Nolan Ten Months
Read, Watched, Listened
Re-read. A memoir/cookbook, which is a genre that I've stumbled upon and been devouring- pun intended - lately. Okay, I admittedly haven't tried any of the recipes, but the family stories and the way they are told are soooooo well done. Kathleen Flinn's writing is interesting, intelligent, and funny, and she has a knack for telling stories that I'm sure in her family are told over and over again. It's engaging and light, for the most part, and is a fun read with the added bonus of the recipes.
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Let's call this a re-re-re-re-re-re-re-read for me. One of my favorite books of all time. I probably read it for the first time when I was 12 or so? I couldn't even tell you but I just adore it. Kathleen Flinn referenced it at the end of her memoir above, and I couldn't resist segueing right from Burnt Toasts Makes You Sing Good to A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. It's an American classic, a coming-of-age story about Francie Nolan and her family living in Brooklyn in the early 1900s. The characters are so vivid, the writing is beautifully descriptive, and it's just so honest that I fall in love with Francie all over again every time I read it. It's also interesting to come back to books that I read as a kid, and remember how I used to relate to the younger characters but can now see so much from the adult side. I haven't read it in years, so I'd forgotten all about Francie's last name - Nolan - and it made me all the more glad I have a baby boy named the same. I can now claim that his name comes from a great literary work, instead of the lame "oh it was just a name we liked" answer I otherwise have to use. ;)
Honestly in the past month, I've mostly been reading things about the election. (No wonder I needed to go through those feel-good re-reads above.) It's hard to believe the election was over a month ago already. The post-election coverage has been enormous. If anyone still finds them helpful, and if you can stomach reading anything more that's related to the election, here are some of the best articles I've read in the past month:
Girls Can Be Anything, Just Not President
Don't Panic
Donald Trump's Demand for Love
Questioning Donald Trump
Donald Trump is Gaslighting America (Teen Vogue. Seriously.)
Al Franken Faces Donald Trump and the Next Four Years
Though maybe the best thing I've read post-election, the thing that has really stuck with me, comes from a statement Bernie Sanders wrote on November 9th:
“To the degree that Mr. Trump is serious about pursuing policies that improve the lives of working families in this country, I and other progressives are prepared to work with him. To the degree that he pursues racist, sexist, xenophobic and anti-environment policies, we will vigorously oppose him."Amen to that.
We're halfway through this series on Netflix based on the life of (the current) Queen Elizabeth. It's fantastic - the costuming, the acting, the sets. It really is just beautiful (their budget must be enormous). Tyson and I have both been enjoying it and Google-ing and Wikipedia-ing different things to get us up to speed on historical events and people that are referenced. I thought it was supposed to be a full sweep of her life from the time she took the crown up to the present, but we're 5 episodes in (of 10) and only through the first few years of her reign, so there must be more seasons to come. That's definitely something to look forward to.
Good Girls Revolt
Not something I listen to regularly, but the episode I linked to (What the F**k Just Happened You Guys?!) (Profanity! Not a lot, but you've been warned) is specifically related to the election. It was released the morning after the election and is a conversation between a couple very thoughtful, well-reasoned writers working through what happened in regards to the election and what led up to it. They're processing it all just as much as anybody else was that day, but it was interesting and also insightful to hear everything discussed so calmly and rationally, yet with a healthy dose of "what the f**k?" thrown in.
Post Weekend
Advent. It's a Thing.
Advent is a thing.
I mean, I know it's a thing. I grew up in the Catholic church for goodness sakes - I KNOW Advent. If there's one thing the Catholic church does well, it's tradition. (Cue opening song to Fiddler on the Roof...) The candles, the prayers, the anticipation. It's a beautiful thing.
But suddenly it's an INTERNET thing. At least the corners of the internet that I frequent.The Pinterest-y, mom blog, "489 Ways to Celebrate Advent With Your Children!!!!!!1!!"- type corners. And maybe there aren't actually articles with 489 ways to celebrate Advent, but when everyone is posting up all the things they are doing during the season, it sure seems like it. I think by now we're all familiar with social media overload. It's kind of exhausting to think about. Especially when December kind of creeps up on you. I mean, I knew it was coming - it was just November and all - but November seemed like a quick march right up to Thanksgiving, (and travel, in our case), and so here we are, thrust into Advent with no particular plans. No daily calendar, no hidden chocolates or candies or puzzles for each day. Are you covering your mouth in horror? Because admitting that almost seems like the ultimate #momfail these days.
Let's be honest, parenting small children is difficult enough without adding HOLIDAYS to the mix. The everyday is filled with too many things to do in not enough time without worrying about adding holiday magic in for good measure.
Thankfully, the kids are pretty good about adding the magic themselves.
Grabbing Mary and a sheep and singing "Mary Had a Little Lamb"? Magical. And, yup, hilarious.
Being blessed to celebrate another first Christmas? Definitely magic.
Listening to Caden read me the Christmas story? Which involves this SINGLE page. And goes like this: "And they say 'hi Jesus!' and they all singing the sheep and the flying and ev-yone happy the end". Every time. Magic.
So, with three kids under three, I've committed to doing exactly four things this year to celebrate Advent and lead up to Christmas. (And by now you should have realized...ain't no elves up on my shelves. Props if you can pull that off, but as for me and my house? NO thank you.)
1. Read the Christmas story each day. This one is half falling apart from all the love we've given it over the past couple of years. It has the best rhymes.
2. Play with the nativity set each day. The one shown above in the first photos was one we'd been given for the kids. Let's just say that while the figures were kid-friendly in size, they were NOT kid-friendly in material. A couple of broken wise men's crowns and half a shepherd later, we gave them this one as an early Christmas present. We gave it to them on the 1st, and it has been THE MOST played with toy by far in the few days since then.
And since it's, y'know, made for kids, even Nolan can get in on the action.
"Sing me the SONG, mommy!" Brooklyn says, each and every time she wants me to act out the Christmas story with the figures. We've been over it many, many times. Caden loves to fly the angel around, especially in scenes when the angel has KEY LINES, such as "Hey btw you're totes gonna give birth to God's son", and laughs hysterically as he zooms away. Brooklyn carries Baby Jesus and "his mommy" around all over the house. And Nolan chews on everything. It's got something for everyone!
It's also great because Caden and Brooklyn are in prime play-pretend mode. So far this morning Mary, a wise man, and the camel have gone on an adventure to "daddy's store" (aka Lowe's). "Do you have your money?" "Buckle up!" (Apparently this camel has advanced safety features.) "It's far, far away."
3. Sing Christmas songs. Hymns. We're loving the Christmas albums from Mercy Me, Brandon Heath , and Casting Crowns.
4. And, of course, we made a paper chain.
(Surprisingly good paper-chain makers.)
They rip off one link each night. We alternate. Brooklyn gets the red ones, Caden gets the green ones, because everything is all "Green my favorite. I love green, mommy." lately.
Five days down. Twenty more to go.
We're not going to do everything this year. Or any year, really. But we can do some things. And this isn't all that we'll do. We made some Christmas cookies over the weekend. I can assure you that we'll make many more before the season is up. We'll play in the snow, read some Christmas stories, attend some parties. But are we going to cram in every community event, every Santa visit, every single holiday gathering we're invited to? Nope. And I'm fine with that.
We're having fun right here.