Hey everyone, me and my now husband closed the distance on March 8th, and since then he's been settling in to life here! We're still getting along fantastically and living together is amazing! It was so much worth the wait through the process of getting his visa to come here, through the long distance. Towards the end of our waiting, we were tired of the distance, but we never once took the stress out on each other and always found comfort in our love for each other. Dealing with a time-zone difference, we still managed to make each other a major part of our daily lives. Now we are living in the same apartment, sleeping in the same bed, and it's absolutely fantastic! I love living with him so much! It's the greatest gift to finally be together, and I'm so happy with him!
I was concerned about homesickness being a problem, but so far it's proven not to be as big of an issue as I thought it might be. He's adjusting quite well. I know he gets homesick from time to time, but he's told me it's not crippling for him. He finds ways to cope with it, like staying connected with friends back home via the internet, Skype calls to his dad, ordering some Russian food items online, and being a member of a few Russian forums. He's an introvert (just like me, lol), and said he doesn't feel the need to specifically seek out Russian friends in the USA to hang out with IRL, but he enjoys the correspondence on the net.
We recently took our cat to a new vet for a check-up and vaccines, and the young vet-tech working there happened to be a Russian guy who's lived most of his life in the US since he moved here with his parents at a young age, but is completely bilingual and fluent in English and Russian (a skill I've always envied, hehe). When he noticed my husband is Russian, he and my husband had a conversation in Russian. It was really cool to see him connect with someone who speaks his native language. A second time was when we needed to drive to my state's capitol from my home city to get his biometrics (fingerprints, etc.) done for immigration. Before going there, we found a Russian deli online we wanted to visit while we were in the area and went there to buy some Russian food. He got to have a short but pleasant conversation with the deli's owner as well.
Another way he stays connected to his culture and language is watching a lot of Russian movies (if there are English subtitles we watch together) and listening to Russian radio online. Also, he downloads a lot of e-books for his kindle in Russian, since he's an avid reader.
I really want to learn Russian, but it's not a language that can be spoon-fed to you. It's something you have to study with some degree of passion, and can take many years to master to a point where you can have a conversation with someone. My second language, which I'm not conversationally fluent in at all, is Spanish. I didn't know when I chose a second language to learn in high school that many years later I'd fall in love with a Russian guy. :-P My school didn't offer Russian, either. I would've had to privately seek out Russian lessons. So here I am at 29, wanting to learn my husband's language, a project which could take many years (he's been studying English since he was 10, so for about 18 years now) to even get to a point where I could think in Russian instead of just having some stock phrases and knowing a passel of vocabulary words under my belt like I do now. :-P
OK, I'm rambling, lol! Long story short, my husband is here, and he's getting along nicely so far, and we're getting along nicely so far, and living together is awesome, and we're happy living in CD! YAY!
I was concerned about homesickness being a problem, but so far it's proven not to be as big of an issue as I thought it might be. He's adjusting quite well. I know he gets homesick from time to time, but he's told me it's not crippling for him. He finds ways to cope with it, like staying connected with friends back home via the internet, Skype calls to his dad, ordering some Russian food items online, and being a member of a few Russian forums. He's an introvert (just like me, lol), and said he doesn't feel the need to specifically seek out Russian friends in the USA to hang out with IRL, but he enjoys the correspondence on the net.
We recently took our cat to a new vet for a check-up and vaccines, and the young vet-tech working there happened to be a Russian guy who's lived most of his life in the US since he moved here with his parents at a young age, but is completely bilingual and fluent in English and Russian (a skill I've always envied, hehe). When he noticed my husband is Russian, he and my husband had a conversation in Russian. It was really cool to see him connect with someone who speaks his native language. A second time was when we needed to drive to my state's capitol from my home city to get his biometrics (fingerprints, etc.) done for immigration. Before going there, we found a Russian deli online we wanted to visit while we were in the area and went there to buy some Russian food. He got to have a short but pleasant conversation with the deli's owner as well.
Another way he stays connected to his culture and language is watching a lot of Russian movies (if there are English subtitles we watch together) and listening to Russian radio online. Also, he downloads a lot of e-books for his kindle in Russian, since he's an avid reader.
I really want to learn Russian, but it's not a language that can be spoon-fed to you. It's something you have to study with some degree of passion, and can take many years to master to a point where you can have a conversation with someone. My second language, which I'm not conversationally fluent in at all, is Spanish. I didn't know when I chose a second language to learn in high school that many years later I'd fall in love with a Russian guy. :-P My school didn't offer Russian, either. I would've had to privately seek out Russian lessons. So here I am at 29, wanting to learn my husband's language, a project which could take many years (he's been studying English since he was 10, so for about 18 years now) to even get to a point where I could think in Russian instead of just having some stock phrases and knowing a passel of vocabulary words under my belt like I do now. :-P
OK, I'm rambling, lol! Long story short, my husband is here, and he's getting along nicely so far, and we're getting along nicely so far, and living together is awesome, and we're happy living in CD! YAY!
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