Birthday Week, Part Two.

You’re supposed to make a big deal about birthdays in my book, so having only one child means it’s probably a little bit excessive around here.    First, there are the required cupcakes for the class.  My child is quite vocal about how she doesn’t like storebought cupcakes.    She says it’s the frosting, she doesn’t like what passes for buttercream.  Can you blame her? 

 

 
So, for the class, I made Red Velvet cupcakes from my 1956 Betty Crocker Picture Cookbook.  I frosted them with Cook’s Illustrated Creamy Chocolate Frosting.  This is the first time I’ve paired the two recipes and they work well together.  That cake definitely needs a big, fluffy frosting to go with it and this one does it.
 
Then, for her family celebration, we had what has become tradition – carrot cake from The New Basics Cookbook, complete with their cream cheese frosting recipe.  I know they say that cupcakes are on their way out and are being replaced with pie, but in this house, cupcakes are still pretty popular.  Perfect portion sizes AND you can pop the extras in the freezer.  They pack much better in a lunchbox than a piece of pie (or cake for that matter). 
 
 

I tend to follow baking recipes pretty religiously.  It’s all chemistry and since any variation can throw a recipe off, I don’t try to get funky with it.  The one exception to that rule are those carrot cake cupcakes.  I substitute half a cup of applesauce for oil and I use a cup of wheat flour.  They are also made from carrots that Edie plants herself in the garden every spring (or at least reminds and then supervises my planting of the seeds).  It’s one of the healthiest treat I bake and so, so good.   The only thing I throw in carrot cake are raisins – we’re not fans of nuts in our baked goods, so they don’t get thrown in, nor do I add anything else, like coconut or pineapple. 
For dinner, I made lasagna, but it didn’t quite turn out.  I may have used too much sauce, or cheese or both, with not enough noodles.   I used the no boil noodles and I guess I thought they would spread out more than they did.  It still tasted good, but it wasn’t quite lasagna….oh well.  It was edible and no one minded and the cupcakes more than made up for it.
Tomorrow is Pat’s birthday.  He has yet to request a dinner or a dessert, leaving it up to me to surprise him.  No idea what I’m going to throw together yet.  Saturday night, we are hosting 5 of Edie’s friends for a slumber party and our menu has been planned for weeks.  There will be more baking of course, and then I’m looking forward to NOT baking and NOT entertaining for at least a week.  I get burned out on it right about this time every year – I’ve been baking since November after all and even though I love baking, I’m pretty sure that 6 dozen cupcakes, a cheesecake and a yet to be determined treat is a bit much for a week’s worth of baking.
Thankfully, we’ve shared a good bit of it, so it’s not like we have it lying around the house.  Forget the holiday gain, I’ve got January birthday gain.  I’m soooo hitting the gym next week…..

Birthday Week, Part One.

The other people who live in my house have their birthdays this week.  Edie came home from the hospital ON Pat’s birthday actually.  I’ll admit, I milked that for a few years.  I still struggle with pulling off celebrations for both of them.  After all, they are two days apart!

This year, Edie’s birthday falls smack dab in the middle of the week.  It was decided that her party would be the following weekend.  Since Pat’s birthday is actually on that weekend, I decided to have his celebration first, so it wouldn’t get swept under the rug, as it seems to be every year.  So, Saturday night, we had a few friends over for drinks and cake.

 To start off the baking, I mean, birthday week, I decided to go with a cheese cake.    I topped it with peaches I canned from our tree in the front yard.  I cooked them just a wee bit, added some corn starch to thicken it and voila.

The recipe is my treasured, handwritten copy of Mrs. Van Popple’s cheesecake.  I think I was about 8 when I declared this the best cheesecake ever and my Aunt Loretta made it for me every chance she got.  I’m not really sure who Mrs. Van Popple was, I think she may have been married to someone my Uncle Peter worked with, for?  Whomever she was, she had one incredible cheesecake recipe. Andoreda, as we kids called her, fought a long, hard battle with cancer.  The last time I saw her, she said, oh, let me get you that recipe, and I knew she knew, this was the last time I was ever going to see her.  There was no way she would just hand that recipe off.  Anytime I asked about it before, she would just bake me the cheesecake.   She had a brain tumor at that point, for years I had gotten letters from her with gibberish in the middle that I knew was caused by it, and sure enough, there is some gibberish in the recipe.  I had to learn to bake before I could decipher it.

