Posted in Places, Travel

Where to Play in London : Holland Park

This Saturday we went to the west for another adventure playground. Holland Adventure Playground is like a mini Battersea Park and Playground.

The weather was cold but the park was still quite crowded. Inside the Holland Park, there is the well-known mini Kyoto Garden.

It was just like our another Saturday playground session until something catched my eyes. I couldn’t think for few seconds when my eyes starred at one of the kids. She starred back. Then from behind, another kid came running and climbing the slide. I was indeed astonished.

They were really here?

In this small playground in the forest?

Playing just like any other kids?.

Suddenly the girl shouted, “Mama, look!”

I turned my head and couldn’t believe my eyes even more.

A mid 30s woman, with coat, jeans, a hat and a pair of long boots came to the girl. At first, she seemed just like any other mother in the playground until I saw her closely.

She was there. The media-around-the-world darling. The future queen.

She looked as ordinary as any other women in the playground.

It was unbelievable to see the most famous people in this country so up close and personal like this. In a small playground, playing like any other kids, queuing with my own daughter waiting for their turn, climbing, running here and there.

Didn’t I take picture? I did. But, the guard noticed and told me not to take it. Since then, the guard kept his eye on me everywhere😁

But, other people were as casual as they were no one. No one came close and asked for picture, it was totally like no one worth-asked-the-picture-taken there.

The kids wore such simple clothes like any other kids. Unless you know their face from the paper or screen and being pretty close to them, you won’t recognize them right away.

It was nice to see the real royals who acted just like the real ordinary people, meanwhile out there, there’s a lot of ordinary people who try so hard to act like a royal.

I never imagine deciding which playground to visit is important until today😁.

Today’s playground visit was indeed one of the most exciting that we had!

Didn’t I really take the picture at all?

I did of course secretly. They were safely kept for my future memories and for few more years later to be shown to Langit that she once was playing on the same playground with the royals of England!

Posted in Books, Places, Thoughts

Tempat Paling Favorit di London

Dua bulan di sini, temen ngga (belom?) punya, kenalan hampir ngga ada, rutinitas itu-itu aja, tapi tetep happy, karena tempat ini.

Seminggu bisa dua-tiga kali ke sini. Jalan kaki 5 menit dari sekolah Langit, 15 menit naik bis dari rumah. Ngga ada temen yang lebih menyenangkan dari buku-buku bagus. Dalam dua bulan, saya udah menghabiskan lebih dari jumlah total dari yang saya baca selama setahun terakhir.

Canada Water ini salah satu perpustakaan lokal di bawah Southwark Council. Setiap daerah punya perpustakaannya masing-masing. Koleksi bukunya lumayan lengkap. Setidaknya saya selalu punya bacaan yang mau saya baca. Selain itu, ngga ada batesan jumlah buku yang mau kita pinjem. Belum selesai baca? Tinggal perpanjang otomatis di mesin. Kecuali ada yang sudah booking di tanggal pengembalian kita. Itu harus dikembalikan dulu. Ada satu buku yang saya udah perpanjang lima kali karena saking sayangnya bacanya diirit-irit

Menyenangkannya lagi, di sini perpusnya bukan yang kaku ngga boleh berisik, bawa makanan dan minum. Di sini boleh bawa makan dan minum, bau harum kopi dan roti di cafe bawah bisa dinikmatin sambil baca buku. Kenapa baunya aja? Ya karena saya bawa bekal sendiri, hehe.

Di lantai satu ada area anak-anak yang mana hampir ngga pernah kosong, biarpun hari kerja. Hari Minggu bahkan lebih rame lagi. Kursi-kursi yang tersedia banyak dan mengakomodasi banyak kebutuhan. Ada yang dateng mau kerja pake komputer, ada yang perlu buat diskusi, ada yang perlu konsentrasi sendiri, ada meeting room kecil buat 10-15 orang, atau ada yang cuma mau duduk baca diselingin bengong sambil liat pemandangan danau di luar sambil berjemur (saya masuk bagian ini), semua ada dan nyaman.

Kegiatan untuk anak-anak pra-sekolahnya pun banyak. Mungkin kalo pindah ke sini waktu Langit belum sekolah, saya akan nongkrong di sini lebih sering lagi. Ada di satu hari, children arenya diubah kaya playground dengan banyak buku. Hari itu stroller-stroller lebih padet dari Tesco pas weekend. Bayi dan anak-anak kecil lari kesana kemari dan saya perhatiin orang dewasanya juga biasa aja. Bahkan ketika anak-anak itu ngelewatin quiet area.

