Brian and I had a wonderful time celebrating our anniversary
this week. It was our 25th,
and the main celebration occurred last month when we took a wonderful cruise to
commemorate the big event. Along with
that, we also celebrated on the actual day this week by having a little get
away to the Big City.
We had a wonderful time eating, shopping, watching a movie, etc. The next day we had a delicious breakfast and
ended our get away by attending the near-by LDS temple. It was a wonderful experience, the perfect
way to begin our twenty-sixth year together.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
A Very Happy Anniversary
My Favorite Gift Ever!
My very best gift of all and the most
exciting part of Christmas was a wonderful gift from Brian. He really outdid himself this year and gave
me many gifts, but one in particular, was the best ever. He really knew what to get me, and it was a
present I hadn’t let myself even dream of.
He was pretty happy that he had both surprised me and made me cry. And the present??? It was an envelope containing flight
information for and upcoming trip to see my sweet little grand daughter, Lily
and her parents! I definitely have the
best husband ever, and I can’t wait to go.
Christmas Morning
Who was up first on Christmas morning? Not the kids, not Brian, but me, and even I
slept in longer than usual. I got up at
6:50 because the plan was to open presents at 7:00. You see, Christmas this year was on a Sunday
which meant church at 9:00 am. It’s
strange but true that while the rest of the Christian world goes to church at
Christmas time, some never stepping foot inside the rest of the year, some
Latter day saints complain about going to church when Christmas is on a Sunday. Some may complain because they figure since
we go to church every week the rest of the year, it would be nice to have a
break on Christmas. But I think for
most, the main problem is the logistics of it all. It’s hard enough to get a family of say six
or eight fed, showered, dressed and out the door for church by nine o’clock in
the morning, but when you add Christmas morning pandemonium to the schedule, it
becomes almost impossible. I think many
families opted to open presents after church to avoid the difficulties. You can imagine how the kids felt about
that! Anyway, with no little kids to get
ready, we figured we could start opening gifts at 7:00, finish by 8:00, and be
to church by 9:00, and we did just that.
It’s weird, though, having to wake kids up on Christmas morning which is
just what Brian and I had to do. He woke
up shortly after me, and so did Katrina, but we had to roust the rest out of
bed. That’s teenagers for you! We had a family prayer and then gathered
downstairs around the Christmas tree to open gifts. Everyone seemed happy with what Santa brought
them. After the festivities, we were seated
in Church before nine. It was wonderful
to sing and hear of Christ and to be reminded of the reason for Christmas.
Labels:
Family Time,
Holidays,
My Church,
Sunday,
Traditions
I Love Christmas Eve
On Christmas Eve we stay home with just our little family. We cook a nice meal—this year it was prime
rib—and set a beautiful table. We dress
for dinner in our nicest clothes, open Christmas crackers, and then eat. Afterwards, we open pajamas, get dressed in
them and head downstairs to share Gifts from the Heart around the Christmas
tree. We’ve been doing Gifts from the Heart for almost a decade now. Each
family member gives a gift to another family member—anything in the world they
want to give—the only catch is that it can’t cost any money; instead of coming from the store, it has to
come from the heart. We have had some amazing gifts from the heart over the years.
This year was also wonderful. Brian
gave Katrina a coupon for six hours of time with Dad which she will probably use to watch a movie or two with him. Katrina wrote Matt a beautiful poem that she shared with the family. She's quite the poet. Matt wrote me a song. It was funny and original, and I
loved it! I gave Thomas a triple layered
blanket—quilted, bonded, and fleece—to keep him super warm. I started the blanket long ago and never
finished it, so I decided I’d finish it up for my gift from the heart. Kind of lame, but he was pleased. Thomas gave Miriam a bracelet that he conned
her into helping him make by telling her it was for Katrina. He figured that the best way to make sure she
liked it was to have her help pick out the beads herself. She wore it to church on Christmas. Miriam gave Jon the biggest, biggest heating pad I've ever seen. He really seems to like it. Jon made Brian a video. It was hilarious! It was all very
fun—one of my favorite parts of Christmas!
Then Brian read the Christmas story, we prayed, and went to bed.
