Referral Link: http://www.senserely.com/referral/7777778a
… that is from Great Britain, that were on a visit here in Slovenia during the last few days of July and the first few days of August. The mentioned family consist of my uncle, aunt, two male-cousins and one female-cousin; while the other female-cousin Miriam this time stayed in the GB from the beginning., let me also mention that though I haven’t seen much the relatives of mine (not now when there were here on a visit, but generally), these in particular are surely the ones with whom I can (and do) communicate in the “easiest” and the most “spontaneous” manner …
OK, I will try to explain this a bit more thoroughly. You see, it’s that as an addition to my problems with communication lately, my family (or rather our family) is somehow a unusual one. I will not go into details here, but just belive me that it is so; and that this applies to many common “family things”. For instance, this means that in case of our family there are no “annual meetings” (in fact, there’re mostly no meetings at all), no weddings and other such celebrations and stuff. While I am talking about the whole father’s side family here (btw., my father himself is the one that’s the most strange/unconventional), and not just about the one family from Great Britain that were here in Ljubljana for the past few days. It is a bit different in case of my relatives by my mother’s side, however, it’s not very much different at all. Although it is true that in general, the family by mother’s side is a bit more “normal” in certain ways; but again, I will not go into details.
Anyways, although we haven’t seen each other much, since they were mostly on Bled (where they were situated), we’ve seen each other quite a lot for the past three days. The first day my father made something to eat for them (and there was the usual sociability), the second day we went to eat to Čad restaurant under the Rožnik hill here in Ljubljana, while today there was another eating/sociability event, but more or less only to say good-bye etc.
P.S. - Aha, and as one interesting thing: the uncle told me that he actually personally knew the second in command of al-Quaida, i.e. the Al-Quaida’s so-called “spiritual leader” Ayman al-Zawahiri. He studied the medicine with him in Alexandria in Egypt (otherwise, my uncle is a Kopt: they are Arabs too but of a Christian faith, similar to Maronites in Lebanon); though he said that he wasn’t such an extremist back then, or at least he didn’t seem to be one.
Ivan Tadej (user: “tayiper”)
Referral Link: http://www.senserely.com/referral/7777778a

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