counting down

 

Been feeling a a bit crunched for time this week.  So much so I have been tongue tied over here.  Looking at her sweet face I am reminding myself that it is more important to become like a little child this season than to be uber grown up and organized and caught up and any number of words I am not at this moment.  Only one thing is needful and if I rush I am going to miss it.  

 

Dec

Still, I really hope all the bathrooms are clean before company arrives.  

That is about how my Martha vs Mary debate goes these days. : ) 

become part of the silence

 

A line from a book I read recently described the tree branches in winter as like arthritic fingers.  I thought of that as I gazed out my window the other morning.  While I stood there a group of dove-gray pigeons came to roost on those frost covered limbs, puffing out their chests as they rested there.

 

Dec 2012 birds roosting web

"In order to see birds it is necessary to become part of the silence." – Robert Lynd


It is a wonderful thing to find the quiet even if it is in tiny little pockets of the day.


today

Today…..

…it was too cold and wet for big boys to run outside.  This was a shame all around. 

….we decided to try to get to homeschool bowling…and ended up being the only ones who went.  But it was ok because,

…B made me smile reciting "Jack Be Limbo, Jack Be Quick" in the car very sincerely

…hot cocoa was mixed with peppermint tea versus water.  This will happen again. : )

…bits of felt and thread skip from room to room

…we learned hands-on about the stages of candy making – soft ball to hard crack.  

…there was watercoloring, and some tears over smudges on watercolored projects and assurances that more watercoloring practice would make for an easier go of it

…Abbie unwrapped lots of candy kisses for cookies going to her big brothers.  

…and wanted to know what "hold your horses" meant

….we made this centerpiece.  


Dec 2012 centerpiece web-3
I tried to find the original post from Pinterest but it only linked back to this blog where I have yet to track it down.  It has been a most pleasant search however.  Gorgeous blog! 

Directions: Salt in oversized vase with a gingerbread house.  We used a little German ginger-angel instead. 

a real Santa story

 

It is the feast of St. Nicholas, for another hour anyway. A day when we pour over the St. Nicholas Center's craft and baking ideas, tell stories, and of course wake up to shoes filled with small treats from the good bishop.  You might remember when we did this last year?  (found an old St Nick study I wrote here if you are interested)

This year finds us in a new home, in a new country.  Our wooden shoes were noplace to be found as evening approached yesterday.  "Does anyone remember unpacking the wooden shoes?"  "Have we seen them in this house?"  We could honestly not recall. I had been prepared for this night, more than usual anyway.  My husband had left some days earlier for a work class and I had put on my best military wife game face, determined to carry on in his absence.  This week would be a breeze.  Only one feast day this week and hadn't I picked up the coins already anyway? Oranges?  Check. 

But those shoes.  Darn it. 

So we started digging through some storage boxes and the Christmas boxes we had begun to bring up from the cellar.  Shortly afterwards came a shriek from the upstairs.  MOUSE!  I cringed downstairs.  No traps, no cat, no husband to tag, no escaping this one.  What followed was a comedy of errors.  It's a long story.  I will just paste some of the FB conversation and chat with my husband…

ME: there is a MOUSE in my room, husband.
Hellooooo!!!!??????!!!!!!! Get on a plane RIGHT now!

(that didn't work btw)

ME: I am hiding in the office on FB in deep deep denial that my husband is on another continent and there is a mouse in my bedroom. I have done what any reasonable woman would do – paid the 13yo to chase it out.

Moira:We're all gonna DIE!!!!!

Alannah: I'm with Moira on this one.

ME:  shuush. Let me think. of something….

Husband: A tennis racket? Stick peanut butter on Aidan's finger and get him with the pool net?

Alannah: Or we could skip all this drama and get a cat….  just an idea.

Me: seriously considered how much coaxing the stray I saw out on the road might need.

 (this after I locked the dogs in the room with it but they sat at the door and cried. Much like I did….)

ME: Much screaming commencing. Apparently there are two. Kangaroo Jumping Mice I am told. Someone is getting a box. Because apparently you can catch this variety at 1030pm with bare hands. I should SO have left the decorations for when the man got home…… (it appears as though we brought them in the house when we brought in the Christmas boxes)

(update here – no Kangaroo Mice in England, however the woodland mice DO jump and have the ability to shed their tails when the need arises.  Made a mental note not to have that need arise)

ME to husband: I am having flashbacks to getting the decorations out of the outdoor shed in San Antonio and finding the boxes all covered with snake skins. And the exterminator telling me that it was likely a rat snake, and I should be HAPPY to have it, and that it would only bite me "if startled."

