I have told many people that
the single biggest myth about Russian women is
that they are primarily motivated to meet foreign
men in order to achieve wealth, citizenship in
some other country or material gain. The countless
women I have met (and the very special one I am
engaged to) seem to come from a time and place
that we have left behind in America - a place
where people make great sacrifices for love, for
the sake of family. The decision to leave home
and fly half way around the world to live with
someone they have definitely fallen in love with,
but are still beginning to know, in order to realize
the dream of happily ever after is the biggest
decision of any foreign lady's life. I was reminded
of this recently when I took my 5th trip to St.
Petersburg, Russia - to bring my fiancé
home to America.
Viktoria and I received our Fiancee Visa from
the American Embassy in Moscow in December. She
wanted her and her son, Sergey, to spend the holidays
with her family, so we planned their relocation
for January and, on the 19th, I boarded the Finnair
flight in New York to go and claim my new bride
and son. I remember thinking, as the plane ascended
and headed north, that this time I would not have
to leave Viktoria behind on the return trip. The
sense of relief and accomplishment was unreal.
The following days in St. Petersburg were filled
with celebrations with her family and friends,
many delicious dinners, countless toasts to our
togetherness and future. Vika and I spent every
night drinking wine and talking late into the
evening with her mother about our plans. And when
the day of departure was finally upon us, her
mother, aunt and uncle, and 2 cousins joined us
at the airport for a final farewell. We all exchanged
hugs and kisses, and vodka toasts for a safe flight
and a quick return. Vika, Sergey and I proceeded
through customs. At the last moment I looked back
and only I and her family could see each other.
Their faces huddled together, they blew me kisses
with happy tears in their eyes and smiles.
"We are trusting you with everything," they seemed
to say. I was humbled beyond words.
I promised Viktoria not to say things to try and
comfort her on the flight back. She knew I loved
her; she knew everyone would be ok, but her thoughts
were of her mother and her family, and the exciting
yet completely foreign new world that was waiting
to welcome her. So we flew quietly for 9 hours
to New York, and I held her hand and kissed her
forehead and let her sleep. Once in New York,
we cleared U.S. Customs easily and headed for
a hotel near the airport to unwind. I thought
the most difficult part of the journey was finally
over - little did I know!
I completely underestimated the gravity of Vika's
decision to leave Russia for America, expecting
that America would immediately seduce her with
so many great freedoms and luxuries. . . the shopping,
the restaurants, the friendly people. . .of course,
this was naive on my part. The first 48 hours
would become a tug-of-war where I would continually
introduce her to something great about America,
or my city, or her new home, and she would simply
reject everything, unable to reconcile the internal
conflict of happiness and guilt, joy and pain,
excitement and trepidation.
There were a few comical moments during this struggle.
We went to Target for a few essential items, and
I wanted her to pay for the transaction, to build
her confidence that she could interact with people.
"Nyet! Nyet!" she said. "What if he says hello?"
"Say Hello back." I said.
"What if he says 'How are you?'"she said. I said,
"Say 'Fine! How are you?"
She insisted no, I insisted yes, and so she paid
the cashier and was fine. "Congratulations, Buddy,"
I thought to myself, "You just taught her to shop.
May you never live to regret that."
Another funny moment came when I sent an email
to her family from work saying everything was
fine, Vika and Sergey were adjusting well, and
I would be sending them back for a visit as soon
as possible, probably later in the year. Her family
translated the message incorrectly and called
her mother to say, "He is angry already at Vika
and wants to send her back immediately!" I made
Vika promise to contact her family and set the
record straight right away.
The turning point came on our third night, sitting
in the hot tub at 2am, looking at the stars. She
cried a little and I asked what was wrong. Her
response made everything clear to me. She said
"It's just that everything in America is so big!
The houses are big, the cars are big, the food
is big, the markets are big�.." I thought
about this. She was telling me she was a little
overwhelmed by it all. Yes, things in America
are typically bigger than in Russia. But also,
this decision was BIG, the emotions were BIG,
the love between us was BIG, the worry about her
family was BIG. I knew in that instant the adjustment
would take some time. I told her I loved her,
and would do anything for her, to not worry, to
not think about the wedding or even staying. I
asked her to just relax, and try to find things
she liked here. And I promised that in the end
if she couldn't stay, I would send her back to
her family without anger. After all, I knew I
could not have made the sacrifices she had already
made. This seemed to calm her down, and we hugged
each other for the longest time.
The next day, I knew I had to do something to
help her make the connection back to Russia so
we went to the Russian market in my city. She
was greeted by the owners, listened to cable Russian
television, bought Kefir and buckwheat, bulka
and caviar spread. She saw the Russian movies
available for rent, and her mood lightened considerably.
We bought a few phone cards (333 minutes to St
Petersburg for $5) so she could call her mother
for an hour a day if she wanted. Suddenly the
world seemed a little smaller to her.
Later that day, we installed a Russian keyboard
on our computer, and downloaded Cyrillic fonts.
Now she could write to her friends and family
in Russian. Excellent move! Knowing her family
ate soup on a daily basis, we went to another
market to buy ingredients. I showed her where
on the Internet she could listen to Radio Baltika
out of Moscow - all day if she wanted. We found
a playground and skate park for Sergey, and bought
him roller blades. With all this she was suddenly
a new girl!
The next couple of days she would cook food she
was familiar with, email pictures to her family,
and talk with her mother and her friend Olga,
now living in West Palm Beach, Florida with her
husband of two years. By Friday the 30th, 5 days
after hitting the US, I could tell everything
would be all right. I asked if she still wanted
to get married, jokingly, and she said "Don't
worry, I still want, very much!" By the weekend
she was suggesting she go shopping again (I knew
that was a mistake.) and had become the smiling,
happy flirt I had fallen in love with.
The range of emotions during this first week together
in America was an unanticipated learning experience
for me. One has to simply relax, allow his fiancé
to feel all the typical things we feel when we
undergo major change in our lives, and not become
defensive or angry when she comes out of the shower
with a few tears in her eyes. We live in this
great country and culture, but our freedoms and
luxuries mean little at first to someone who is
leaving her family and home in Russia, to create
new ones abroad. Be patient, and be flexible,
and wait for the love between you to replace the
worry and wonder that come with leaving home.
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