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Christmas Breeeeeaaaaaak, Baby

Yeah, you heard me.

Today is Pajama Read-In Day at school, which means the kids come in pjs and bring books and basically read all day. Some might call that a prison sentence, but my kids call that Christmas Come Early.

We’ve got PJ Day today, then we’re Christmas caroling in the neighborhood in a years-long tradition with friends, then we’re going to see Nutcracker on Saturday, then Santa on Sunday, then . . .

You get the picture.

We’re diving in deep and about to have a BLAST.

Bring it!

It's The Most Wonderful Day of the Year

Yes, it’s that time again. We’ve been building up to it all year long, and to say that I’ve been looking forward to it for the past 360-odd days would be an understatement. All year long, I’ve been dreaming of this moment, this wonderful day when I wake up and say, “Today is the day!” and leap out of bed with excitement.

No, it’s not Christmas.

It’s the day the cleaning lady comes.

ONE DAY a year, we hire a cleaning lady to go over our house top to bottom. She comes early in the morning, and doesn’t leave until dinner time. She cleans the baseboards. She washes the windows. She cleans all the ceiling fans. Well.

Counting Down

Yes, it’s the last week before Christmas break, and we are counting down like it’s New Year’s eve.

Last Monday to have to get up for school in 2013? Check.

Last time for Cora to take ballet in 2013? Check.

Last Monday night to pack lunches for school in 2013? Check.

Can you say, “Ready for Christmas break?”

Check.

Just Look Surprised (And Happy)

The girls are old enough now to be very directly involved in choosing and/or making the gifts they give, and for better or worse this year, they’re in it up to their necks.

Cora has decided to make Sock Buddies for her teacher and a couple select friends: you take a long cotton sock, fill it with rice and dried lavender buds, then sew the end shut. Now you’ve got a Sock Buddy to put in the freezer to cool off an owie, or in the microwave to act as a heating pad. Cora loves measuring and filling, but even more so she adores threading a needle and laboriously sewing that sock shut tight, one stitch at a time.

Being A Truth-Teller In A Fairy-Tale World

Last week I was at a mom’s group with several friends, and as we sat around chatting and catching up one mom started telling a cute story about her six-year-old and a recent lunch table experience.

It seems that this little girl – we’ll call her Susie – had a friend who, at six years old, insisted that Santa is not real. Susie became quite concerned, and several other kids at the table started to panic. As the children argued and began yelling at the poor “Santa basher”, the teacher came over to see what was going on. By this time, at least one child was near tears at the thought that Santa was not real, so the teacher began to calm the child, assuring him that Santa is, indeed, real. Unconvinced, the student continued to cry.

“So what happened?” one mom asked interestedly.

Frozen

Well, thanks to a huge ice storm that hit north Texas Thursday night, we spent three glorious days not getting in our car, not working, not packing school lunches, and in general having a fantastic time.

School was out Friday and Monday, thanks to the solid sheet of ice coating all the roads. And before anyone starts sneering about the pathetic southerners who can’t drive in snow, this is ice, ok? And I drove in snow for twelve years in New York, but you can’t drive on a solid sheet of ice with no snow plows or salt trucks around. Ok?

Santa Has Left the Building

I’ve always been ambivalent about the whole Santa thing: I enjoy the magic and childlike wonder, but feel incredibly uncomfortable actively encouraging my children to believe a lie. So I’ve lived in this uncomfortable zone at Christmas time, deflecting questions and trying to avoid all-out lying to my kids. And yes, we go see Santa for photos, and hang stockings, and all that – but we don’t do Elf on a Shelf or go crazy with the Santa idea.

This year just after school started, the mom of one of Cora’s friends pulled me aside and told me that Cora had told her daughter Laura that Santa Claus wasn’t real. In a very sweet and non-threatening way, the mom asked me to please ask Cora to respect other family’s traditions and not ruin the illusion of Santa Claus. Mortified, I assured the mom that Cora and I had never even had “the” Santa talk, and as far as I knew Cora still believed, and perhaps it was a misunderstanding?

Talkin' 'Bout the Man With the Bag

I haven’t written for a of days – no one’s sick, we’re just working through some hard stuff here.

Cora’s figured out the lowdown on the Man in Red, and we’re having some tough conversations, and frankly it’s been too much to process “out loud” here.

I’ll get it all straight in my head and written out for tomorrow – promise.

The Secret Spot

Maddie and Cora each have their own bedrooms, and their own closets. Both closets are full, which sounds crazy since each closet is a double-door, wall-length closet with PLENTY of space for a small child’s clothes and perhaps a newlywed couple in some countries. But in our house we don’t get rid of stuff very quickly; we have tubs and tubs of clothing in Maddie’s closet ready to be handed down to Cora, and in Cora’s closet we’ve got tubs and tubs of clothing Cora is handing down to her young cousin.

This past year, Cora’s closet has been gradually emptying out as baby J starts growing. We’ve said a tearful good-bye to newborns, then three month olds, then six month olds – you get the picture. Each tub leaving is both a cause for rejoicing – more STUFF gone! – and a pause to remember my babies, and how they’re moving inevitably onward and upward.

Gift Giving Preparation Goes Into High Gear

Yes, it’s December.

Let’s just let that sink in for a second before we move on.

December.

Ok, so it’s December. And if that’s not enough, I’ve counted backwards and realized that I have to mail my out-of-town boxes A WEEK FROM TODAY if I want to pay ground rates. Technically I could do it a week from tomorrow, but I’m booked that day so a week from today it is. Which isn’t too bad, except that I have almost a DOZEN boxes to mail out to friends all over the globe, many of which said boxes will be carrying some sort of/several home-baked goods, homemade jam, that sort of thing.

Which means I gotta get moving.

I’ve been baking for the past two weeks, but still have miles to go. I’ve been canning jams, mixing up lotions and hot cocoa mixes and more, and am SLOWLY getting it all done.

Just in time to be handing out gifts for teachers, friends, crossing guards . . .

Deep breathing. Deep breathing.