And so, the best way I know to start my week of baking for loved ones is to start with the recipe that got me going.

Adventures in knitting

After way too long a hiatus, I picked up my knitting needles again.  I finished these fingerless gloves – a pattern from Knitty.  I’ve been carrying them about with me for longer than I care to admit, especially considering how easy they are and how quick they knit up.  I’ve knit that pattern, both the male and female version a few times now.  I like it.  Very easy.  I forget how much I love to cable until I do it and then I always wonder why I don’t do it more.

I like knitting, but I have a tendency to stick to smaller projects.  I don’t mind spending a year working on the same project, as I did with sweaters for both Pat & Edie, but to be honest, my finishing techniques stink.  I definitely need to take class or befriend a really good, experienced knitter who can sit me down and show me how to improve these skills.  I’ve bought myself a number of books on the subject and they’re not cutting it.  I also am totally overwhelmed by gauge and yarn types and well, alot of the basics of designing a sweater.  Scarves and gloves are just easier and much quicker.    I want to get over this. 

I bought those 4 cones of yarn from our friends at Open Gate Farm back when they had sheep as well.  I love the idea of a ‘local ‘sweater.  When I bought it, I had every intention of turning it into a sweater for Pat.  I wanted it to be some fabulous Irish Clan Sweater, but the process of figuring out the gauge, adapting it to some complex pattern, well, it more than overwhelmed me.  The yarn has sat for at least a good year, probably two, waiting for me to get my courage up to figure it out.  I’ve been assured I have enough yarn to knit Pat a sweater, but I’m nervous about making it the right size.  I can’t find a pattern I’m totally happy with. Why is it so hard to find just a plain, men’s pullover sweater pattern?
I’ve been inspired since I read this post to get back into it.  I would love to be able to knit that fast, that much.  I’m totally inspired with how creative knitting is, not to mention how relaxing and even sort of addictive it is.   You can take it along with you everywhere, unlike sewing.  You can manipulate the yarn into so many things, it boggles my mind.  I know that when I knit, I do it well, I just have to wrap my head around this gauge and sizing business.
I’m on Ravelry, but to be honest, I haven’t played around on it much and really figured out how the site works.  I did find a pattern that appealed to me through the site, so that’s a start and it’s one I think Pat will wear and so now I’m going about knitting a gauge swatch and trying to wrap my head around this process.  It’s going to be an adventure, but if I don’t just jump in, I’m never going to figure this out.  And I’ve knit scarves for everyone I know.  It’s seriously time to move on and challenge myself. Wish me luck and stay tuned!

Coming around again.

My new favorite soup is this  Northern Italian Spinach and Cornmeal Soup from an old Vegetarian Times cookbook.  This fall, I was looking for a new, quick, easy soup recipe and rediscovered the soup section in that particular cookbook.  It was a hit and quite yummy to boot, so it’s now in the repertoire.  At least until we burn out on it.

I’m not sure if it was the end of the holidays and the return to regular life, or the flat out catharticism of my last post or a combination of the two, but I had the most productive weekend I’ve had in I don’t know how long.  Christmas got taken down.  The house got clean.  I made some super yummy pizza with my own dough.  I cleaned out and purged Christmas decorations that hadn’t made it out in a few years.  The attic corner in which they live in got cleaned out and reorganized.  Edie’s birthday party got planned.  Laundry got caught up.  The “happy corner” got cleaned up and reorganized and I even purged stuff there too.  AND I fixed the torn loop on the laundry bag in our room.  I pulled out all the best stops in my procrastination bag in getting it all done – long, hot baths were had and naps were taken.  The only thing I totally slacked on was Sunday night dinner.  Which is where the spinach & cornmeal soup comes in.  I really wasn’t in the mood to cook, so I made that instead.  I love that there is NO chopping involved in that soup.  Just my handy garlic press that I swear by. 

I started making a list of projects I want to accomplish as well.  I’m slowly but surely crawling out of my head and back into real life.  It feels so good, I can’t even begin to tell you.

