
I won’t pretend Finn, but there have been times when our choices have taken their toll. What we’ve started here, like so many things, is a marathon and at times it simply feels never ending. I truly doubt we had any idea of what we were embarking on when we launched ourselves in to this, but once we started we had few options but to see it to it’s, probably, bitter end.
And that’s the thing you see, whilst it’s all going on, you can’t see the end. It’s just another day in another week, another month, another year, that goes on and on, as if it will never end, and that gets to you.
The never ending final 3 months.

We simply needed to get past this! We knew it was getting closer but mirage like, we never, no matter how long we worked seemed to reach the illusive end point....it was always 3 months away, and those three months go on and on and on!
Finley tells mummy to change topics of conversation....to his monsters, not ours!

Some might say that we bit off too much; two large chantiers, raising a wonderful child, nurturing a marriage and maintaining our individual sanities..all things that were relatively new to us (excepting the sanity mantainance program…which was never my forte!). And add to that our continued attempts to have another child..phew!. Steep learning curves everywhere, and that took it's toll, there were times when even you had to intervene and say enough was enough...How do you do that?
Times spent outside of the dust of the chantiers came to be consumed with trying to find solutions to current or future problems…thus how are we going to design the kitchen at Tazi …if we ever get the architects plans…let alone the roxa! Little did these women sorting bails of wool know that surrounding them was a solution at hand.
Women sorting bails of wool in Fez Medina
Fortunately it isn’t all work, though there’s been too much and we’ve managed to get out as a family a few times. This was a first, I think for all of us. I can’t remember going to a circus before. You loved it, tho I’m not sure I’d go aga
in…let’s see if we can get you on a safari next time!
Finn at the circus.
We hadn’t had a holiday for years, not even a real break and I think we were probably unaware of how much this had all gotten to us. We’d lost sight of something, that we are doing this all for us and we, not it, are the most important asset that we have, we are what is ultimately important.
It’s easy to say, but easier to forget!
We move in to 813 and that puts a smile back on your mums face. And what a beautiful smile it is!

So at last we managed to be able to move in to an as yet unfinished, but liveable in 813. Of course we all fell ill during the move, but I think, whilst it may have been slightly premature, at least we were in and that raised a smile on mummys face.
The carpenters thought they'd be here till Christmas next Year.....
Of course there were things still left
to do. Nabil seemed to have forgotten that we weren't intending to employ him permenantly. His pace of worked slowed and slowed. Of course he was being paid by the day. It's always a great quandry; pay by the day and watch as even the tiniest job takes a week, or pay a forfet and look at the faults generated by quickly done shoddy work! Arghhhhhh.
The Grillage finally goes up...6 months after ordering it!

And then there was some work that entered in to new levels of The Bizarre. We had ordered our terrace grills before Xmas...last year...a job that should only have taken a few weeks to do. Out of nowhere there was a national shortage of iron and so we waited, and waited and waited. But they are beautiful now they are up...Finally!
Beccie manages the move in to our new home!

When we did eventually manage to move out of the watanya and in to our new home, we found ourselves homeless at jen's, all sick and completely knackered. It's a long way from when I first moved in to my flat in Camden armed with a duvet, a stereo and several boxes of records with the help of a friends ford escort. This took the best part of 24 hours, several vans, a good 6 - 7 workers and yet another pound of flesh...not that you'd notice. But once it was all in situ, I think your mum enjoyed overlooking things moving through the house.
Of course despite the grandeur of our house, we've only a tiny derb, all of 65cms at it's thinest point. This made things like sofas, cookers, fridge freezers and other larger furniture a complete nightmare. Fortunately a rare piece of forward thinking on my part ensured that we have a gate through our halka, and thus many pieces came over the top of neighbours, across another ruin and down through the middle of the house.
This being the medina, the best and least public time to move house is in the middle of the night, a common Fassi trait, moving house by candle light. The streets are empty and even the evil eyes behind twitching curtains have fallen aslumber....we started at approx 10.00 packing boxes in to the lift at Watanya, and everyone finally sloaped off after sun rise the next day....was it worth it?..look at your mothers smile above
A first holiday in years...and you guessed it, we spent all our time here.

As a reward for years of toil we finally went on our first family holday and can only highly recommend where we went in the Sierra Norde.
Oh the joy of having a pool and the run of tens of hectares of farmland to just luxuriate in. We needed it, oh boy did we need it. I think that we barely moved from the pool for the majority of the time we had there. Just to be away from chantiers, makadms, mwalems, demands for fluuss and people talking rubbish at you, with the assumption that you are simply a fool. Oh to have left that behind. Never let us forget, even if we some day waffle on otherwise, that this has been and continues to be, the hardest job I, and I suspect we, have ever done...oh how little we knew when we started looking at houses so many years ago! 
Finn the horse whisperer.
The only thing that got us off our derriers or from the pool was giving you the run of the place and of course you made friends and had new adventures.
Obviously you have a way with animals and given your affinity for language made efforts at learning another new one..can you remember the secret she told you?

Finn sees the pigs.
This being you, it wasn’t all about listening. No, what impressed me was that you had such a fine tuned understanding of how you felt it most appropriate to react to different animals. And this wasn't without some significant reflection as illustrated best with this set of pigs we met in the forests.
Finn conside
res his options.
Obviously it's good to see you in deep reflection as to your options. Umm, I wonder what they are? Have you even seen animals like these? Not where we've come from. Thus you are considering the unknown, a whole new possibility of consequences. Surely small steps are an option, incremental movements in any direction? What will you choose to do?

Finn makes his decision!
You saw, you thought and you charged right in.
Simply fearless.
I love you.