a quiet birthday at home

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She didn't have a lot of requests.  "Can I make my own dinner? Whatever I want?"  That is always a yes answer.  They set to work making lasagnas, which were not exactly perfect because their supervisor has yet to master the perfect lasagna.  (soooo many steps, sigh)  They were happy enough with the process so it's all good. 

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We got the glue gun out for our December daily (-ish) project – candy cane hearts. 

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Carolers came to the door!  That was pretty cool.  I love this place.  

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Her Daddy brought home flowers. 

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Big brother lit her birthday sundae.  

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and her little sister made her the most wonderful I Spy book unbeknownst to me. It really and truly does not get much better than this.  

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December Daily – Guadalupe

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"Hear and let it penetrate into your heart, my dear little son:
let nothing discourage you, nothing depress you.
Let nothing alter your heart or your countenance.
Also, do not fear any illness or vexation, anxiety or pain.
Am I not here who am your mother?
Are you not under my shadow and protection?
Am I not your fountain of life?
Are you not in the folds of my mantle, in the crossing of my arms?
Is there anything else that you need?"

– Our Lady of Guadalupe to Juan Diego

Deer at Daybreak

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"Moooooom!  There's deer out back!" 

"Where??"

"Coming up over the hill!"

"Don't tap the glass.  Don't let the dogs out!"  

"I can't see.  MOM! Tell her I can't see!" 

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Can you see?  We have to peek out the window and through the railing or they will hear us and make a run for it.  So many this visit!  I think we counted eight before they split up and wandered off.  And – baby trailing behind! Better than tv any morning.  

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A tailor-made feasting plan

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Hymn for St. Nicholas

From every land and every age
We sing of those who bravely wage
The saintly fight with Spirit's sword
In mighty battle for the Lord.

Saint Nicholas the Shepherd true
Who brought his flock to faith anew,
Now by his prayers and faith secure
Draws us, for Jesus to endure.

Now we rejoice on this his day
For in his life, in Christ's sure way,
He saved thy children from their plight,
Defeated sin, put fear to flight.

And we, like sailors lost at sea,
Recall our saint, for surely he
Our patron, points us to the Lord
by whom all sinners are restored.

Now in this church we raise our cry
To God the King of Saints on high.
And pray that, with our Patron, we
May one day God in glory see.

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It was a beautiful feast day this year.  We found another pair of authentic Dutch wooden shoes at the thrift store for $4 which made my heart sing, I tell you.  Then our college daughter assembled all the shoe stuffers for us. Even though we have been busy, between us we were able to make a nice morning.  

I commented to a young mom friend though that it's important to look at peaceful, artsy feast day celebrations with a balanced perspective.  Do not compare your spring to another's autum.  I don't have babies at home and have not for many years.  My baby just turned EIGHT years old.  Sigh.  

There are other reasons besides more available time and being well-rested that account for my ability to pull off creative feast days these days.  We are in good health right now.  We have spent 30 married years collecting statues and decorations – $4 or less at a time. It took a loooooong time.  For many years we were lucky to afford dollar store candy canes in their little tennies.  And that was wonderful in its own way.  I am not being facetious.  Oh, to have those tiny children back for an hour or two.  

Our priest has always encouraged us to cultivate fulfilling projects of our own.  He advised that the day would come when the children would be grown and we needed to have other satisfying ways to fill our hours.  That day has not completely come yet but we are definitely in transition.  There are no more hours in the rocker or pacing the floor with colicky infants.  There are no more night wakings nor need for constant vigilance with the outlets or the breakables or the household cleaners.  However, the trials bigger kids face are also not as easily fixed up.  I can't carry around a big twelve year old boy on my hip.  I can fill a shoe with the same favorite treats he has enjoyed for many December sixth's and thereby remind him that while the bigger world around him is ever changing and ever presenting him with new challenges, some things are foundational, fixed, unchanging.  You can count on them.  

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It occurred to me that this is a way to embrace those big kids. To borrow a contemporary term – this is my love language.  Decorating and celebrating come easily to me.  I am not particularly skilled in areas other people find come easily to them.  I hope they are embracing their skill set and using it to show love in their own ways.  

That, after all, is the real point.  

The purpose of the task is to strengthen the relationship.  If decorating stresses you then it is not strengthening your relationships. It is straining them.  Go to Starbucks and have a peppermint latte instead.  Go to the library and pick up a Christmas book to share. Pack up that fussy baby and drive around looking at lights til she is asleep again.  

Just be you and be that well.

anticipation

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"The next day, the second day of December, we all, even John, even Daddy when he got home from the office, made Christmas cookies."

The Twenty-four Days Before Christmas

My favorite line comes a few pages later, however.  "After school Mother discovered we'd eaten up all the first batch of Christmas cookies, so we made more."  

Because that happens too, we will be having several such days between now and Christmas.  #readingthroughadvent

Best-tasting cookie icing here

 

Art Project – snow trees

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Favorite project this week was the winter trees against the snow and sky.  The children cut a undulating edge off the blue paper and glued it over the white.  Then they used sharpies just below the snow line and "grew" up a tree trunk and branched off.  To make fatter trunks they began again near the base and ran the line alongside the first. Gray pastels beginning at the bottom of the tree and fading down and left gave the illusion of shadow.  One child had a wonky shadow which gave us the chance to discuss direction of light probably more effectively than if they had all been 'perfect.'  White pastel made the moon and falling snow.  

It was an easy art lesson that gave a lot of bang for the buck.  The finished work was really nice!    #makeart

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The Doorway to Christmas

 

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"For Mrs. Sharp's family, the holiday excitement begins as soon as the Thanksgiving turkey starts simmering on the stove for soup. Then we put away the everyday china to make room for the Christmas crockery and bring out the Advent Box.

