Friday, December 28, 2007
Just had to post
McKenna was opening presents from her grandparents (mind you, they were visiting us and watching them open up gifts). She'd already opened some fun games and then opened up a beach towel that was embroidered with her name. As she took it out of the box, held it up, and looked at it, she said, "It's just a TOWEL?" Sadly, we all laughed. And she was thrilled two seconds later when she found out it had her NAME on it...and then carted it around the entire next day and used it as a blanket. Oh, the gratefulness is oozing from her.
Last night we as we sat down to eat dinner, Laurianna had been singing the praises of that evening's dinner - a pork and mashed potato casserole. After she took her first bite, she got a funny look on her face, scrunched it up, looked at me and asked, "Is this horse meat?" Yes. We're out of beef and pork, so we used the next best thing. Sigh.
I'm sure I'll be posting more soon. I'm missing all of my bloggy friends, but enjoying the time with the kids.
Saturday, December 22, 2007
Holiday Eating Tips
1. Avoid carrot sticks. Anyone who puts carrots on a holiday buffet table knows nothing of the Christmas spirit. In fact, if you see carrots, leave immediately. Go next door, where they're serving rum balls.
2. Drink as much eggnog as you can. And quickly. Like fine single-malt scotch, it's rare. In fact, it's even rarer than single-malt scotch. You can't find it any other time of year but now. So drink up! Who cares that it has 10,000 calories in every sip? It's not as if you're going to turn into an eggnog-alcoholic or something. It's a treat. Enjoy it. Have one for me. Have two. It's later than you think. It's Christmas!
3. If something comes with gravy, use it. That's the whole point of gravy. Gravy does not stand alone. Pour it on. Make a volcano out of your mashed potatoes. Fill it with gravy . Eat the volcano. Repeat.
4. As for mashed potatoes, always ask if they're made with skim milk or whole milk. If it's skim, pass. Why bother? It's like buying a sports car with an automatic transmission.
5. Do not have a snack before going to a party in an effort to control your eating. The whole point of going to a Christmas party is to eat other people's food for free. Lots of it. Hello?
6. Under no circumstances should you exercise between now and New Year's. You can do that in January when you have nothing else to do. This is the time for long naps, which you'll need after circling the buffet table while carrying a 10-pound plate of food and that vat of eggnog.
7. If you come across something really good at a buffet table, like frosted Christmas cookies in the shape and size of Santa, position yourself near them and don't budge. Have as many as you can before becoming the center of attention. They're like a beautiful pair of shoes. If you leave them behind, you're never going to see them again.
8. Same for pies. Apple. Pumpkin. Mincemeat. Have a slice of each. Or if you don't like mincemeat, have two apples and one pumpkin. Always have three. When else do you get to have more than one dessert? Labor Day?
9. Did someone mention fruitcake? Granted, it's loaded with the mandatory celebratory calories, but avoid it at all cost. I mean, have some standards.
10. One final tip: If you don't feel terrible when you leave the party or get up from the table, you haven't been paying attention. Re-read tips; start over, but hurry, January is just around the corner.
Friday, December 21, 2007
Would you like fries with that?
Last night I woke up around 3 am to hear Zachary using the bathroom. As I began to fully wake up, I realized that I was holding something in my hand. A plastic, crinkle-cut french fry. I dropped it over the side of the bed, got up, helped Zachary and climbed back into bed. Rick was awake at this point and mumbled, "I woke up and was holding this in my hand." He proceeded to hand me an ear of corn. French fries and corn. Only in our bed. :)
Thursday, December 20, 2007
A Blur of Motion
I won! I won!!
Yes, I realize the cover looks a little...ummm....creepy, but it is an AMAZING book. I emailed DK yesterday and they FedEx'd the book and I received it today. It has pop-ups all over the place, sounds like there is a heart beating on one page, has tons of flaps to explore. Definitely a book my kids will love - and that will be out of reach for exploring little hands unless Mommy or Daddy are nearby.
Sadly, I can't enter any more contests for 30 days on her site....so I can't try to win this lovely amethyst and diamond pendant. You don't need to stay on my site - quick - go register to win it. I'm sure it would look lovely around your neck! ;)
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
A Swaying Tree
After a few more emails, I discovered it was our Christmas tree she saw swaying. As I thought about it I remembered last evening and my attempt to read a story to the kids.