New Year’s Resolution

I had a conversation at a holiday party with a fellow blogger about how most blogs make life look picture perfect when it’s not always that way.  It is lovely to put a good face out there and pretend that’s all there is to it.  But in reality, it’s not.  I’m actually quite skilled at making people think I’m something I’m not, that all is well and picture perfect in my life.
On one hand, I do have a spoiled pretty little princess life.  And it’s quite lovely and I appreciate it to the tiniest detail.  I also know I’ve earned every last one of those details.  I’m not exactly sure how or why all of this landed in my lap, but it has.  I’m very grateful for all it.
Every family has their issues.  Every family has a touch of dysfunction to it.   Mine is pretty hard to beat.  I don’t just say that either.  For years, I didn’t talk about it.  I tried to put a happy face and a pretty picture on it and alot of people bought it.  My closest friends for instance.  When that little stomach tumor was discovered August of 2009, I realized I needed to make some serious changes in my life.  I started opening up to people, REALLY opening up.  Like, coming clean to one of my closest friends from college why I never went home to visit.  It’s actually quite easy to pinpoint the exact moment my family went from merely screwed up to completely dysfunctional. 


My parents had always had a  little bit of a rocky relationship.  There were separations and reunions, ups and downs.  My father was a binge drinker brand of alcoholic.  He didn’t drink every day, but when he started, he didn’t know when to stop.  And he was not always a good drunk.  He had multiple DUI’s, but in the days before MADD, that didn’t take away your license permanently. 

As the oldest of 4 with a wide age range between us (I was a freshman in high school when the youngest child was born), I was expected to take on a good bit of responsibility.  I got a car when I turned 16 so that I could help cart kids around.  None of this really seemed that out of the ordinary at the time, but I’ve had friends tell me looking back, I had way more responsibilities than anyone else they knew. 

My senior year in high school, my parents split for good.  My responsibilities around the house increased even more.  

I went off to college the following year, but due to a number of circumstances, found myself living at home a year later.  I helped out with the younger kids quite a bit, in between working 2 jobs and trying to figure out what I wanted to do when I grew up.  A friend suggested I look at Auburn University.  I had never heard of it before – it was way down in Alabama, a 14 hour drive from my hometown in Pennsylvania.  There were some things that appealed to me abut it, so I decided to give it a look.  The biggest deciding factor, I have always admitted, was when I left my mom’s that day in mid-March, there was snow on the ground.  All the way down I-81 through the mountains of Virginia there was snow on the ground.  When I finally arrived in Auburn, it was full on dogwoods in bloom spring.  And it was beautiful.  I was sold.

So there I was, finally getting my 19 year old act together.  Out of the blue one fine May morning, just before I was scheduled to leave, my father dropped dead of a heart attack.  He was 44.  I was 19.

My parents were officially divorced, so legally, he was single.  There was no will and so by law, that made me the next of kin and the one responsible.

Right there, in the Emergency Room of the hospital, my family imploded.  My dad’s parents were livid that I was the one with the so-called power.  My father and I had not always had the best relationship.  Looking back, I realize that both my parents took my teen rebellion personally and made me out to be about the worst person in the world for what I now understand is quite normal teenage behavior.  There was no room for that in their deteriorating marriage with all their other children, so when they split, the blame firmly landed in my lap, because I was ‘difficult’.  A straight A honor student, who volunteered weekly at the local hospital, held down a job and was responsible for not only my own, but my father’s laundry as well as numerous other household chores.  I was considered unmanageable. I was a smart ass and had some issues, sure.  But come on……

In the months before he passed away though, my father and I  had turned a corner and had actually started a new phase in our relationship.  But my grandparents didn’t know this and certainly didn’t want to hear this in the emergency room at the hospital as my father’s body laid in the next room and they weren’t allowed access to it until I allowed it. 

The power struggle between my grandparents and my mother started right there in the ER.  I had to be the one to ID the body and sign the death certificate.  I was 19.  And it was held against me by BOTH parties.  I ended up having to retain a lawyer and file motions in order to get a key to my father’s apartment to get clothes to bury him in.  Not only was I living the nightmare of losing my father so unexpectedly so young, I was having to be the responsible adult in the whole situation.  After I picked out the suit to bury my father in (and noticing my grandparents had gone through his apartment, making sure they left no valuables for his children), I got to take my then 5 year old brother shopping for a suit in which to bury our father. 