"Advent Box, Mrs. Sharp? Is this another old-fashioned Victorian tradition?"

No, dear readers. Advent is one of the oldest celebrations of the Christmas season, dating back at least 14 centuries. The Advent season–the four weeks preceding Christmas–is traditionally set aside for spiritual preparation before the Nativity of Christ. Mrs. Sharp likes to think that Advent is the doorway through which we enter into a joyful Christmas.

And the Advent Box is just a cardboard box, clearly labeled "Advent" (to distinguish it from the hundreds of "Xmas boxes" in the attic). It contains all the books, supplies and materials Mrs. Sharp needs early in December in order to celebrate Advent.

Do you observe the season of Advent in your home? Victorian families did, for the many colorful customs that surround its observance–the Advent calendar, wreath and candles, as well as mini-festivals such as St. Nicholas Day (Dec. 6) and St. Lucia's Day (Dec. 13)–all added to the children's understanding and appreciation of Christmas."

Mrs. Sharp's Traditions

Although the lower level remodel is eating up a good deal of our time right now we are enjoying our Austin family style advent doing some bit of preparation each day along with our special advent prayers. This weekend's particular task is to be certain we are prepared for St. Nicholas' feast day Tuesday.  Now is the time to ensure there are chocolate coins and candy canes for the shoes as well as the makings for a simple craft gathered up. 

with hands and heart

 

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It should be understood that everyone in the family has a present for everybody else; these presents should be precious, though not in terms of money, as they should not be bought, but home-made. This is quite a task in a large family, but fingers become skilled in handicrafts of many kinds block prints, wood carvings, leather work, needle work, lettering with beautiful illuminations, and clay work. All these, and one's imagination, are called upon to create many beautiful, useful things, which could not be bought for money because they are made not only with the hands but also with the heart.

– Around the Year with the Trapp Family

 

Do we do this perfectly?  Not even close.  I am sharing my favorite advent and Christmas reads though because they give me a vision. 

Almost December Daybook

Outside:  The rich autumn reds and oranges we were blessed to enjoy so long have been blanketed with beautiful snow cover all week. We need the moisture and I just plain love the snow.  Then again I loved the leaves.  It's a beautiful world, period.

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 Around the house: We moved all the furniture and dozens of books from the family room/school room. (hundreds? thousands? millions?  probably not, it just felt that way.)  When we pulled up the carpet we noticed some concrete irregularities and panicked a little.  Ok I panicked a lot.  We have had enough disaster in our residential history to warrant panic.  However the contracter who came out assured us all was well and to carry on.  That we did.  We are now nearly halfway to a new floor.  It is transforming an 80's basement to a clean open farmhouse space.  That might be more in my big picture vision than in actuality at this moment but the promise is there.  The boys are learning so much working on this project. They have painted and cut out vents and trimmed edging.  Real life work.

Note to self: get the leaves and pumpkins rounded up today.  

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Wearing: Snow gear per above.  I need to buy some more waterproof gloves soon.  The first snow always surprises us.  In other wardrobe news we have ordered the girls' dresses for the wedding. I am probably late on the game but working on mine.  An unrelated note – Elizabeth Broadbent wrote this essay about dressing your kids in secondhand clothes which resonated with me.   I heart thrift shops.  

In the kitchen: lots of veggies.  Someone here, who isn't me, had a 'midcentury' physical and is motivated to jump on the veggie train with me. This one was good.  Roasted brussels sprouts and butternut squash and onion.  Toss in pomegranate seeds or craisins afterwards.  

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Listening to:  Christmas music on the piano.  All day.  Every day.  Carols.  It's a wonderful thing though to have a houseful of piano students again.  Their instructor gave them a new Christmas music fun book and Tess especially has been all over it. 

On an unrelated random note,  driving home home last night I was listening to Simon and Garfunkel's America.  In the dark, as the music was playing, I was 16 again, right back in an apartment in Italy listening to that album playing on a turntable and soooo terribly homesick.  Missing a boy with all my heart.  (dear reader, I married him)  So funny how music can transport you not just to a place but to the very emotions that enveloped you at that moment.   Another random note – the song was written in '68.  So basically it's almost as old as I am, which doesn't feel as old as it sounds when I say it.  Not at all. 

Creating: We are busy making Christmas gifts.  Trying to aim low and finish a few.  The guys packed up the sewing machine and many of the craft supplies so we are working with a limited cache of tools at the moment.  Abbie was given a bracelet making kit for her birthday.  Her big sister helped the girls make a ton of them over the weekend.  

Nov 2016 bracelets web (1 of 1)

Abbie's bells and whistles party didn't materialize.  Because, life.  We decided to make a gingerbread house together instead.  

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Nov 2016 gingerbread web (1 of 1)

Reading:  My time has not been my own lately.  Every time it seemed as though moments were going to open up to grab my book they have been taken up with other work.  However we finished a huge chunk of our fall reading list and are happily diving into advent and Christmas books. (see right sidebar)  Today we will at least begin 24 Days Before Christmas.  This was our first introduction to Madeleine L'Engle and the Austin family.  In this slim volume we follow the family's gentle approach to holiday preparation.  Each day Mrs. Austin puts up a little bit of cheer, usually homemade.  Some foil ornaments.  A door wreath.  A batch of cookies.  Without even realizing it you fall into step with her as the days draw nearer.  I am so looking forward to sharing it with the youngest of our family and hope this will help to set the pace for our own advent.  

Coincidentally, a friend shared this short essay on L'Engle this week.  She captures the purpose and role that art plays so well, 

"To try to talk about art and about Christianity is for me one and the same thing, and it means attempting to share the meaning of my life, what gives it, for me, its tragedy and its glory."