Perpustakaan seperti ini berharga banget buat saya yang suka baca tapi banyak mikir buat beli, bisa karena harga atau penyimpanannya. Saya punya kindle, tapi baca buku fisik itu beda. Adanya perpustakaan seperti ini, semua kesenangan dapet. Baca buku fisik dapet, ngga musti keluarin uang, pilihannya super banyak, selesai baca ngga menuh-menuhin ruang di rumah, tinggal balikin, bisa ganti cari buku lain lagi.

Perpustakaan ini, dan saya rasa perpustkaan lokal daerah lainnya, bukan sekedar tempat baca dan pinjem buku, tapi sekaligus jadi pusat komunitas. Kegiatan lainnya seperti pemutaran film, teater skala kecil, story telling buat anak-anak, pesta piyama, kursus singkat bahasa Inggris, dan masih banyak lagi. Tempat yang pas sekali buat menghabiskan waktu tanpa menghabiskan uang. Semua gratis.

Perpustakaan yang mumpuni dan taman hijau dengan playground yang memadai, dua hal yang seharusnya wajib ada dan tersedia di sebuah area tinggal.

Dua fasilitas umum yang jadi indikator negara maju (buat saya), yang mana (mungkin), ngga akan pernah ada di Jakarta, (dan seluruh Indonesia).

Posted in Places, Travel

One Day Trip to Salisbury and Bath

Stonehenge had been on the bucket list for quite long time. I know it’s just stones, but reading a lot of stories about them made me really want to see them and most of the picture with them are so breathtaking. I was trying to fit this one during our 2017 trip. But, as that year trip wasn’t mine but more for others, so this one wasn’t included.

Stonehenge could be reached by train from London to Salisbury. From Salisbury, you’ll need to take Stonehenge Bus Tour to the Stonehenge Visitor Centre. Stonehenge Bus Tour runs every an hour and it costs 16 pounds per adult (insanely pricey, yeah). After arrived at the Stonehenge Visitor Centre, there’s shuttle bus to take us to the yard.

I was quite taken aback at the first sight, because, is it this all? Really? But, you must see them from different kind of angle. They look mightier when we see them from the other side of the circle. Maybe lots of tourists also made the view less appealing. There were neolitikum houses too which considered as the house of the builders.

The Famous Ancient Stone made by alien. Taken from the side less of tourists.
The Builders’ Houses

Done with Stonehenge, we went to Bath by train. It took an hour from Salisbury to Bath. We stayed overnight at Bath and explored the city the next day. I had one specific purpose to visit in Bath, which was Jane Austen Centre. As Mr Darcy’s fan, Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Semsibility, Mansfield Park, and Emma reader, Jane Austen Centre is a must. The ticket is £10 if you buy online, £12 if you pay at the centre. Is it worth the visit? If you are Jane Austen team, it is. The eloquent guide explained little details about the writer passionately.

Jane Austen Centre in Bath
Our Mr Darcy from Pride and Prejudice

Done with the centre, we were strolling around the city. We visited Sally Lunn, the oldest house in Bath from 1400 which sold the famous bun in Bath. The bun was really good.

We didn’t manage to visit some places as planned since the mood was quite ruined because of first paycheck drama. As usual, strangely, there’s no single thing run just smoothly about us. For the same simple thing, when others just have it gently and smoothly, we need to dig, sweat, chase, and spend some unnecessary energy until we make it.

In spite of the bad mood, I enjoyed the city and hoped to see it more.

Sally Lunn : The oldest house in Bath who makes famous bun

Posted in Books, Maternité, Review, Thoughts

Parenting Around the World

I am not a big fan of parenting seminar, but easily sold to well-written parenting books. While seminar is mostly sound like preaching, these books provide not only opinion but with fact and data, research results from journal or real experience to support their writing. I have finished all these five books and so eager to write about this.

European countries have almost similar pattern and idea in raising their child. They didn’t even know before that their country parenting way existed until four American Parents did some researches, observed things,interviewed the experts, compared some studies, then published their findings into an enjoyable reading (for me).

Although there were some minor differences, but they all agree on few big ideas from the very beginning : raising a self-reliance child, the importance of playing, social skills, basic values and character development over cognitive in early years. Those are some of important skills to master that lead to many things in the child future years such as lower chance of depression and anxiety, emotional stability, resiliency, and higher chance of being a happy adult, which also linked to the result of a happy parent.

Soothing himself to sleep and sleeping all through the night, is the first and foremost skill a baby has to master as soon as 3 months, at the very late at 6 months, no matter what kind of feeding (breastfeed or bottlefeed). All four books agree with this. Mastering sleeping is more crucial than stimulating any skills in the early months.