And yet, this is not even the worst of it.

My mother had been dating this man of whom I can say absolutely nothing good.  The best man in our wedding declared that if his name was milk, we’d all be lactose intolerant.  So, to be nice, we’ll refer to him as milk. 

Months before, when they had started dating,  this man had started coming into the department store where I worked and harassed me.  My coworkers learned to call security when they saw him come in the store.  It was that bad.  I approached my father, who said my sister closest to me in age had also complained about this man.  Next thing I know, he had talked to my mother and milk was out of our lives.  Until the day my father dropped dead.  Guess who my mother called first?

After the trainwreck of my father’s funeral, I didn’t see the point in delaying my move to college.  I continued with my plan.  A few months later, I got a letter from my mother, explaining to me that she had moved on with her life and there wasn’t room for me in it.  She had moved in with milk and her home was no longer open to me.  I was welcome to visit, but I needed to be invited first.   Just like that, my mother removed me from her family.

That first Christmas without my father was hell. I was invited to my mother’s and while it was clear us kids  were all grieving, we were to not talk about my father.  It was literally slapped across my face that his name was to never, ever be mentioned in milk’s home ever again.

Once upon a time, I considered my mother my closest friend.  The amount of hurt, not to mention shame, on my part was astounding from all of this.  I withdrew from all my friends back home.  I didn’t know how to say my mother didn’t want me around any more.  I thought it was me, and she had enough people back her up telling me how difficult I was and how I deserved this.  Down in Auburn, I made up excuses as to why I only went home for a few days at Christmas.  I became skilled at getting invites to other folk’s parents homes.  I didn’t let anyone get too close to me, because I was terrified that if they found out my mother didn’t like me, they would realize they didn’t either.  I really thought it was my fault.  Already good at giving good face, I became a master of creating a happy facade.  No one was to know how awful my family life really was.

For years, I tried to work on my relationship with my mother.  As long as I was useful, she wanted me around.  The minute I stopped having a purpose?  Out the door with me.  I spent a few years slightly estranged.  And then I got pregnant with what turned out to be Edie.  I wanted her to know her grandmother.  I adored my Granny and I hoped my mother could have a decent relationship with my child.  For a while, it was okay.  My mother divorced milk, but yet, he still seemed to lurk.  He was a father figure to my brother and youngest sister, who didn’t remember our father.  I laid out serious boundaries, that under no circumstances did I want him near my child.  That was a game ender.  I blamed him for most of my mother’s treatment of me.  He was a control freak, as well as an alcoholic, abusive and condescending to everyone around him.  He seemed to want to remove everyone from my mother’s life that was there before him, and yes, that included her children, with the exception of my brother.  My sisters were treated pretty shabbily as well, but then he would turn around and give them money, help pay their bills, and so they put up with this.   But me?  I was nothing but bad news.  My wishes about having milk not near my child were not always respected.  He dropped by once when we were visiting my mother, in a move that my mother said was all him, but I didn’t believe her.  Pat picked Edie up and left until I called to tell him it was okay to bring her back.  I told my mother, if you ever do that again, you will never see my daughter again.  Pat assured me, I was not being unreasonable in not wanting my child to know him.  He was as awful as I imagined.

The last few years my mother’s behavior became increasingly alarming.  And detrimental to our relationship.  It was hard to put my finger on it.  I knew she blamed me for most of her problems, including both her marriages failing, but then she would turn around and deny she’d ever said and done a good number of things.  My siblings almost always sided with my mother, so I started thinking that maybe I was crazy.  This only happened around my family though, so I couldn’t understand what was wrong.

And then, after a series of events, I went back into therapy again.  I’d been in therapy over the years since high school.  At one point, I had realized that my mother’s problems weren’t my fault and had done some healing from that, but I still carried quite a bit of baggage around in me.  So, I started therapy again and at about the same time, discovered the reason my stomach had hurt for months was because I had a tumor in the muscular wall of it, close to my pancreas. 