Christmas Traditions
Our family has many Christmas traditions, but we don’t do them all
every year. Instead, we do whichever ones
feel right for that particular year. Some of our
many traditions (besides the Christmas Eve ones which I will mention in another post)
include a nativity advent, reading from the Christmas story basket, decorating
a gingerbread house, giving gifts to Christ, going to the city’s light display,
going to the light display at the LDS temple grounds, doing twelve days of
Christmas for a needy family, singing Christmas carols around the tree on as
many nights in December as possible, participating in the neighborhood
Christmas play, etc. We also like to try
new traditions as we go along. This year, along with doing a selection of the old traditions, we also read excerpts from the four gospels every night possible in December. By Christmas Eve, we’d read the highlights of
Jesus Christ’s life, atonement, and resurrection. It was a wonderful way to remember Christ
during the holiday season.
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Friday, December 16, 2011
What's Everyone Else Up To?
Brian has been busy at work and at home doing whatever needs
to be done. The other day he dreamed
that he found rare currency worth a ton of money—definitely a good dream for
Brian; he woke up happy. His work party
was last Monday, and we all went as a family.
It was nice having a family party instead of a couple’s party. His Christmas gift from the school district
was 2 movie tickets, so he and I went to the movies Saturday afternoon between
Christmas parties. He’s been suffering
from a cold lately which really stinks, but feeling sick doesn’t stop him from
being a wonderful husband and dad.
Lily and her parents are doing well. We sent them a Christmas package and they got
it on Friday. They seemed to like the
Joseph, Mary, and baby Jesus that I crocheted for them. We also sent them each an individual
gift. They opened everything early
because they won’t be home for the holidays—they are taking Lily to meet her
other grandma for the first time. They posted
new cute pictures of the fam on their blog, which I love! I hope they have a very Merry Christmas.
Jonathan has been the Santa Claus Junior of the family this
Christmas. I swear he knows more about
what people are getting than I do, and I’m Mrs. Santa Senior! He’s really been helpful telling us what
people want and coordinating the buying of gifts. This has been finals week for him and
Matt. I transferred money into their
accounts so that they could buy some finals survival snacks. I know it’s not much, but its something. He and Matt come home today!!
Matt says studying for finals is going well for him. I chatted with him on Facebook the other
night which was fun even though he spent the whole time teasing me. Actually, that was why it was so fun. Jon is going back to college at the new year,
but Matt will stay and prepare for his LDS mission. He’s and Jon are planning to load all their stuff in the
little pick-up, and head home this afternoon.
Suddenly I’m wondering where we’ll put everything all when they get here. Matt’s got lots to do this next week—get photos
and doctor’s appointments and send off his papers. Pretty exciting.
Miriam has been singing her head off lately, I’m so proud of
her! She sang a solo—"What Child is
This"—at our congregation’s Christmas party and again in our annual
neighborhood Christmas play. Her voice
is so beautiful and she got tons of compliments. I’m so proud of her! She also performed with the school choir
Wednesday at a beautiful Christmas concert.
We brought Brian’s mom with us and she loved it. So did I, it really brought the Christmas
spirit! Tonight Miriam gets to go to a
party which will really be fun for her.
Katrina has been busy with drama club counsel and is getting
ready to begin tutoring for National Honor Society. She has been accompanying Miriam when she sings
“What Child is This.” I had no idea that
she played so well. We went to Katrina’s
choir concert last night. They sang “Come
O Come Emmanuel” and The Halleleuiah Chorus.
It was beautiful! Katrina tried
out and got a part in Beauty and the Beast.
She will be playing “the aristocratic woman.” It has a few lines and a bit of singing. I’m so excited for her!
Thomas also got a part in the school play. He will be playing “Le Fool,” Gaston’s
sidekick. It’s pretty unusual for an
eighth grader to get such a big part, so he’s pretty stoked. Sadly, however, he had to quit wrestling
because the practices conflict.
Bittersweet. Thomas is sure
looking forward to his brothers coming home tonight. With Brian and I going out on a date and the
two girls going to Christmas parties tonight, it will be just the boys at home.
They should really like that, especially
if I get them a pizza and a couple of moviesJ
Testing, testing...
Last week and this week I am working full school days doing
testing. We go from school to school
doing benchmark testing in resource as well as mainstream classrooms. You think those last two sentences I wrote were
boring, you should try listening to kids read the same passages over and over
every week day for two weeks and then coming back 3 months later and doing it
all again.
It’s the fictional passages that are really dull because I
don’t really care if Kim and Anna are entering a jump rope contest or that
Mother Kangaroo keeps loosing her baby.
