Blackout!!!

We experienced or first blackout, only on our fifth day. Not only was it our first, but it lasted four hours. One of the longest in a while, according to locals. And we had some worries. Our biggest worry was that we would have to sleep without A/C. But, once it was nearing 5:00 we were wondering what we were going to have for dinner but, we just ended up going to the local sports bar. At 6:30, the power turned on and, just like that, we were all happy and it made us realize how different it is here.

By Sam Whitman, Guest Blogger (Also known as Trina’s son)

Thank You!

Not Always Paradise

I knew not everyday would be paradise…just didn’t think it would come so early in the trip. I thought maybe the first week or so would feel like vacation, because everything about this place feels like vacation. Then, in maybe a couple weeks, the pull of friends and home would start. That will probably still happen, but today caught me a bit by surprise. It was just one of those off days. And, in an attempt to have some perspective, I am telling myself that you need to have the off days to contrast with the good days. We will persevere.

Some highlights:

Parent: “I don’t think you want to wear a sweatshirt.” Child: “I’m going to.” Parent: I think you will be really hot and uncomfortable.” Child: “No, I won’t”

Thirty minutes later: “I am so hot. I don’t want to eat breakfast. I feel terrible. Can we go home? I hate it here.”

Parent: “Do you want to rent bikes and ride around.” Child: “No, I just want to go back to the condo. I want a down day.”

Back at the condo…before going into the pool:

Parent: “You should put on sunscreen.” Child: “I don’t need sunscreen.” Parent: “Sweetie, you’ll burn.” Child: “I don’t need sunscreen.”

After a short time at the pool…

Child: “Can I back to the condo?” Parent: “We haven’t been here very long.” Child: “I don’t care I want to go back.”

Later…

Child: “I don’t want to go to dinner.” Parent: “It’s only two blocks and I think you’re going to really like it.” Child: “I still don’t want to go.”

Five minutes later:

Child: “That was not two blocks. It was more like three or four.”

On the positive side, the boys had a great time body surfing at the end of the day and I had my second good latte in a row this morning, a good pina colada at dinner and enjoyed another glorious sunset.

Latte from Cafe Tico

The Beginning

Is eleven bags a lot or not much if you are on your way to live somewhere for 5-6 months? These are the kinds of things I think about. Some people asked us before we left if we were going to ship a bunch of stuff and I thought, “Jesus, we would have to be bringing a lot of stuff to HAVE to ship it. After all, we can check 8 bags AND bring 8 bags on to the plane with us.” Other people who saw our pile of eleven bags said, “Wow, that’s a lot of stuff.” Whether a lot or not much, our entire lives reduced down to one suitcase, two duffel bags, three carry-on on bags and five back packs. That’s what it took for us to move our family to Costa Rica.

The last few weeks has been dominated by marathon box-checking. It’s been a lot, even for me, someone who is generally comforted by a list. The refuge an overwhelming list provides is that it keeps you in your head, until a sudden goodbye to someone you love surprise gut punches you. There was a lot of that, but then again the refuge of the logistics: pick-up debit card for new back up bank account, reorganize bags for plane ride, run last errand at Best Buy, check into airport hotel, fail to sleep because what if you didn’t wake up in time for the flight, get family up at 4:20 am (not that kind of 4:20), catch airport shuttle, check bags, go through security, eat breakfast, load plane, two hours in the air, LAX, eat lunch, load plane, 5 more hours in the air, immigration and customs at new favorite foreign airport…so new, so easy, so fast…shuttle to airport hotel, mediocre expensive dinner, crash, mediocre expensive breakfast, shuttle to rental place, rent car, pick up bags and boys, drive to Tamarindo, check into condo (have momentary freak out while guy at gate looks at us like “Who are you? You think you are living here?”), move eleven bags in, begin unpacking, experience surprise delight to discover our Netflix account works on the TV, drive to supermegasupermercado, have semi-frustrating experience shopping with irritable family members at store that has only 20% of the things on the list, take irritable family members home and throw them in the pool, then leave them behind while driving to better supermercado that has another 60% of the things on the list, put now sick husband down for three hour nap, make boys dinner, blissful night of good sleep, make boys French toast breakfast and feel surprise delight that you pulled it off in a foreign country, return rental car, explore Tamarindo, let boys have super expensive “fish eating the dead skin off your feet” experience, check out the beach, discover water temp is lovely, have mediocre coffee, yelp “best coffee in Tamarindo” and discover that was not it…will attempt redo tomorrow, discover the walk back to condo is longer than expected in the heat, throw boys in the pool, continue nesting and cleaning or “Mary Buitron-ing” my way through the condo (yes, Mary Buitron is my Mom—she is also a verb), I thought of her much as I redid the cleaning that was done before we moved in (as I scrubbed and discovered new areas of grossness, I kept thinking “Mary Buitron would not consider that clean!”) and pant, pant, deep breath…I think I can start to relax.

This evening boys were feeling home bound and into re-watching “Avatar: The Last Airbender” from like 4 years ago, so Matt and I left them at the condo and walked a couple dimly lit, dirt and gravel blocks to the local sports bar. It turned out to be surprisingly cool: open-air, good cocktails, simple good food, super affordable, lots of things to do like ping pong, foosball, pool, darts, horseshoes and had friendly owner, Steve, who chatted us up and quickly made us realize that this would be a regular haunt. The future is looking good.

Some moments worth remembering from today:

Sam: “Thank you, Mom, for taking us on this trip. You did a really good job.” “I really like our condo.” “I think I am already feeling at home because I feel comfortable walking around our condo naked. We should all walk around naked.”

Gus: “I really like the condo. I have always wanted to live in something small.” “Oh my god, our Wi-Fi works!”