I most definitely was not on good terms with my family and so didn’t mention it to them until after the initial biopsy. The official results were inconclusive, because the doctor couldn’t get a piece of it.  It was small and hard and hard to get to, so she felt it was probably benign, but to be safe, I really should consider getting it removed sooner rather than later.  Benign stomach tumors are rare and don’t stay that way for long.  There is a strong family history of cancer in my mother’s family, combined with my looking at the age of 40, knowing my father dropped dead at 44 – in no way shape or form did I think I was special enough to have a happy ending to this. 

It took 3 weeks for anyone of my family members to show any concern over this development at all after I shared my news with them.   I realized once and for all, that my family is truly only there when I can do something for them and certainly not when I need anything from them.  I was heartbroken and hurt and sick. I made the decision to cut all ties with all of them.  As I worked through all this, my therapist threw out the notion that my mother was Narcissistic.  I wasn’t quite ready to deal with that though.  As I worked through my issues, I realized more and more how my mother’s behavior and treatment of me had affected me.  I went to visit an old college friend, who was a therapist.  For the first time, I really opened up to her and started telling her about all this.  She pulled out her big textbook of diagnoses and we looked it up.  I realized, that sounded like my mother.  I went back to my therapist and discussed this.  She encouraged me to look this up, read about it, find some on-line support groups. 

People simply don’t understand when you choose to walk away from your mother.  “But she’s your mother!” they say.  Unless you have had your mother tell you how much she regrets giving birth to you, how she doesn’t love you, blames you for all her problems, tries to separate you from your family, you really cannot imagine it.  I’ll admit, I have moments where I question it myself – moments where I wonder, what if Edie grows up and decides she wants nothing to do with me?  I have to live with this decision.  It’s not always easy.  But putting up with the abuse isn’t easy either.   

This year, the holidays hit me hard.  I really just couldn’t get into the spirit of them.  For Edie’s sake, I went through the motions and baked and decorated, but I couldn’t pretend to be festive.  I finally decided to take my therapist’s advice and started looking online for some support groups.  I started reading.  I found this and was blown away.  The Characteristics of Narcissistic Mothers, 25 items in all and I saw my mother in every last one.  Some of the things I experienced were not as extreme as are listed, but to some degree, there was my whole relationship with my mother in a 25 item list.  It occurred to me that some of this behavior had always been there, I had always wondered if maybe my father, never a saint, had actually been the better parent, if he had been able to keep my mother’s tendencies to put herself first in check.  I now think that maybe their divorce and his death, combined with the influence of milk, is what caused her to have a break and become a full blown narcissist.  I do think he kept her somewhat in check though.    I have realized so many of my behaviors are a result of her condition.  No wonder I couldn’t put my finger on it, that’s one of the traits.

I am slowing coming to terms with this.  I realize that there’s no going back to any sort of healthy relationship with my mother, there hasn’t been one with her in a good 25 years anyway.  I’m not sure if there’s any chance of reconciling with my siblings.  I certainly don’t expect it while my mother is alive- she’d never allow it.  (It’s in that list of 25 characteristics, that the Narcissist must be in the middle of every relationship between her children.).  It saddens me in ways I cannot put into words.  I’ve always known my family isn’t right, but to know WHAT it is isn’t as freeing as I thought it could be.  I’m sure when I work my way out of this, it will be freeing.  But right now, I’m just stuck.   Right now, I feel fragile and I want to curl up by myself until I can make sense of this.  But I can’t, because I have Pat and Edie.  And I thank the universe for them.

Because I spent so much time when my brother and sister were infants and toddlers caring for them, I wasn’t sure about having kids of my own.  When my friends from college starting getting married and looking forward to babies, all I could think was, they are inconvenient, messy, hard to deal with.  They suck the fun out of everything.  I really couldn’t imagine why anyone would WANT one.    But Pat wanted kids.  And he works with kids.  He’s great with them, and all his friends pointed out, I can’t just be married to someone like him and NOT have a baby.  We spent years talking about it.  There was one particularly nasty episode with my mother where she checked herself into the local psych unit of the hospital, mostly to get back at her children.  That put the baby conversation on hold for quite some time.  I was terrified of turning into my mother.  I didn’t want to bring a child into the world to turn around and make them feel alone and unloved.  What if I didn’t love my own child the way my mother told me she didn’t love me?  Motherhood scared the shit out of me quite honestly.