But the non-fiction passages aren’t too bad because at least I’m
learning something. For instance, I now
know that Big Ben has four faces so that it can be seen from every direction and
that those faces are 20 feet wide and, the numbers are 2 feet tall, and the minute hand is long as a car. I also know that Carl Gauss grew up in a poor
family in Germany and could work math problems in his head by the time he was three. When he was seven, his school
teacher asked the kids to add up all the numbers from one to 100, and he
figured out the answer almost instantly.
Kind of interesting, right?
Non fiction stories
have their frustrations, too, however, since no one ever gets farther than half
way through the information. The passage
about Big Ben begins with people climbing up it’s face. It took me 5 days of testing before I got a
kid who read far enough to find out that the climbers were actually
cleaners. What happens next? Do the climbers fall? Do they ever finish cleaning London’s clock? I may never know. I also may never know what amazing things
Carl Gauss did after the age of seven. I
keep telling myself that I’ll go back and finish the good ones, but when I’m
off work, I come to my senses. Anyway,
that’s what I’ve been up to lately.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Happy Birthday, Grandma
My Grandma is turning 90 this month, and her kids are asking for everyone to write something to her, so this is the letter that I am sending to my Grandma.
Dear Grandma,
I have so many memories of you over the years. I remember you making me hominy to eat and I remember drinking your delicious, slushy grapefruit drink. I remember you giving us hot water bottles to keep us warm when we spent the night. I remember you giving Great Grandma perms; it taught me alot about honoring my parents. I also remember all the things you made. You made me and my siblings stuffed frogs with colorful soft bodies and big bulgy eyes. You made me and mys sister Julie each a doll with sleeping eyes on one side and awake eyes on the other. I named mine Jane. You made me a quilt stitched in the outline of the temple. You made my son, Jonathan and Katherine's boy, Michael, quilts out of the same fabric when they were babies. You made Katherine a rag doll, I think it's name was Bernice. You raised chickens, grew raspberries, hung and ironed laundry, mopped miles of linoleum, and lived through ten teenagers. Grandma, you are truly my hero, I hope I can be half the mother, grandmother, great, and great great grandmother that you are, and I wish you a very happy birthday.
Love,
Marci
Dear Grandma,
I have so many memories of you over the years. I remember you making me hominy to eat and I remember drinking your delicious, slushy grapefruit drink. I remember you giving us hot water bottles to keep us warm when we spent the night. I remember you giving Great Grandma perms; it taught me alot about honoring my parents. I also remember all the things you made. You made me and my siblings stuffed frogs with colorful soft bodies and big bulgy eyes. You made me and mys sister Julie each a doll with sleeping eyes on one side and awake eyes on the other. I named mine Jane. You made me a quilt stitched in the outline of the temple. You made my son, Jonathan and Katherine's boy, Michael, quilts out of the same fabric when they were babies. You made Katherine a rag doll, I think it's name was Bernice. You raised chickens, grew raspberries, hung and ironed laundry, mopped miles of linoleum, and lived through ten teenagers. Grandma, you are truly my hero, I hope I can be half the mother, grandmother, great, and great great grandmother that you are, and I wish you a very happy birthday.
Love,
Marci
Sunday, December 4, 2011
A Nice Week
Brian's Dad, Wally
Thursday was activity days. My church calling is to work with the eight and nine year old girls of my ward (congregation) in doing activities that promote their Faith in God. Next week, we plan on visiting a local rest home to sing Christmas songs to the residents there. The girls sing wonderfully as a group and we thought that this would be a great way to spread Christmas cheer. This last week, we planned on having the girls make poinsettias to had out to the nursing home patients after we sang. The poinsettias are a craft I came up with and I was excited to help the girls make and share them.
On Thursday, we went to their house and had a wonderful time. The husband showed each doll and explained where she was from. Afterwards the girls asked a few questions about the dolls. They also wanted to know who made the beautiful hand-crocheted ornaments hanging on her tree and were very impressed to hear that she had made them herself. Before we left, we sang "Silent Night and Jingle Bells," then we went out the door with "We Wish you a Merry Christmas" ringing in their ears. Such a simple thing; such a wonderful feeling!
Yesterday, (Saturday) we went to the temple to see the beautiful lights and the nativities. We had a wonderful time!
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