The key difference between Ukrainian and British lives revolve around children and soup. Our guest has a nine year old son with her. He doesn’t like to stay at the table to eat, and gets up and wanders off mid meal with phone in hand (this seems to be fairly standard as other hosts have had the same experience), he argues with his mother about everything and gets away with it. Strangest is his liking for sitting in the (empty) bath for long periods of time playing on his phone. I have wondered if this was classed as a safe place while still in Ukraine, you know the old use a cast iron bath as protection against shrapnel thing. Mind you, ours is glass fibre so I don’t think it would be much help. If he was a few years older I’d wonder about the type of phone apps he was viewing!
As for food, soup seems to be a go to food stuff with large panful's being made and kept for a couple of meals eating. We have had to buy a bigger soup pan! It’s a bit like the housekeeper’s obsession with tea in Father Ted but with vegetables in. Our guests also don't like to waste food so the fridge is crammed full of left overs, the problem is that they don't seem to eat these so we are actually wasting more than is saved. Again this is something other hosts have commented on.
Borscht - but with beef in it, ours is mostly vegetables and is available wholesale |
The other key difference is that they always change clothes after any trip out. Separate clothes for indoors and outdoors, so a lot of time can be taken up changing between indoor and outdoor sets. This makes setting times for meals a little 'interesting' as while changing they do other things as well, what these are I haven't ascertained yet but coming back down for dinner is almost optional.
Still, the important thing is that our guests are safe, warm, fed and that most of the initial admin is either done or in progress. School has been started, Medical registrations and initial health reviews done, English language assessments booked, biometric visa meeting set and NI number application is in train. We are now starting on second tier needs, a judo class, social interactions with other Ukrainian families and just general familiarisation with different ways of doing things. All I need to do now is learn some Russian! I'm sure that in a month or so it will all be running like clockwork. But Oh that soup!
Sounds like you have a very difficult path to navigate. You have my admiration.
ReplyDeleteHas the lad shown any interest in your toys?
Chris/Nundanket
I haven't really had anything out as I'm slightly nervous of any distress it might cause so I have had 2mm stuff on the painting table and not much else. We went to the Ferens Art Gallery in Hull last week where they had a Lego art exhibition on. one piece was full size guns made of Lego and he seemed very keen on that. So wargames might not be an issue
DeleteI’m finding it hard to resist recycling the old joke about seeing all sorts of horrors, “they shouldn't have taken him to ….”
DeleteI remember watching an episode of Little Wars TV where a couple of their team were saying that as combat vets wargaming actually helped them. In that particular episode they played a game based on a COIN operation in Iraq.
Obviously small boys are not combat vets so their responses might be different.
Chris
You are a better man than me. I can’t have family stay for more than 2 days without wanting to strangle them.
ReplyDeleteWell done on helping these folk. Friends of ours also have Ukrainian guests, and things are generally going well. But we did get a call asking if they could come over and go for a walk with us in the hills... sometimes everyone needs a bit of space.
ReplyDelete