Since getting married more than a decade ago, we have moved around a lot. About every 2 to 3 years we get the itch to seek out a new adventure. I like moving. Well, not the packing up and getting settled part, but the opportunity to live in new places. Nowadays, we find ourselves living in a spacious apartment in the megalopolis of Cairo and it is the largest home we have ever lived in. I estimate that it probably around 2700 square feet. I love the space.
As expats with the American Embassy, we could choose to live in an American-owned compound (apartment complex with walls around it and guards) or we could live "on-the-economy" (an Egyptian apartment). We chose an Egyptian apartment and are for the most part happy with our choice. A big advantage to the compounds is that they have generators that automatically turn on whenever the local power is cut. Little did we know back when we had to make our choice that Egypt would experience a terrible energy crunch, the worst in years resulting in multiple power cuts a day, sometimes as many as 6 times a day, sometimes every day for weeks at a time. Ugh. It's after a day like that when I wish I had a back-up generator to keep my house operating. Cold food sitting in a frying pan waiting to be cooked and a stalled laundry cycle only 5 minutes after starting are no longer uncommon in my new world. It's strange to say, but I've already almost gotten accustomed to it. Almost. ;-)
So here's the tour of our Egyptian home . . .
We brought only a few items of furniture from home. This side table is from New Mexico. We bought many of our baskets in New Mexico. Although they fit in really well with Native American designs, I think they were made in Pakistan. So they happen to fit nicely into our Middle Eastern home, too.
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This is the little guest bathroom. We are not fans of the "bum gun." It is very typical for Egyptian bathrooms to have a hose with a sprayer attachment, a bidet, or a toilet with a built in bidet feature.
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For a family of girls, I think we would have preferred pink over blue, but the girls enjoy their bathroom and it's more than sufficient for the chaos of each nightly routine. I had to teach my girls to take showers because the little water heater isn't big enough to fill the tub with warm water. Our apartment has four of these little water heaters (master, guest, kitchen and laundry room).
The thing that I miss most is not having a yard. In the past it was a joy to have the option to tell my kids to “go outside and play.” Here . . . they do go outside but it is never to just play and run around freely (unless we walk to the club that we joined and then it is still a supervised play). Sometimes we blow bubbles on our balcony but it really is not the same as having a yard . . . and we can only dream of our own play set.
Also, I miss our attached garage. At least we have a garage but I cannot park our minivan into our spot. We have to push in our side mirrors and cannot have passengers in the vehicle on the passenger side when we park because we have to squeeze to within about one inch of the cement wall. The driver cannot open their door the whole way but must wiggle between our minivan and another parked car. Luckily our boabs (doormen) will park our vehicle for us. They also keep it clean. I was really stressing out about parking here before my husband came up with the solution to use their help. I don't know how they have not yet damaged our vehicle in such a tight spot.
Overall, we feel very blessed to live in such a beautiful apartment. We enjoy American standards of refrigeration, stand-alone freezer, full size washer and dryer, air conditioning, air filtration, water filters, hot water, Internet, and comfortable furniture. Now if only they could do something about increasing the bandwidth . . . .