Which is why my being a decent mother has been such a surprise gift.  When Edie was born, I realized in no way could I ever NOT love that face.  No way could I ever blame her for my problems.  And so, as she grew, I realized more and more there was something wrong with my mother.   Edie’s at an age where I wish I had my own experiences with my mother to draw on, but I now realize, even at that age, my mother was setting me up to fail.  I have no blueprint for this motherhood business, at least being a good mother, so I depend on my friends and my gut instinct to get us through.  I make mistakes and I’m going to make them.  But, she will never, ever doubt my love for her.  I will never belittle her.  I will never be jealous of her. 

Pat says that the more I open up about all this, the stronger I become, the more I heal.  I’ve debated putting all this out on this blog for a few weeks now.  This is a big part of me and I think Pat’s right, I need to open up about it.  I have a crappy family.  I have a crappy mother.  I don’t blame her, but I don’t want her in my life anymore.  I’ve had a hard time accepting happiness in my life and I realize it’s because of my mother’s condition.  It’s an illness really.  A mental illness.  I’m terrified it could happen to me down the road.  My therapist says I don’t show signs of it, and that I put Edie first without even thinking about as a general rule of thumb and that right there says to her I’m not in any danger of inheriting my mother’s illness.

My new year’s resolution is to practice being open and honest more.  To get a better handle on my roller coaster emotions – from what I’ve read, that’s pretty common among ACON (Adult Children of Narcissists).  I’ve joined some on-line support groups, but I’m not sure about them.  It’s wonderful to know there are others like me out there, but everyone is at different levels of healing.  I might be new to the realization of my mother’s illness, but I already know I don’t want to go back and retread her every wrong towards me.  I just want to move on and have a happy, healthy life.  I want to better accept the happiness and love I have around me. 

For years I thought that I really didn’t matter to anyone, even to Pat really.  When Edie came along was the first time I thought I experienced unconditional love.  That stomach tumor made me realize, I actually have alot more love around me  than I knew, and that all I had to do was open up and accept it.  Some days it’s excruciatingly hard to do that.  But now I know why that is.  Doesn’t make it easier, but at least I know, it’s only in my head.

Merry it was.

So much work goes into Christmas. It’s really the ultimate deadline. Being trained in design, I work best under deadline I’ll admit. And Christmas morning simply must be magical. At least it feels that way when you have a wee one (or even not so wee as she’s getting) who cannot wait to see what Santa brings.

Two days before Christmas, neighbors had a party. I’ve struggled with getting into the spirit this year, but the 23rd was my last day at work until the new year and I finally felt I could throw myself into the last of it. The party really did alot to buoy my spirits – we really do live in the greatest neighborhood, at least the greatest one for us. We have a core group of friends here that are more than friends, they are family. Year in and year out, we have various holiday traditions with them – not just Christmas, but birthdays, Halloween, the Fourth of July. We find reasons to celebrate every holiday.

A few of the neighborhood kiddos were across the street and threatened to crash the grown up party (All of our celebrations include the kids, with the exception of this party. We figure we are allowed ONE night to ourselves all year, yes?). They did wander over for some dessert, because Edie knew I had baked one of my fabulous chocolate cakes and she was hell bent on having some, but for the most part, they stayed out of our hair.

There was much joy and merriment and I am blaming that oyster shooter for sending me over the edge of being slightly overserved. Needless to say, I felt the effects of it a teensy little bit the next day, which may have slightly impeded my to-do list until later in the day.

Betty called and invited us down to bake cookies with her Christmas Eve. Baking cookies is something we try to do together every year and so I knew, this was it. So we went down and baked cookies, had some holiday cheer and while we were there, Virginia popped over and by the time it was all said and done, Edie had agreed to go to the 10 pm Christmas Eve service with her.

I did have every intention of going along as well, but when we came home to make our sugar cookies for Santa and dinner and start the cake for tomorrow’s dinner and the dough for the cinnamon rolls for breakfast, we got as far as popping the cookies in the oven when I realized, it wasn’t on. It was 6:30 Christmas eve and I didn’t have an oven.