Eating habit becomes crucial especially for French and Dutch. Children eat what is served, any kind of food, and sit on the table. In Dutch, no one is eating until every family member sits on the table and they have chocolate sprinkles for breakfast. Meanwhile in France, even babies learn to differentiate and taste many kind of cheese since early years. No wonder when it comes to food, French is quite snob.

These two basic habits are important for the baby to set a routine and schedule. Mastering both make days easier.

French and German send their children to a whole-day daycare since early age. ‘La creche’ in France and ‘Kita’ in German are available free for all children, not only as a choice for working parents. Meanwhile most of the Dutch preferred the children to be with their parents.

All four let their child wander around alone in the playground, go to school by their bike or bus from the first grade, and decided what they want to learn since daycare days.

The Danes put strong emphasize on free playing for the first seven years of a child’s life. Playground time is crucial because it’s where the children learn about empathy, patience, and social skill. Lego was made by the Danes, which derived from the word “leg and godt” means “play well”. Children creates their own playing, even without the toys, and outdoor play is a must, in spite of season or weather. They believe there’s no bad weather, only bad clothing.

While French and German are more to stiff and rigid parents, the Dutch and Danes are more relax and fun. France and Germany primary schools are still heading to academic excellence while Denmark and the Netherland see school as a place for personal development training and social skills, without giving so much stress to the academic achievement.

These writers compared how different Americant parents raised their child. Kindergarten is the new first grade, a short recess time to play outside, mastering skills over growing values for the first seven years, cognitive development is a king until Vygotsky came up with what he called by “American Question” : “When will my child master… (insert skill : reading, writing, counting)?

The famous American Tiger Mom raised her two daughters in total opposite of how those European parents did. Bien sur, with more tangible and measurable result too.

“European parents main concern is for their children to be happy and find a community that they feel at home in. The main concern of American parents is for their kids to become successful in life”.

(We can replace American with some asian countries too).

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European parents are lucky because they live where the whole country raise their children together. Their parenting curriculum is clear and one for all. Saying Bonjour for French becomes a national curriculum that should be achieved by everyone. Also, they have many things to make raising a child easier.

From birth child support, free health care and daycare for all children as small as 18 months to 6 years, paid maternity and paternity leave, shorter working hours, long vacation days, big and proper playground everywhere, the society who put pedestrians and bikers before four wheel rider, no long hours to commute from home to work, one single national curriculum for the whole country.

While on the other side of the continent, the situation is pretty much different. Those luxuries might not be available for everyone, and the struggle is undeniably harder. When European works to live, most of American (and Indonesian) lives to work. No wonder an American writer countered the idea by writing an article : “French parents are not superior, they just have it all easier”. French is one of the countries with most vacations day.

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As much as I agree, enjoy, and have been applying few things even before reading the European ones, half of me stand on American side too and it’s great to know how both ways are aligned with Islamic parenting way.

When I was doing my final paper for master degree, I found an article about how Islam divides parenting in three big periods.

Taken from http://islam-today.co.uk/parenting-the-islamic-way :

The Holy Prophet(s), in a beautiful narration, has divided the upbringing of a child into three stages; from birth to age 21 :

The child is the master for seven years, a slave for seven years and a vizier for seven years. So, if he grows into a good character within 21 years, well and good; otherwise, leave him alone because you have discharged your responsibility before God.”

The first stage is so aligned with European way. Up to seven, a child is a king. What he needs to do is play, no responsibility. The utmost priority is proper upbringing and character building. It’s the foundation of everything that he becomes of in the future. Universally good character should be planted before anything else.

Then, at the second stage, he is a slave. It’s when American style is suitable for this period to emphasize formal learning, academic or any talent skills. It becomes clear why salat also becomes compulsory when the child turns seven and should be punished if he doesn’t do it until the age of 10. Being a tiger parent is allowed on this stage.

I won’t go further with the third stage since I just want to point how Islamic parenting aligned with both European and American. I think the third stage is about the time the child and parents ‘see and enjoy’ the results of their upbringing from the first two periods. It’s when a child is a vizier, or in more a familiar word is minister. It’s the time when the child starts leading himself, know his preferency, and the parents need to be there as an advisor until the time he reaches official adult age.

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I believe parenting is not a noun, but more to a verb, which full of hard works. As a mother who raises a daughter without my mother around, I have a lot of questions that I want to know the answer, reading so far has been a good teacher for me.

In term of the writing style, Bringing Up Bebe is the most enjoyable one. Witty, funny, and examples given feel right. Also maybe because I was raised this way and naturally, raising Langit this way too as I wrote It’s Matched!

