The Video of Christmas Past

I’m still working on this year’s Christmas song and video and am hoping to get it recorded and posted by next week. Here’s last year’s video for now…

Advent Calendars

My mother-in-law made these advent calendars for our children a few years ago. Every year it’s slightly daunting to find 72 things to fit into the little pockets. Looking for ideas for advent calendar fillers or stocking stuffers? Here are a few:

  • Wind-up toys
  • Small animals – stuffed, plastic, wooden, etc.
  • Finger puppets
  • Bendy figures
  • Parachute figures
  • Clay
  • Small Games – cards, knitting doll, peg game, etc.
  • $$$
  • Buttons/Pins
  • Googly eyes
  • Select-A-Smile fake gag teeth
  • Paper balloons
  • iTunes or other gift cards
  • Paper gliders
  • Rubber stamps – one year I had personalized rubber stamps made with each of the kids’ names
  • Jaw Harp
  • Small Christmas crackers
  • Nail polish
  • Hair accessories
  • Ornaments to decorate – we found ours at Paper Source
  • “Book buddies” sticky notes
  • Santa’s coal bubble gum
  • Other little candies – Lindt truffles, little chocolate Santas, Pez, gum, or TicTacs
  • Matchbox car
  • Chapstick or lip balm
  • Tissue packets
  • Comb
  • Cap rocket
  • Toothbrush
  • Pens, pencils
  • Erasers
  • Temporary Tattoos
  • Seashells
  • Flash drive (even better in fun shapes and sizes)
  • Blank books
  • Flip books
  • Handwritten notes – “Let’s get our Christmas tree,” “Holiday lights drive tonight,” “Cocoa and Christmas stories by the fire,” “Movie night,” “Cookie baking,” “Christmas carol sing,” “I love you, because…”
  • Sometimes I make the kids do a little work too: “Do a kind deed today challenge,” “Write a card to your brother/sister”
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Poems for November and a few more leaf prints

November Night

by Adelaide Crapsey

Listen…
With faint dry sound,
Like steps of passing ghosts,
The leaves, frost-crisp’d, break from the trees
And fall.

Autumn Movement

by Carl Sandburg

I cried over beautiful things knowing no beautiful thing lasts.

The field of cornflower yellow is a scarf at the neck of the copper sunburned woman,
the mother of the year, the taker of seeds.

The northwest wind comes and the yellow is torn full of holes, new beautiful things
come in the first spit of snow on the northwest wind, and the old things go,
not one lasts.

Related post: Leaf prints

On the road again

My son and I are heading to Madison, Wisconsin today to visit friends we haven’t seen since last April when we met up in NYC to celebrate the boys’ 13th birthdays. We’re looking forward to catching up and taking lots of pictures!

Nicholas and Noah

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Social Media: #/$;”*?!

Today Twitter goes public with its initial public offering. Before you plunk down your hard-earned benjamins on shares, may I humbly suggest taking a long view at how social media is evolving?

Market research has recently revealed that Twitter has overtaken Facebook as the most popular social media platform among teens. Instagram is fast on its heels and is now as popular as Facebook with that same demographic.

No one has the time or attention span to read these days. We’ve already established that books are no longer for reading, but for decorating. (See yesterday’s mini rant). The trend is toward increasingly compressed information. Wordy posts are giving way to 140 character tweets, soon to be overtaken by cropped photos. Facebook, Twitter, Instagram are already circling the drain. Friends, save your money for the next big thing.

So what’s next on the horizon?

Emotic: the social medial website that allows you to update your status using emoticons only.

and

Punctu: tell the world exactly how you feel with an asterisk, apostrophe, or semicolon.

You heard it here first. You’re welcome. Or, just: }

Mini rant

Can somebody please explain to me this strange and terrible trend I’ve been noticing in catalogs for the past few years?

Does anybody actually shelve their books in this manner?

This is as grotesque as buying books “by the yard” or to fit a color scheme. I just don’t get it at all.

What to expect when you’re expecting…

Like many mothers-to-be, I diligently read The Book cover to cover when I was expecting my first baby. My husband and I binged on an entire academic year’s worth of classes on childbirth and childcare. Despite all this, there were still many things I was not prepared for when I had my first child.