Sit on couch. Tell Zachary to sit on the couch, not the arm of the couch.
Discipline Zachary.
Start reading. Tell Zachary to stop touching the tree. STOP touching the tree and pulling the ornaments.
Discipline Zachary.
Start reading after figuring out where I left off. Pull Zachary off the arm of the couch while he is pulling at the ornaments.
Discipline Zachary.
Try to read a touching and significant Christmas story to the other kids. Attempt to pull Zachary off the arm of the couch AGAIN and this time succeed in his near tree-tipping over experience as he half falls into the tree.
Somehow we finished the story. But I guess the neighborhood was all witness to the saga.
These are supposed to make me feel smarter...
I have a masters degree, yet sometimes the simplest question can completely throw me. My brain just doesn't seem to want to kick into gear quickly at times. Perhaps if questions were asked in a whiny voice kicked up a notch I might do better, but who knows. Completing a sudoku puzzle, as trivial as it seems, makes me feel like I still have a brain. It is active. It does work. And I have the proof to show it. My reasoning skills are still intact.
I haven't done them in awhile, because they also tend to get a little bit addicting for me. I start and just can't stop. I dream about them. Sad, but true.
This last weekend I printed off a few, starting myself off with three easy ones and one moderate one. Just to wean myself back into them. I found a website that I could print 4 on a page, so YEAH! I worked on the first one for about 20 minutes and got stuck. On an "easy" one. So as not to end the night on a bad note, I started on the second one ... and my husband decided to go to bed. About 15 minutes later, that one too started wearing thin, so I moved onto the third one. And again, stuck. Huh? I tried working on the moderate one and wasn't getting to far and beginning to feel a little frustrated with myself.
These things are supposed to make me feel SMART? And I can't complete one of the four puzzles! As I looked over the three easy puzzles and realized they were all the SAME PUZZLE, can you guess how incredibly smart I felt then? Brilliant I am.
At least I had the same answers for all three. :)
Monday, December 17, 2007
From the Backseat...
Thursday, December 13, 2007
What Coffee Personality are You?
What Your Latte Says About You |
You don't treat yourself very often. You find that indulging doesn't jibe with your very disciplined life. You can be quite silly at times, but you know when to buckle down and be serious. You have a good deal of energy, but you pace yourself. You never burn out too fast. You're addicted to caffeine. There's no denying it. You are responsible, mature, and truly an adult. You're occasionally playful, but you find it hard to be carefree. You are honest and genuine, but you are never tactless. |
Holiday Par-tay Recipe
Karla at Looking Towards Heaven is hosting a Holiday Par-Tay recipe exchange, so this is my little contribution to it. I am hoping somewhere at one of the holiday parties we attend that it will be present. Or I may have to make some myself!
Coffee Punch
Ingredients:
1 cup sugar (or sugar substitute)
1/2 gallon of Breyers vanilla ice cream, softened
1 tub Cool Whip, softened
1 quart of milk (skim or otherwise)
Directions:
Make the coffee and mix in sugar and milk. I then mix the ice cream and cool whip together and leave them in the fridge so they are liquid and mix them in with the coffee mix when I am ready to serve the punch. You can otherwise mix the ice cream and cool whip together and then freeze it in a lovely mold and add it to the coffee when you serve it so that it keeps the punch cooler. This is great!
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Happy Birthday to Heather!
I don't really recall a time in the last 4 years or so that Rick and I have ever taken all of our children out to a place that involved someone serving us (for real), involved taking an order and waiting for food. Golden Corral is about the closest that it's come. So that said, I think our children did remarkably well and am very proud of them. And I, being the mom that didn't think about this fact, didn't bring a stitch of ANYTHING to occupy my children in the restaurant. You'd think after 4 kids that perhaps something might have triggered in my brain. But no. Thankfully Heather came prepared to the max and the kids had stickers, magnets, and there was LOTS OF FREE BREAD.
So Heather - Happy Birthday again. May this year coming up be one filled with more fun, family and a deeper revelation of who God is. :) I'm praying that God will just knock your socks off and surprise you in so many amazing ways - because He's a God that likes to do that! Dig deeper into Him and let Him show you new things, especially His heart for you.