The Happiest Kids in the World is an easy and light reading. A Battle Hymn is very well written and couldn’t help feeling the same high tension while reading it as how tense Amy Chua raised her daughters.

One of the perks of moving to London that I love the most : library with good books is only few bus stops away and time and energy for reading is widely available. Another thing I will miss when I return to Jakarta.

Posted in Langit Senja, Places, Travel

Where to Play in London : Parliament Hill

This weekend we were going far to north by London overground to Hampstead Heath. The weather was getting colder and unbearable for my old body, but a bright sunny day was too irresistible for just staying at home.

So, off we go to Parliament Hill. Still in zone 2 oyster card. It was a huge garden with the feels like a small village. Proper playground is available, weekend market, and short hiking to the top worth the view.

Free playground, big and beautiful garden everywhere, weekend market, fresh air, blue sky, few things that make all the effort done to take the opportunity offered here (energy, time, money) seems worth every penny.

Things that we surely miss when we return back to Jakarta.

Posted in Places, Travel

A Must Visit in London : Greenwich

Yesterday was the doctor’s day off and suddenly the idea of going to Greenwich came up. After sending Langit to the school, Greenwich market turned out to be only few bus stops away from where we are. What I mean with few means less than 15 bus stops riding.

It was still too early and the market opens at 10am. So we decided to walk around and it was so easy to fall for this borough. It feels like being in a small village although Greenwich is still in zone 2/3. There are National Maritime Museum, Greenwich Park, University of Greenwich and those charming little shops that sell unique things.

Greenwich point zero located inside Greenwich Park. We did some hiking but decided not to buy the ticket. Non-free museum in London is quite pricey for our wallet. Greenwich Market has more charm for the things but not with the food. For this one, Shoreditch still has the best street food market.

I won’t write long and let the pictures do the talk. Although it was cloudy, but the heart was indeed happy.

Posted in Places, Travel

What to Visit in London I

1. The famous detective museum in Baker Street.

Ticket price : £15

2. Harry Potter’s filming site

The entrance of Diagon Alley

Millenium Bridge which destroyed by the Death Eaters
Borough Market, secret passage to Diagon Alley and Leaky Cauldron
Gringotts Wizarding Bank

3. Beatles store at Baker Street

Guess the quote below is so true.

Posted in Thoughts

What’s next?

I didn’t know or maybe I rarely thought, there would be a day when I really have to let go almost all things that have been staying with me for a long time. Even worse, after letting go all those things, I don’t know where to go.

I have been always one with to-do list since I was little. Always come with a day to day schedule or long term plan,it’s all on my head.

Two first paragraphs were written before arrived in London and I just got stuck. Gonna try to finish this in one shot now. Hopefully.

It’s been three weeks since we arrived yet it feels as if it’s been few months. They say time flies when you’re having fun. But, saying that this new life has no fun too is pretty unfair. It’s far from easy yet it’s still survivable. We’re having enough food, money is quite tight, yet still on the level that I could accept, and proper good night sleep. Three basic things are secured. For now.

While the other two have started their own ‘pleasant’ daily routines, it’s still a luxury thing for me. ‘What’s Next’ has been continously questioned for some time before the departure and still no definite answer available. I have several things in mind, but none seem to be fitted well with the situation.

This week was the first week of Langit’s school days. School pick up and delivery become one of the new routines to be dealt with. She got into reception class, one level above nursery just before primary, just like kindergarten. The long school hours, from 9.00 am -15.30 pm also left me with long hours of leisure time.

The only daily routines available for now are doing houseworks, groceries and still playing tourists in between. Houseworks were still manageable. Tried to finish everything before sending Langit to school. Six hours of leisure time is too precious to be used for doing mere houseworks.

Grocery time has been always my favorite. Finally found the place which offered the most pleasant price for the wallet after comparing several stores.

Playing tourist is too unavoidable. London has a lot to be explored and I don’t even do much. I set one day in a week for me playing, just like today. Been planning to visit Harry Potter’s Diagon Alley since it’s only a bus riding from Langit’s school. It was raining but, it was very nice to be among the crowd where I didn’t feel like a stranger. Haha.

Professional work has still need to be working on. Found something yet it’s still on discussion. But, at least having something to be looked forward to feels soothing.

Maybe the answer from the question above is not meant to be discovered instantly. Just like many whys that I have been continously asking to the One who decides all affairs, the answer of my questions usually take a long time until they arrive at the right time. Never too soon, never too late.

Our moving to London is one of the answers from one of the whys asked long ago.