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Yesterday was kind of a perfect day, except for the fact that Jon is in the middle of tax season and like every day in the past 8 weeks (yes, EVERY day), he had to work 8-10 hours. So we didn’t see much of him. So that was a bummer, but we still had a lovely Easter. Here are some pics from Easter morning, our church Easter egg hunt and Easter dinner at Jon’s parents’ house. We didn’t get the big kids back from their Dad’s house til late afternoon, so the bunny came to their Dad’s house this year, but we all had a great time together later in the day. I think this was the best Easter Day weather I’ve ever seen. Awesome.

Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.

Dec 062009
 

I have no idea who My mother sent me this link, but it’s 2 year old C, elfed! You may find it as entertaining as I did…or maybe not, since you aren’t her mama ;-)

elf

 

C and NC turned two a few months ago, so this Christmas is a complete revelation to them. Actually, they didn’t really notice Christmas last year. But this time? They are DIGGING Christmas. Each time a new decoration comes out, they are so excited that I fear their little noggins might explode from the sheer joy of it all.

Here they are a day or two ago, checking out a Santa snow globe for the first time. I have been collecting Christmas snow globes for years, and all of the kids love them, but for toddlers, a musical snow globe is as much fun as DisneyWorld… (forgive the lighting in the video, I shot it on my BlackBerry, which isn’t exactly the highest quality camera)

 

On Friday night, C and NC went to see “Finding Nemo on Ice” together.

Fw:

And this morning they curled up together in a quiet corner of the church nursery to tell secrets to each other.

C and NC, telling secrets in the church nursery 11/09

The girls are both going to play little lambs in the Christmas Eve pageant at our church. (It’s possible that real, actual angels may descend from on high to attend the pageant, just because they want to get a peek at the cuteness first-hand.) E has been tapped to play Joseph, cousin M is a wise man, I think, and I am going to try to convince 14 year old J to put on some sort of Nativity-scene-appropriate costume so she can herd the two little sheep around up on the altar/stage during the performance.

 

On Friday night, while The Baby Toddler Cousins went to see “Finding Nemo on Ice” (because every story is better told on ice, right?) with Uncle Ray and Aunt Betsy, I took J, E and their cousins M (age 7) and E (age 11) to the Fellini Kroger with me to do some catch-up grocery shopping.

While at the store, and against my better judgment, I allowed myself to be wheedled by all 4 children into buying a “Make Your Own Gingerbread House” kit for $6.99. The box promised that it was so simple that even a very young child could complete the project without assistance. It was the “without assistance” part that sealed the deal, because in addition to hating baking and crafts of all kinds (although this kit did not require any actual baking; the pieces of the house supposedly came ready to assemble), my idea of torture would be working on a craft project involving jujubees that I would not be allowed to consume. The combination of crafting and delayed gratification would be a disaster waiting to happen for me.

But I digress.

Again, against my better judgment, I shelled out the $$ for the gingerbread house kit, and the five of us headed the 3 blocks back to our house, where the kids excitedly showed the colorful box containing their kit to Jon, who looked up from the book he was reading long enough to bemusedly mutter, “Bad, bad idea,” before going right back to reading. He’s low key that way (and as it turns out, usually right).

Oh no, I assured him, with the kids nodding their heads in enthusiastic assent. This is a VERY easy gingerbread house kit! It says so, right on the box!

I halfheartedly offered to help the children with their project, and was not so secretly glad when they said they could do it all by themselves, and that they wanted to. So I helped them find a few supplies they needed (actually, we had to interrupt Jon to find some of the supplies, as I was unsure whether we had something the instructions referred to as an “electric beater.”) Once the kids were set to go, I went and took a hot bath for nearly 40 minutes whilst reading the latest Star Magazine. As I caught up on the latest hijinks from those wacky Kardashian sisters, I assumed that the kids were busily at work on their SUPEREASY gingerbread masterpiece. I imagined how cute the finished product would look on our mantel during the holiday season just ahead.

However, I don’t think I will be displaying their handiwork on the mantel…or anywhere else for that matter. But I thought I would let y’all take a gander at what the kids produced with this “so easy that a drunk chimpanzee could build it” gingerbread house kit.

Gingerbread House In Need of FEMA assistance

Yes, this was the result, and the children had already decamped to the upstairs, leaving their deconstructed “gingerbread house ” – and all of the mess they had made – behind on the dining room table. They assumed, somewhat bizarrely, that I would clean it all up for them. They were wrong.

But it goes without saying that I certainly DID go ahead and eat all of the jujubees. After all, I didn’t want them to go to waste.

Dec 272008
 

MY BEAUTIFUL GIRLS. LITTLE SISTER ADORES BIG SISTER, AND BIG SISTER IS SUPER SWEET WHEN C FOLLOWS HER AROUND EVERYWHERE, SAYING “SISSY! SISSY!” OVER AND OVER.

 

H MAKES PROGRESS ON CREATING HIS DREADS 

 

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