Love you, Heather!
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
For "Really"
Since we were in our bedroom folding laundry, Rick raced out of the room to deal with it right away and I heard him telling the kids that we don't talk about killing, even though we are pretending.
Zachary's answer: (and I could picture him patting Rick's arm as he said this)...It's ok, Dad. We're playing for really.
(So it's not ok if it's pretend, but it is ok if it's for real. He's grasping this well, isn't he?).
Head on over to Mary's for more Tiny Talk Tuesday and also to join in her fun Holiday contest by clicking on her logo below.
Sunday, December 9, 2007
Shamelessly Bragging
If you are having trouble figuring out who is where...Laurianna is toward the left of the screen - right next to the angel (she's wearing a red shirt). She sings the first verse of Away in a Manger and also narrates a little bit during the song.
McKenna is the angel in the middle of the top row. Charis (Chistin's oldest) is next to McKenna - just to the right as you watch. Selah, a cow visiting the manger scene, is in the front row next to the right of the chicken. She is out in the pasture at the beginning of the song, due to a little potty break need, but she joins in about halfway through. *grins*
Yes, shamelessly bragging on our girls. :) Can you blame me?
Last Year this time...
More traditions to think about...
Joesette shared these traditions from her family. Love the ornament idea too, although our tree would get crazy fast! *grins* And helping out as a family is a wonderful idea.
- Each year we make a Happy Birthday Jesus cake...year 1, child 1 (6months old)...footprint in top of cake. Year 2 (same child) hand print in top of cake (lost her balance and fell in...sigh...)
- Each child gets a new ornament (this year, I'm cross stitching them, what was I thinking????)
- We ring the bell for the Salvation Army as a family (mental note, pick the Mall NOT an outside location).
Val at 3 little munchins shared this additional tradition. It sounds like fun!
- About 2 years ago we started having a Christmas Eve picnic in front of our Christmas tree. We spread out a blanket and eat your normal picnic style meal. We talk about Christmas, why we celebrate it... we just have a wonderful time together as a family. The kids love it. This is one we will be doing for a LONG time.
Erin emailed me to tell me that she and her husband sit down together Christmas Eve and she makes him he lovingly offers to help her wrap all the presents while they watch Christmas movies (some lovely classics) until they are all done...but are usually still watching movies til the wee hours of the morning.
We also have some friends whose children are a little older now and they have a lovely tradition of waiting up until midnight to open their presents. Then they can all sleep in nice and late Christmas morning. :) Someday when our kids are older and don't wake up at 6am, I'm sure that will be a lovely thought!
Some other things that Rick and I have talked about (but have yet to put into action) are caroling together as a family (nursing home, etc...). This of course would involve having children that knew all the songs so that they weren't just la-la-laing along with us. :) So this is a "for the future" tradition to start.
Today as I was visiting some other blogs I stopped by An Ordinary Mom's blogsite and she has an amazing tradition that we will definitely have to implement as a family. If you would like to read the entire post you can click here. During the month of December she and her family write a note to one other family member each night until Christmas (taking turns writing to each one). It can be a "thank you" for helping with something, a long letter to another, etc... When they finished the note, it is put in that person's stocking - not to be opened until Christmas. Then Christmas morning, everyone "opens" their stockings first and read all the notes.I think that this would be an amazing family-building tradition to start. We don't do stockings right now (we figure the kids have enough toys already) but this would definitely be something I would run out and buy stockings for!
Hopefully that gives you a few more fun ideas for the Christmas season. Have fun!
Saturday, December 8, 2007
It's technically baking if it goes in the oven...
I promised the girls (and by promise I mean I promised them during our advent devotions so I had to follow through!) that we would make cookies this week, before we light the second advent candle. Not even 24 hours after the promise was made, I was wondering what I was thinking - despite the warm fuzzy feelings baking with your children should generally evoke.
I was ever so happy to come across a relatively simple, flour free, chocolate involved, "baking" recipe of sorts this week to use with the girls. Hardly any mess. Easy. Quick. And we did it together without me losing my mind.
Here's what you'll need: a bag of waffle pretzels, a bag of Hershey's hugs, and a bag of holiday m&m's.
