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Authors: Jennifer Gargiulo

Diary of an Expat in Singapore (21 page)

BOOK: Diary of an Expat in Singapore
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5:45 am, Christmas Day. The kids are awake and running to see if Santa has come or not. From our bedroom, we hear amazement and joy: Santa came! Teddy bears, dolls, miniature skateboards, and Silly Bandz…

“But where’s the real puppy?” asks Eliot.

This year both children decided to put only one thing on their list: a puppy. They knew chances were slim but they figured if there was just
one
thing on the list, the pressure on Santa would be huge.

I’ve noticed that most expats leaving Singapore have caved in. Their children are sad about leaving but invariably overjoyed at the promise of a canine addition to the family: “We’re going to be getting a puppy when we get to Connecticut/Finland/England/(fill in the blank)!” This definitely sweetens the blow. I will have to remember this when the time comes. “We’re leaving Singapore… all your friends, teachers, the pool, our house… but we’re getting a poodle.” Hmmm, I might have more luck with a Jack Russell. My kids have already put two and two together. Their nightly conversation goes something like this: “So, basically, when we move, we’re getting a puppy, right? So, when are we moving? We can call the dog Buddy… No Sparkle… Sniper is cooler.” Some of their most bitter fights have been about what name to give this imaginary pet.

The night before Christmas, we go to the children’s mass. It is very sweet and inspired but, after the first hour slowly becomes the second, a bit too long for kids. That, and the fact that Eliot asks in a very loud voice halfway through, “When is God coming?” makes me feel slightly guilty. Either I’m not taking her to mass often enough or we need to go over the basics of Roman Catholicism. Soon.

On our way home, the budding theologist ponders: “If God made everything, who made God?”

“Is there any place without ants?”

The good news is Eliot, unlike her mother, has very good eyesight and can spot a tiny ant on the wall from across the hotel room.

The bad news is… Eliot can spot a tiny ant on the wall from across the room. “That ant keeps following me,” she complains as we wait for a taxi on Newton Road.

He’s not following you. Ants are actually very nice. If anything, they are scared of you because you’re so big and they’re so small. Maybe he’s climbing your leg because he thinks you’re a tree.

“But why does he think I’m a tree?”

It’s 7:20 am, there’s only so much mental energy I can devote to this topic.

“Is there anywhere with no ants?”

No, no, no. There are ants everywhere, Singapore, Italy, New York… Just get used to ants.

“But not in a snowy place?”

I guess, maybe Alaska. But I can’t say for sure because I have never been to Alaska.

“Mommy… yes, you have. You’ve been everywhere. You know, before you were born. Before I was born I was just bones… and then God bought me. Right?”

Where is that taxi?

“Why didn’t you
make
me without whining?”

It was a public hospital?

“Which Winx should I be?”

Oh no, Eliot has discovered ‘Winx Club’, an animated series consisting of five glamorous fairies with magical powers and super-short skirts. They’re so sexy they make Barbie look like a nun. I googled them and found out that this global phenomenon is actually Italian (that explains the fashionable look)… but still. A friend brought over the films and Eliot watched back-to-back Winx… for five hours. Now she’s hooked. Just yesterday, I was ever so lightly nudging her toward medical school: “Wouldn’t it be great to cure people?” But now she’s thinking: “Wouldn’t it be great to wear short, glittery skirts?”

The other night in bed Eliot pondered her future movie career as one of the Winx: “When I get taller I’m going to be in the Winx movie, I can be Bloom even though I don’t have the right hair but that’s my favourite one…”

Alexander briefly looked up from his bed, where he was reading ‘How to Design Manga Comics’, to ask: “What? Eliot is going to be in a movie?”

“Yes, when I’m big. But Mommy, I’ll have to show my belly button like they do…”

What? No, I don’t like it. I mean (covering up my innate ultra-conservative stance), well sometimes you can but not always. (I can be really tough when I have to.)

“My name is Eliot and my Daddy ate a rabbit.”

Lately, my kids have started to shift from the whole puppy idea to the more attainable bunny idea. Though we still compulsively watch episodes of ‘The Dog Whisperer’, I noticed the subject in their conversations has definitely changed.

Eliot: “I really want a rabbit. I want a nice white fluffy one.”

Alexander: “Well, how would you feel if you were a rabbit with brown spots and nobody wanted you?”

“Sad?”

Alexander: “Yes, so let’s not say for sure that we want a white one. We’ll just know when we see them all which one to choose.”

Eliot: “Okay, I’ll take very good care of our bunny and I’ll tell Daddy not to eat it.”

A somewhat scary train of thought, but the girl has a point. Her dad is from Verona and
Veronesi
are known to eat rabbit (you can put that down next to the horse meat already mentioned). He mainly ate it as a child and once mentioned how delicious it is with polenta (Italian-style cooked cornbread). This admission so impressed Eliot that I even heard her introduce herself by saying: “My name is Eliot and my Daddy ate a rabbit.”

The heartless dad is still holding out on getting them a bunny but he has offered them this not-at-all trauma-tizing concession: “Sure, you can have one when we get to Italy. There are plenty of rabbits at the supermarket.”

“Can we go to Hong Kong to get an eraser?”

If you have a five-year-old expat kid in Singapore, do not be surprised. To them, this is a totally plausible request. When I went to pick Eliot up from school today she showed me a tiny eraser that her friend gave her.

“She got it in Hong Kong. Can we go to Hong Kong to get more?”

Hmmm, you do realize that Hong Kong is four hours away by plane from Singapore?

“Well, four hours is not one hundred.”

The crushing logic of a five-year-old.

After watching a music video with Taylor Swift: “Is this girl in jail?”

No, why? “Because Justin Beever is in jail. Maddie told Katie and Katie told me. Because Maddie sometimes looks at the news. A very important girl asked Justin Beever for chopsticks but he didn’t give them to her… so that’s why he went to jail.” So this is how rumours in the entertainment world get started. By first graders… who knew?

The fact that Eliot prefaces most of her questions with the words
In real life…
leads me to suspect she’s living in a parallel universe.

If she found herself at a wishing well, she says she would wish for poor people to have houses with comfortable beds, to be a fairy, and to have a puppy. She also wishes beds were made of jello: “So we could bounce on them.”

“I can be a princess?”
BOOK: Diary of an Expat in Singapore
13.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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