The daughter I was expecting turned out to be a son. When he was handed to me, I gasped, not in wonder and instantaneous love, but in horror to be perfectly honest. After 20 hours of labor, his head was alarmingly cone shaped. Jaundice had already started kicking in, and he was an unnatural shade of yellowish orange. Nursing, which I thought would be a piece of cake, turned out to be a sweaty, complicated affair that would leave both of us cranky and exhausted. It was so painful, I kept checking my babe’s toothless mouth to make sure there weren’t rows of razor sharp shark teeth hiding out in there. No one told me that I would be a walking spittoon for regurgitated milk and that I would consequently smell like rotten cheese for the first six months of my baby’s life. And in all of the many birth and parenting classes I took beforehand, not a single person told me about the mustard yellow projectile poop that would squirt all the way up the baby’s back to his neck.

Another thing I didn’t expect was that in these many classes I would make life-long friendships with other new mothers. I met the women in the photo at a prenatal exercise class. Our friendship has lasted through many joys and sorrows. Together we’ve celebrated the births of our first, second, and third babies, we’ve attended countless birthday parties, commiserated over illnesses and the inevitable issues that arise once babies become schoolchildren, and have consoled each other as other “baby friends” moved on to other cities. Last night we celebrated these thirteen years of friendship as we said goodbye (for now) to Christine, who is also moving away to continue her work as a developmental pediatrician in another city. In retrospect, I’m so grateful for all those classes I took. I met women who would teach me so much more than I could learn from a book or in any class…not only about the project of raising children, but about friendship. Until our next dinner date – “May the road rise up to meet you, and may the wind be ever at your back…” Thanks, Christine!

Prince Rupert’s Drops

My husband recently became fascinated with Prince Rupert’s Drops, named after the German prince who first brought them to England to present to the King in the mid-1600s.

The drops form when molten glass is dropped into cold water. The resulting shape looks like a tadpole and has curious physical properties. The outer part of the bulb hardens more quickly than the inner part of the bulb. As the interior portion cools, an incredible amount of contraction and compression takes place. As a result, the bulb end of the shape is so strong that even the hardest hammer blows won’t cause the glass to shatter. If the slightest tip of the tail, however, is broken off, the entire structure explodes into powder.

“It’s a good analogy for a certain personality type,” my husband said as he concluded his explanation.

“What do you mean?” I asked.

“On the one hand, they’re extremely solid and stubborn, but at the same time really brittle and explosive.”

“What are you trying to say?” I asked suspiciously. “WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU TRYING TO SAY?!

Check out this video:

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I’m an overachiever

I hate to brag, but I’m going to give myself some props for some things that I do better than most people. I wrote about one of those rare talents yesterday, when I revealed how I can get telemarketers so mad by being nice to them that they hang up on me. And then there are certain driving maneuvers…the three point turn, for instance?…I pretty much kill it. Three points are for average people. Me? I do it in seventeen. I would imagine it’s pretty breathtaking to watch, though perhaps not quite as breathtaking as watching me dance. Jaws literally drop when I start busting a move. I’m guessing there aren’t many others in the world who can actually get people to weep when they dance like I can.

In case you’re feeling really jealous of me right now, let me make you feel better by telling you that there are some areas of my life where I struggle. Punctuality, for example, has never been my strong suit. Lately, circumstances have conspired against me, making the task of getting my daughter to school on time even more of a challenge than usual. We used to cross a rickety, one-lane wooden bridge on our way there. They’ve recently closed it and are rebuilding it. In a year’s time when they’ve finished the work, it won’t feel like you should be driving over it in a covered wagon. In the meantime, unfortunately, the detour we now have to take makes the drive to school five minutes longer. As we all know, five minutes in the morning is equivalent to at least half an hour during the rest of the day. (Have I mentioned that I’m also really amazing at math)?

This morning I was driving my daughter to school and it became clear that we were going to be late. When I announced this fact out loud, she heaved a sigh.

“Hey, it’s not that bad. This is the first time we’ve been late all week!” I said.

And then I realized it was Tuesday.

I’m on a roll.