood that he was not a Russian and that his fluent knowledge of Russian did not turn him into one. He must have felt bitter when he came home.
My other son is only 6. I had him when I was 40, and he beat all laws of probability!. We did not plan for him. It was this 0.03% cases when things we normally use fail to work. Second, I experienced no signs of pregnancy whatsoever. We all read about it in medical textbooks, but it is a pretty rare situation. In short, when my belly started to grow my son was already 14th gestational week.
So it was a pretty short pregnancy, and now instead of an empty nest we have a feisty 6-year old in the house. He has a mild case of Asperger's, but you probably won't tell it if you didn't know. His main quirk is obsession with airplanes, our house looks like huge airport, and we often go to the Museum of Flight.
His aspiration is to become 'a passenger'.
Well, I think it is all. We live in a nice house, and community here is diverse. There are many Asians (in fact, we have a museum of Asian art, an affiliate of Seattle Art Museum, and recently a new museum of Asian history has opened in Seattle). We now have a huge Eastern Indian community. I see many other people come and settle here. The state is becoming younger and more liberal. Library system, opera and symphony are getting much better, too.
If everyone took care of their own kittens, we would not be facing the problem of shelters. Same, however, applies to people.
Best place in the USSR? A couple.Date: 2/21/2010 9:00:36 AM
Author: MAC-W
Thank you for sharing so much information. I feel I really know you now. And I love the ''healthy volunteer'' story - so cute
But... I have another question...... (of course I doI always have questions
)![]()
With all the travel you and your husband do and having lived in USSR, USA etc, .....
what''s your favourite place that you have visited /been to?
1. In USSR/Russia?
2. In USA?
3. Elsewhere?
Also where have you not been but would really like to go?
Samarkand is all about blue sky, bright sun and equally bright mosques. Very hospitable people, bazaars with awesome fruits. Uruk (apricots) is amazing! If you ever get there in a season when peach trees blossom...you'll never forget it! The flowers resemble pads in color. Old mill- two stones lying atop one another, with a pole in the upper one, and a donkey with a tie on his eyes walking in rounds, tied up to the pole..Date: 2/27/2010 9:52:07 AM
Author: MAC-W
I know what you mean about Germany. We were there for 4 1/2 years and I felt so at home. Its a very easy country to live in isnt it? And the Louvre absolutely... But Paris? I hated it. I mean really really hated it. I used to work in Chalon-sur-Soane but every time I had to go up to Paris I was like 'noooooooo, please dont make me do that' LOL. The people in Paris are never welcoming, its got nothing to do with the riots etc. (So different from the 'provincial' towns) Parisians are just generally rude and arrogant. And its such a dirty city dont you think? the bits around the major tourist attractions are generally kept not too bad but outside of that I found it to be yuk. Maybe its changed since I was there in the early 90's [:shrug:]
And wow Samarkand... thats definately a place I would like to go. I'm so jealous you've been there. It must have been amazing. Please, please, please tell me more about your time there. Its No.3 on my 'bucket list' of places still to see (Bhutan is No.1 and Guatamala is No.2) And actually Boston (for Christmas shopping) is No.4, so if I ever manage that I now know who to ask for advises LOL. My SIL went Xmas shopping there a few years back and said it was amazing.
Also personally I would have to say go to Turkey before you do Greece. (and then your husband should be really, really afraid haha) Everyone talks about Greece as amazing, but I found that Turkey blew Greece out of the water but that maybe because I lived in Istanbul for a couple of years and know it better. And if you go outside IST then there are so many things and places that will just blow your mind (Epheses, Pamukkale, Cappadiocia). For me the only other place that came close to that was Egypt but I'm hoping if I ever make it to Samarkand, I will have the same reaction.
The one place I would advise to avoid is Malta. We went there on holday one year and I had really high hopes for it cos I'm fascinated by crusader history but it was extremely disappointing![]()
Oh and if you ever come to OZ again give me a shout if its the West Coast. We have so many fascinating places here if you like natural history. Much better than the East Coast (and I'm originally a EC girl so thats saying a lot). One of my friends is involved in indigenous tourism so can organise 'special' tours for you.
Anyway enough about countries/ travel etc... lets get back to gemstones.
if you could only ever buy one more gemstone (in the the rest of your life) which would it be? I know I know - cruel question. I'll answer it first, I would buy the largest Hauyne ever cut which I think is about 7.5 ct (subject to a lotto win of course)
Date: 3/26/2010 4:09:32 AM
Author: crasru
Samarkand is all about blue sky, bright sun and equally bright mosques. Very hospitable people, bazaars with awesome fruits. Uruk (apricots) is amazing! If you ever get there in a season when peach trees blossom...you'll never forget it! The flowers resemble pads in color. Old mill- two stones lying atop one another, with a pole in the upper one, and a donkey with a tie on his eyes walking in rounds, tied up to the pole..
I am not a firm believer in reincarnation but Samarkand was the only place on earth where I got this strange feeling...I was standing on the mountain with ruins of observatory built by Khan Ulugbek in, I think, 12th or 13th century (I may be wrong with the dates). And suddenly I got this feeling of deja vu. It was in the air, which was clean and almost bright from the sun. I expected this feeling to come in Europe, maybe in Sicily with its ancient ruins but never in the East.
One more gemstone. Hard to tell. Probably, an ultramarine bluish-blue Kashmir sapphire. Yes. If sapphires are gone, the best Alex I could find. If all Alexes have been sold - then a pink, totally natural, untreated diamond could do the job.
BTW - totally agree regarding Paris. The only place in the world where our (then) 2-year old was called 'merde' (he touched something in a cafe. Very dirty cafe at this). But I think that Parisians are, mostly, unhappy with themselves because the birth rate is steadily declining and the place is becoming old and grim. (It is a huge problem for Europe. In general, I have noticed that in places with low birth rate, people appear very unhappy).