Sunday, March 8, 2015

Our Last Sunbeam

In January 2014 Holly began attending Primary at church. That means she "graduated" from the toddler nursery and into the "big kid" class. The littlest big kid class is called Sunbeams.  Those three-year-olds are always the most wiggly children in the room, but they bring a lot of cheerful light--just like real sunbeams.
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Holly took a little bit of time to warm up and stay with her teachers (some weeks more than others), but she really did love being in her large class with many of her friends and was always happy to wave to her teachers, Sister Slaugh and Sister Peters, when she saw them elsewhere in the church. 

(I have to make a note on this hair of Holly's. It's like feathers, I tell ya; thin and wispy. On this day, I think she had a pony tail that was falling out by the time the photos were taken.)
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And here are just a few snapshots of Holly from January 2014:
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Learning time on the iPad, for sure.
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A cutie-pie shot of Holly waiting for everyone else to finish at a museum:
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Finally, an action shot of Holly riding her scooter to preschool at her friend Max's house. During the 2012-2014 school year Holly and I participated in a co-op preschool with 5 other moms. We took turns teaching preschool at our own homes two mornings a week.
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This photo prompted my mom to ask, "Think she has enough patterns on?" It is a pretty colorful and cheerful ensemble. That's how I would also describe Holly's personality. She adds a lot of color and cheer to our family. 

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Christmas 2013

We feel lucky and blessed to be able to have lots of presents on Christmas morning. We know it's not the real reason for the season, but enjoy the joy of giving and then seeing people light up in delight as they open their gifts.

Here's a photo of all the "loot" before the kiddos descended.
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The presents from Santa: Gunnar got a putting green, Maggie got a karaoke machine (which I found at a garage sale), Adah got some PVC pipes for making into backyard hurdles, Holly got a La La Loopsy doll.

And I surpised Damon with a guitar! The year before I gave him Guitar for Dummies to try out on a kid-sized guitar that we had. That quickly proved to be a lousy instrument for any real musical progress, so in 2013 I got him a "real" guitar.
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Happy gift receivers:ImageImage
Here's Maggie in her cupcake hat. This girl loves all things cupcake.
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Nana and Gumpin (Jillaire's parents) gave all the kids their own colorful headphones. They are just perfect when we're riding in the car or we have multiple screens going in the same room. Wait...uh...did I just admit to that in a public forum? Eh...who are we kidding? Sometimes Gunnar doesn't want to watch whatever "girlie" movie his sisters have chosen (poor guy is often outvoted), and he gets his own computer or iPad time. (But, I swear, that's the only time. wink wink.)
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Maggie does a little drawing in the aftermath of gift opening:
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Adah stretched out in her own room with her new sketch book, pencils, and horse drawing how-to book.
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Christmas night we had our traditional tamales, beans, and rice--just the six of us,
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...and six little reindeer friends. (Maggie decorated these rootbeer bottles with her fun violin teacher at the end of a theory lesson earlier in December. She guarded them until Christmas day when she gave one to each member of the family.)
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December 2013 Moments Not to Be Forgotten

I got my first smartphone in November 2013. While I sometimes felt like the last person to finally get one, I really knew that I wasn't. I'm typing this in February 2015 and Damon is still a hold-out.

Anyway, once you always have a camera on hand, the photos multiply. It's so easy to quickly snap a photo of those cute and funny things your kids are doing. It's so easy to make a record of so much. It's a treasure and a great resource for remembering the past--a gift to a tardy blogger like myself, but it can also be a little overwhelming. How does one create a post, a story, for each one of these adorable, silly, creative, fun moments? Answer: One doesn't. One just lumps them all together in a post that can capture a dozen individual (or small group) moments.

Holly as Hello Kitty, as rendered by big sister Maggie:
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We finally said goodbye to our trusty red wagon, a hand-me-down gift from our White Salmon neighbors the Andersons. It was warped and troubled after too many times being out in the rain and too many trips loaded full of kids, blankets, rocks, dirt, patio pavers, or rummage sale donations,
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Three cute kids all dressed up for church. (Not sure where that 4th cute kid was.)

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 You've heard of a jack-in-the-box? How about sisters-in-a-box?
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If I remember correctly, she fell asleep in the car and then transferred to the Jo-Ann's shopping cart.
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I made these baby Jesus crafts with Holly's preschool friends:
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And these paper plate Santa masks:
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Silly Holly, all wrapped up in our Christmas blanket:
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In early December, we visited the annual Christmas Creche exhibit. It's a display of hundreds of Nativity scenes donated to the event by people in the greater Silicon Valley area. It is hosted by the Menlo Park Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in partnership with some of the neighboring stakes, including ours here in Sunnyvale. We were not permitted to photograph the many wooden, ceramic, glass, metal, and other scenes. It is an impressive collection set up in several beautifully decorated rooms throughout a church building. Small musical performances are on-going in one room and there are concerts by local choirs and musical groups in the chapel each evening.

We were allowed to photograph in the children's room, where a marvelous tent was set up with dress-up clothes, I believe with the intent to recreate characters from the Nativity, or at least from Bible times. My children loved it, especially Adah. She didn't want to leave, and when we returned in 2014, she made a beeline for the dress-ups.
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Sunday, February 15, 2015

My Favorite Christmas Tradition

Note: This post is about the Christmas tree two Christmases ago. We're talkin' 2013, folks. Yes, I'm that far behind on this blog.

