Resonate Edition 33 | Page 8

Culture Surprise David and Eliza have been living in the Silk Road Area for three years. Here they pick out some memorable moments that gave them a little case of culture surprise. Is the local system as bad as we’ve heard it is? David decided to try it out when he had a back complaint. The massage was great but the “electro-massage” that followed left a bit to be desired. In fact, the paddles, poorly earthed to the machine, left burn marks up and down his back! At the next session, David took his own electrical tape to repair the wiring himself. We are very thankful for access to international medical centres in the city but this experience gave us an insight into what our local friends are faced with. Health System Our children have enjoyed a succession of feathered friends as pets, including hens that we hoped would lay eggs for our breakfast. But a local friend, who was keen to sell us some of his own poultry, was quick to advise us that we needed a rooster if we wanted the hens to lay. David, who grew up on a farm and had sold eggs commercially for a number of years, was at a loss to work out how he could explain that hens didn’t need a rooster to lay eggs. Only if we wanted them to have chickens would we need a rooster… Pets We feel like we have a reasonable handle on the road rules but last year the one-way street in our village caught David out. He turned right one street too late and the waiting policeman pulled him over to inform him of his misdemeanour. But the officer didn’t want to speak the K language, he could only speak the other main language, which David doesn’t speak. This confusing conversation attracted the attention of David’s mates at the nearby plumbing store, who knew which languages David could speak and which language the policeman should be able to speak. The officer could only take so much of this teasing so he threw the documents back at David, jumped in his car and took off. So much for David driving the wrong way up the one- way street! Driving Eliza knew homewares were significantly cheaper in the Silk Road Area than in Australia. But even after three years, that difference brought her undone. She wanted to buy a set of 10 tea cups as a gift for her mother. When she asked the vendor the price of the cups, he said, “1000 tenge”. No worries, that would mean 10,000 tenge, the equivalent of $40 for the set. But when she got out a 10,000 note, he quickly corrected her. “No, no, 1000 for the set. The cups are only 100! You be careful with your money, Eliza. Don’t wave 10,000 tenge notes around!” Money resonate · issue 33 · page 7 Eliza is always keen to get involved at the kinder where their daughter Caitlyn attends whenever she is able, in order to deepen her relationships with the teachers and to get to know the other families. But agreeing to drive a handful of children to the museum on an excursion took her involvement to a new level. Yes, the group visited the museum, but also the fire station, central mosque, police station, a school and the local swimming hole, making up the itinerary en route! All of those visits were packed into an hour-and-a-half. Photos were taken at every site of the children posing in front of buildings, emergency service vehicles, stuffed animals, and later in the day our Whatsapp group was flooded with photos of the excursion. No consent forms required. Kinder