I calmly tried to not freak out, as Pat ripped apart the entire range. As parts came off, I realized it had been a while since I had really cleaned my oven and stove and so my clean kitchen OCD kicked in and there I was, scrubbing away, mentally rethinking my entire Christmas Eve & Christmas Day menu based on not having an oven. Black Forest Torte became Julia Child’s Chocolate Mousse, Oyster Dressing became Oyster Stew, the cinnamon rolls could become french toast or pancakes. Not as Christmas-y, but hey….I was in crisis mode. The sugar cookies got moved onto a smaller tray and went into the toaster oven while all this was happening.

Finally, inexplicably, the oven turned on. We think maybe the emergency shut off valve got knocked (possibly when Edie, by her own admittance, climbed on it to get the brown sugar out of the upper cabinet for Betty’s chocolate chip cookies earlier in the day). Whatever it was, the oven was now on and bonus, scrubbed clean.

We didn’t sit down for Christmas Eve dinner until after 9. I hadn’t even started my Black Forest Torte, so when Addison came to pick Edie up for church, I had to bow out.

Instead, I got that cake in the oven and then decided to finish scrubbing down the rest of my kitchen. At 10 pm Christmas Eve night.

In my defense, everything was wrapped. I couldn’t put it all out until she came home from church, because she is still a firm believer in Mr. Claus. No way was I going to ruin that simply because she had gone to church this year. I was so tired I really just wanted to crawl into bed, but I had to keep going….and so mopping the kitchen floor it was.

Thankfully, staying out until almost midnight 2 nights in a row made her sleep in Christmas morning until after 8. Delightful. She had a wonderful Christmas, the oven turned on Christmas morning for those cinnamon rolls to bake and all was right in the world.

It was just the 3 of us this year. Years past, we invite anyone we know who is going to spend Christmas away from their family. Edie was quite disappointed it was just the three of us this year, but Pat explained, it’s a good thing. It means we don’t know anyone who needs to spend the day with us, everyone is with loved ones.

Up until Christmas Eve, I couldn’t narrow it down to what I wanted to make for Christmas dinner. I couldn’t find a local ham, I don’t like beef all that much, and Pat suggested fish. Christmas Eve, I ran down to the local seafood shop and got some nice fish, some trout actually. That was our main course, with some of Smiley’s oysters in a nice oyster stew as our first course. Because of course I have to know where our food comes from at all times, well, with a few small exceptions here & there. And while Pat spent an hour Christmas Eve pulling my range apart, some of those mental menu reworkings stuck.

Last Christmas, I was recovering from stomach surgery. Not only was I limited on what I could eat, I had zero energy. I was forced to scale back. This year, I realized, that was not a bad way to be. We had mimosas, Betty came by for our traditional mid-day cheer and exchange of gifts, but otherwise, we didn’t bother to get dressed until dinner and we just lounged all day. I followed the lesson from last year and dinner was easy but good. I put all my effort into dessert, because quite frankly, I can bake some chocolate cake to knock your socks off and I love chocolate cake. This years may have been the best yet. I remembered to undercook it and avoided those crispy edges. (I still could have pulled it out sooner and will make the note on the recipe.)

So, our Christmas was cozy and really sort of perfect. I love spending our day with just us. It makes it so relaxing, and with the snow off and on all day, it was quite conducive to not getting dressed.

The magic really is in what Santa Claus brings. Everything else is the cherry on top for her. It didn’t matter the only present I made her was an photo album from a website. Santa ‘set up’ her Itunes under her profile on our main family computer and loaded it with music she requested. So what if some of that music makes us cringe. The fact that she has her own musical opinion and taste is what matters. And now she knows how to load her own music onto her mp3 player.
And her belief in Santa is strong, at least until next year.

And all that work? Worth it.

Holiday Tea Party.

The activity in her advent calendar the other day was to have a tea party. We spent the day baking cookies and when I wasn’t looking, she set some things out she wanted to use. Like the tea cups Uncle Dave gave her last year. And my new pink depression glass cake stand. And ‘the fancy sugar bowl’.

It was a lovely little tea party.

My very own elf.

I have dream child. I do. I feel that when I admit this to people who don’t know me or her very well, it sounds slightly pretentious. However, after you get to know her, you start to realize this is indeed, just the plainly spoken truth. Sure she has her moments, they all do. But overall, I have been blessed with a wonderful child who is indeed dreamy.
I mention this because she turns into the most magical, helpful little elf this time of year. She loves to help with Christmas. First up is the tree.