I love buying and decorating the family Christmas tree. I have fond memories of scouring Christmas tree lots with my brothers looking for just the right tree--one that had well-spaced branches for hanging ornaments and plenty of room for "loot" underneath. As an adult, it's remained a favorite. During our years in White Salmon, we visited a charming U-cut Christmas tree farm that was such a perfect Norman Rockwell experience.

Now, we live in Silicon Valley. Capitol of the tech industry. 300 days of sunshine. No Christmas tree farms---at least none with campfires, log cabins, and $20 trees. We have driven by some farms south of San Jose and have heard you can get a permit to trudge into the mountains to cut down your own, but we haven't quite been able to figure that out and make that commitment yet. Nope. We went to OSH:
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This is the hardware store just about a mile away, in a shopping center with a grocery store, two Indian restaurants, and a Starbucks. While not quite as quaint, the family council over the right tree is still just as important and yields the same result: the biggest Christmas decoration in the house--and one in which the whole family is invested. I love it.

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I don't just love picking the tree. I love decorating it. That's because every ornament on our tree comes with a story. After several years of beating back the kids and trying to divvy out the ornaments into their person-specific piles while sequestering the kids in another room, we finally figured out a way to organize the ornaments pre-hanging. 

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Everyone gathers round me on the floor near the tree. I carefully unpack each ornament and say whose it is and where we got it. Then that person gets to put the ornament in their own small area, be it a couch cushion or the lid to a box. Some of the ornaments are family ornaments and once all the others are distributed, we take turns choosing one ornament at a time to go in our pile. When all the ornaments are assigned, then we go for it: everyone just starts hanging them up.

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Here Maggie hangs up a fairy ornament that was given to her at birth by, Vaishali, one of Damon's classmates at Cranfield University in England. Our ostrich Beanie Baby is to remind us of our time in Chandler, AZ, which celebrates its history as a center of ostrich ranching by holding an Ostrich Festival every year (or at least it did when we lived there). The stocking on the right is one of 6 (or more?) that hung on my family's tree every year growing up. They all had different designs, and when my brothers and I moved out of the house, my mom gave one to each of us.
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It's been 2 months since we decorated our last Christmas tree and 14 months since these photos were taken, but I still feel all warm and fuzzy inside just thinking about the happy feelings I have when choosing and decorating the tree with my family and all the fond memories of people, vacations, and Christmases past that are represented by our ornaments. The Christmas tree really is my favorite Christmas tradition.
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Sunday, November 23, 2014

Just Makin' It


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In early December 2013 there was a Book Fair at the kids' elementary school. There was also a craft fair attached to the event, and I had the crazy idea to sell my wares at it. I wasn't quite sure what my wares were....but I got sewing and crafting and had an eclectic grouping of handmade goods to sell come time.

Because I had a mix of items, I wasn't sure what to call my new little "business." I had the thought that if things sold well, I would consider doing more craft fairs throughout the year and might even open an etsy shop. I wanted to start off with a clever name and finally came up with "Just Makin' It." The tag line: "Crafts Made During Those Rare Quiet Mom Moments." It was supposed to be a sort of play on words for the handmade nature of the goods and the feeling that many a harried mother has of "just makin' it" through the day. It also gave me the freedom to have a variety of crafty things to sell. I don't know if people got it--or even paid much attention to it at the fair--but I was pleased with it.

I worked hard during spare moments for several weeks, cutting, sewing, stuffing, gluing, and more. I was so anxious on the day of that I had trouble sleeping and got up early to attach my price tags. Damon found me in my bathrobe at the kitchen table with a hole punch and some string.
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My products included hair clips, kids' aprons, stuffed animals, headband hangers, and a significant stock of leftovers from Damon's mother's dancewear business that she gave me to sell.

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The stuffed animals, which my kids had dubbed "Fleecy Friends," were definitely the best sellers. I had bluebirds, elephants, penguins, whales, and frogs. I'm not sure which one was my favorite. I designed all of them (with some template-searching help on Google) and am proud of how they turned out.

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The hair clips had pretty stiff competition and I only sold a couple of those, and the headband hangers were a complete bust. I'm not sure people understood and caught the vision of their purpose, even though I had a display. (Personally, I think they're brilliant and ours has totally saved us from a mess of headbands in a drawer or on the floor in our bathroom.)
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I sold a few aprons, a couple of the Watercolour skirts, and many of the Watercolour scarves/ties. What I didn't sell became a great stash for birthday gifts throughout the last year as my kiddos got invited to parties, so none of my work was for naught.

It was a fun experience and I'm glad I did it. My enthusiasm and motivation did wane after the event. Truthfully, it was difficult to find other venues for selling; I did dedicate some time after the holidays to searching for other craft fairs. I wasn't really ready to launch an etsy shop. From here, if I press on with any of this, it will probably be in the Fleecy Friends department. They were fun to design and popular with the customers (and the birthday gift recipients). Hmmm...just writing this post is giving me a little itch to get out the fleece....

SLO Children's Museum

On November 30, 2013, two days after Thanksgiving, we visited the Children's Museum in San Luis Obispo with Uncle Jotham, Aunt Dana, cousins Cassie, Braden, and Kara, and Grandma and Grandpa. We were quite a crew, and gratefully the small museum wasn't too crowded. We had great fun exploring the many hands-on exhibits.

We tried to build earthquake-proof structures . . .
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and played with magnets . . .
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and "spinny discs."
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Grandpa was served lunch at the Cosmic Cafe by chefs Gunnar and Holly.

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There were firefighters...
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Cassie, Gunnar, Braden, and Holly
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...and crime fighters.
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In all, it was lots of fun for all the kids--big and small.
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