(later)

Me: Abbie had a light saber, standing guard by her door. I said what are you doing? She said, I'm a 'inja.'

Colin (son #1 from CO): fwiw, dec. 5 is the day of the ninja. little known fact…

We then gave up. Abandoned my room altogether, knowing logically how unlikely it was they were staying in there, but still. I put the ninja, the mouse hunter and the rest of them to bed and camped on the couch rather fitfully while the Yorkie snoozed under the covers oblivious to the watch he was to be keeping.  Woke up in the night and my sleeping bag was dangling on the ground, where it occurred to me, a mouse could use it like an escalator.

  Bleck!!  

So needless to say St. Nicholas was a little traumatized by the whole ordeal and didn't make his Dec. 6th appointment.  I suggested we cut him a break and reboot his visit for tomorrow.  We cancelled regular school work and just regrouped.  We gave little people nice warm bubble baths. We gathered all the ingredients for the super sweet St. Nicholas cookies we'd pinned and spent a good long time supervising little hands assemble them.  
 
Dec 2012 st nick cookies web 

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Does my heart good to hear that Montessori sigh.  I don't know if you have stopped to do that but it never fails, when a child is really swept up in an absorbing project, they begin to settle in and breathe really slowly and deeply as they concentrate with all their might. Love that. 

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After their treats we began some art projects that aren't finished.  That's ok too. My goal is to just try to do something neat each day or so of Advent like the Austin Family. We will work on them tomorrow with hopes that on this night not a creature will be stirring.  Not even a mouse.  Most especially not a mouse.  Please, God. 

 

PS: I want to mention that I have been celebrating St. Nicholas with my children for a good couple decades.  I can count on one hand the years I have actually made a treat like this to go with. You will notice one big person was manning the camera and three teens were available – one for every under ten-er.  This was not reasonable to attempt when they were younger.  Moral of that story?  If all yours are wee bitty yet, you need not try this at home. I told a young mom friend earlier that if she had fed, clothed, and loved on her kids and her husband today, she rocked.  I meant it. This type of project is for other years. Years of emptier arms, which is not nearly so much fun. 

 

 

 

 

 

sweet shop

 

When I was little the was a restaurant in the mall decorated like a turn of the century sweet shop. It was right around the corner from the skating rink – when malls still had indoor rinks and you could sit on the second level watching the skaters spin around below, dreaming Dorothy Hamill dreams.  It had those little dot candies on long rolls of white paper. There was an elaborately carved candy counter where you could order ice cream sodas with impossibly high mounds of whipped cream, which would be served by a man in a red and white striped shirt with a bow tie and suspenders.

And there were swirly lollipops.  Giant, rainbow-colored pops as big as your face. 

When I went to the farm store with friends some weeks ago I knew I was coming back to the sweet shop.  It's not nearly as big as the shop in my dreams but it has swirly pops and my girls, yes my big girls, were every bit as excited about them as I was. It's not always easy getting Moira to go shopping but even she felt she hit the jackpot on this one. 

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momentos

Dec 2012 perfume web

It is said that "childhood smells like perfume and brownies."  That came to mind when I pulled up this picture this evening.  My Gram had a very distinct, if modest and understated, style.  She favored coordinating polyester outfits purchased by mail order, which somehow looked quite put together on her. She had her hair set and dried, in more or less the same style, every week from the day I was born until she died, giving it a mist of Final Net each day in between for good measure and covering the whole with a see-through plastic head scarf in wind or rain.  I don't recall her ever wearing mascara but she always wore lipstick… and a spritz of Estee. 

To this day I can walk past a perfume counter and she is right there. Right. There. 

One of my very favorite memories is of an atomizer like this one.  I remember the pressure of the fabric bulb and the weight of the cut glass. when I saw this one on a shelf  of bric-a-brac it was destined for my vanity. (Which, at this moment, is my windowsill.) I smile when I see it and offer a little prayer for the repose of her soul.