Sorry for the hiatus. Make sure you check out the new pages in the tabs at the TOP of the blog. They were very interesting to write and both contain pictures that you'll want to see.
Anyway, December through the end of January was packed with the following.
(1) My family visiting Dnipropetrovs'k, Kyiv, and L'viv, ending with a New Year's Eve extravaganza with the Ukrainian cousins (Possibly additional pictures to come from Mom and Dad, as they were the primary photographers)
Dnipropetrovs'k
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Oddly enough, one of our only family photos (unfortunately a seflie) from the trip;
on a cloudy Dnipropetrovs'k day on the river |
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| Great traditional Ukrainian restaurant |
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| The Embankment at nighttime |
Kyiv
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Blessed with nice weather at Pecherska Lavra;
toured a mini catacomb;
proud of mom, dad, and Chris for overcoming fake claustrophobia |
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| Geiger counter for added comfort |
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Mom getting artsy (probably by accident) with iPhone filters;
Kyiv train station, L'viv-bound |
L'viv

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Someone finally decided to start using her Ukrainian;
She was quite uncooperative in Dnipropetrovs'k and Kyiv |
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| Best use of English-language advertising in Ukraine |
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We found a Chinese (and unfortunately Japanese) restaurant in L'viv named Beijing (Pekin);
My dad was a celebrity and let's just say Chinatown and Flushing
don't have much competition in Ukraine |
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One of many family reunions;
this one was on the farm where my grandmother grew up |
Long Island, NY
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Couldn't resist.
This is exhausted Sophie after welcoming the family home (sans yours truly) |
Thank you mom, dad, and Chris for the incredible visit. It hasn't been easy living so far away from you, but the challenges are what have made the journey so exciting. I'm thankful to have shared some of my adventures with you. I hope seeing and experiencing Ukraine was as eye-opening for you as it continues to be for me. The part of this journey that has had the strongest impact on me is that this is the opportunity to live, work, and learn for others, especially when those others are our ancestral brothers and sisters in Ukraine. I have you to thank for instilling in me the mindset to pursue an unwavering commitment to other people. I bet babcha and aunt Stephanie have the biggest smiles on right now.
(2) Volunteering at a U.S. Embassy-sponsored camp in Pereyaslav-Khmelnitski for teenaged Ukrainian students studying American English in Cherkassy, Donetsk, and Luhansk
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| Sunset on the icy Dnipro |
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The students, teachers, and staff at the US Embassy in Kyiv with the US Ambassador to Ukraine
(Geoffrey Pyatt, with the green tie);
He has been on the US news a lot and even met with John Kerry and President Poroshenko recently in Kyiv |
I can't emphasize how much I enjoyed working with these students and their teachers. They were from the central Ukrainian city of Cherkassy, and the eastern Ukrainian cities of Donetsk and Luhansk. From the humanities and arts to mathematics and the sciences, these students are extremely talented and motivated. They are now equipped with American English in addition to Ukrainian and Russian, so the world is theirs to explore. They are certainly going to have nothing but positive impacts on the people around them in the future and I am proud to know them.
Another big thank you to fellow volunteers at the camp. I can't wait for reunions and future projects together.
(3) Visiting Krakow and doing another round of Kyiv/Dnipropetrovs'k with my BC friend/second-violin partner/lifeguard coworker/Campus School Marathon teammate Hayley
Krakow
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| Passport control entering Poland |
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| Wawel |
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| Just a fire-breathing dragon |
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| Beautiful rivers are abundant in Eastern Europe |
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Not your everyday intersections
Left: in Krakow; note L'wów (L'viv in Polish) a mere 280 km away
Right: Somewhere on Route 66 in the American Southwest; seeing the sign in Krakow
made me recall the amazing travels I had this summer while interning; note Warsaw is 5887 miles away |
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Wieliczka Salt Mine Cathedral
Flashback to the first day of 9th grade geology, licking halite |
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| Me and one of many Pope John Paul II Statues |
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Saw a chamber concert in this church
Chopin was partly featured of course |
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| Krakow Opera House |
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| The Cloth Hall |
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| Eagles in Krakow; Hopefully the end of my selfie career |
(More) Kyiv
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We saw the immediate Maidan response to the events in Mariupol
Photo credit: Hayley |
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More Le Petit Prince;
this time with fox, a dashing robe,
and a former French language student |
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National Philharmonic of Ukraine;
Barber, Prokofiev, and Brahms night |
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| The Funicular |
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We couldn't resist trying Domino's;
apparently they take delivery very seriously |
(More) Dnipropetrovs'k
Hayley, you have a great knack for exploration, pretty sharp photography skills, and an uncanny ability to locate felines. Thank you for the crazy adventure. I'm sure it won't be our last.
Location omitted for emphasis
One of my new favorites in Ukraine is this sculpture,
Loved looking at these pictures again. I can't wait to see all your pictures and hear more about your adventures. It will be so good to have you home! What would you like to eat? I wonder if you will have some reverse culture shock when you come home? love, mom
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