Step 1: Unwrap the hugs.
Step 2: Place the pretzels on a baking sheet.
Step 3: Bake at 170 for 4-5 minutes til the hugs are a little bit melted.
Step 4: Top with an m&m (patterning is optional *grins*).
*** To help them set faster, it helps to put them in the fridge or freezer for a little bit after finishing them.
Friday, December 7, 2007
Expect to be surprised
What about all the craziness leading up to Christmas? Do you set expectations that everything will be just so? Unrealistic expectations in part: the kids will attentively listen (and comprehend) the nightly devotions. The tree will remain perfectly decorated and ornaments will not be found hiding in various parts of the house. Making cookies with the kids will be a bonding experience - not one where it would be easier to whack your head on a brick wall.
Life in general does not always go according to our expectations. Reading again about Mary and Joseph and then thinking about expectations that they might have had - and the things they didn't expect to happen made me start thinking. Mary wasn't exactly expecting a pregnancy (and a virgin one at that!). Mary didn't expect to be the mother of the MESSIAH! I'm sure that they didn't envision baby Jesus being born in a stable (the birth plan she had in place went out the proverbial window). The shepherds probably weren't expecting to be startled by a choir of glorious angels. The wise men - searched and searched and then had to sneak out of the country (again, probably not in their initial plans). Jesus went completely opposite in most ways to what everyone expected. What they anticipated.
It's so easy to get caught up in how we want things to be. How we desire things to turn out. To set our expectations and then be crushed in the process. We can't always expect things to turn our the way we want - BUT we don't have to lose our joy in the process. We can't expect everything we wish for to happen - but we might end up with more than we ever dreamed or expected. We can expect that God will always keep his promises to us - no matter what the situation is that we are in. He WILL heal our hurts. He DOES hear our cries. He LISTENS when we call. He GIVES exceedingly, abundantly more than we can ask or imagine. He is ALWAYS with us. He NEVER leaves us. He LOVES us. That will never change. We can expect that and never be disappointed.
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Favorite Christmas Movies
Dirt is protein, right?
It took a few minutes to realize that it is no longer safe to let him play in my room. I forgot we moved a plant in there for the Christmas season.
This is what I found in my room.
But technically, if I remember correctly, dirt is a protein, so that means that Kaleb got his recommended daily allowance of protein.
****
On a side note: About 15 minutes after I posted this, Kaleb got REALLY funky - lethargic and just so not himself. I was seriously considering taking him to the ER (it was that bad) and I finally just prayed, "God, whatever it was - get it out of him now." To which he promptly turned over and threw up all over my kitchen. Again and again. And then got all perky on me. :)
I did call poison control too and talked to them. Apparently, there must have been something lovely in the dirt he ate. And in case you are wondering, peace lilies are toxic to kids and pets. Nice to know now.
First Snow
Rick is from upstate NY where they get lake effect snow and I'm from Maine, so growing up we were used to the snow. So we laugh when we wake up and there is a dusting causing school delays.
We told the girls last night that there might be snow this morning. When they finally remembered and looked out the window, listening to them discover the little snow we had was rather comical.
Laur. e. ANNA!! Look outside! THERE'S SNOW!!!!!
And this is what all the excitement is about. And I am very serious when I say that some schools have already CLOSED today!!
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
I Know What I'm Getting for Christmas...
I have quite a few to share this week, along with some video from the kids (asking some fun questions about Christmas).
Yesterday we were laying on the floor on our stomachs and McKenna said to Zachary: You have some long legs, Zachary."
Me: Where did you get your long legs?
Z: From God and Jesus.
Me: That's right.
Z: Yep. (Lifting his left leg a little) This one's from God (and lifting his right leg) and this one's from Jesus.
Monday, December 3, 2007
Guess what I found....
In my bed. Between the sheets.
Who do you suppose put it there? Hmmmm...
Sunday, December 2, 2007
Last minute gift ideas....
I'm still shaking my head at this one. Yet someone, somewhere has purchased one or two. Someone will receive this as a gift this year - will it be you? Apparently boiling water is too hard. Or using the microwave isn't fast enough. I suppose since I have four children who will be over-anxious to eat (as always) I should probably buy two of them and just line my counter-tops with them. To be as efficient as possible, of course.