She and her father go cut down a tree every year. They find the best one out there, cut it down and trek home with it. Once they get it inside, I put the lights on. She lets me dig out and hang the first ornament – always the Styrofoam ball and pipe cleaner beauty that my father made my parents first Christmas they were married. I always hang it on the inside, near the trunk, in a tucked away spot, just so I know it’s there. I’m pretty sure it’s the only one left out of the whole collection they made. I remember a good portion of our ornaments growing up were from that craft session and over the years, they either fell apart (My dad always commented on how surprised he was that spray paint made Styrofoam deteriorate.) or just seemed to disappear.

After that though, she gets to work. She’s not entirely comfortable hanging the vintage Shiny Brights, or any of the breakable ones for that matter. After all, she’s only 8. But she loves digging through the boxes of ornaments we’ve amassed over our lifetimes, especially the Hallmark ones we got as kids. She does a great job of decorating the tree. She has a really fantastic sense of style and proportion and design. She’s quite good at making sure the ornaments are spread out and not just all on one spot on the tree. Seriously, dream child.

Left to my own devices, I will take my time decorating the tree. I tend to get a little OCD about the placement of each and every ornament. I will hang and rearrange for days on end. She has very little patience for this and so we compromise by spending 2 days putting the tree up. And she does most of it.

I mentioned she was dreamy, yes?

Up next is the Christmas card. A few years ago, she came home from school to find cards, envelopes and mailing labels in neat piles on the dining room table. She sat down and took it upon herself to get those puppies ready to mail and has done so every Christmas since. This year though, she’s decided to seize creative control. After informing me that she was ‘not comfortable being the center of attention’, she announced that if our Christmas card was to be a picture of her, it needed to be of the entire family. I tried telling her no one wants to see me & daddy’s faces, they know what we look like, but she wouldn’t hear it. She refused to cooperate any time the camera came out, guessing that I was going to try for a sneaky photo. I really loathe having my picture taken, as does her father, so while I know she comes by it honestly, it doesn’t make it easier. I have a slew of family portraits dating since pretty much her birth, where she refuses to smile for the camera. There are the straight face pictures, the pouty pictures and then the out right scowl pictures that make me wonder what sort of teenager she’s going to turn into. A particular favorite has a 2 year old not only scowling, but curling her little fists up into balls, as if to say, get these people away from me. Of course, Pat & I are grinning quite happily into the camera in every single one. I finally caved and said fine, we’ll do it your way, but you have to smile.

Smile she did. Although when I suggested ‘outsourcing’ the card this year, both she & her father rebelled. Every year, I have designed and printed our cards in what most of our friends and family tell us is the best holiday card they get. There is a source of pride to it I suppose. But it’s also alot of work. We send an insane amount of cards and it takes an entire day of babysitting the printer to make it happen. I finally uploaded pictures to Snapfish the other day and made her a photo book. They sent coupons for a freebie, so I made another one as a gift for another family member. I got really comfortable with this, which is why I made the suggestion of perhaps having someone else print our card …..”You want our card to look like everyone elses? It won’t be handmade if you do that. It just won’t be the same. The website name will be all over the front of the card.” They had a number of arguments against this idea. In the end, I caved. I’ll do it by hand. And my little elf will help.

I love that she loves to help so much this time of year. She generally is helpful, but at Christmas, she really kicks it up a notch. I’m pretty sure she’s going to start hounding us to wrap presents soon – she always does. She encourages us to finish shopping early and then she somehow ends up wrapping every gift that’s not for her. She’s very helpful with the baking cookies part too. Every year, she takes just a little bit more on, of her own accord. Every year, I’m delighted to share these traditions. And the work. Let’s face it, Christmas is a lot of work. I’m quite grateful to my Christmas elf who works so hard to make sure we have a good one.

Starting.

I’ll admit it. I’ve never made my child a baby book. I have one and I have stashed things in it, but I’ve never spent much time putting together. Putting together photo albums? Ha! Edie’s baby pictures are in boxes on the shelves under the stairs. Anything since I moved up to the digital age are stored on my hard drive. I know, I know. I’m awful about printing any out. The only current pictures of Edie on display are some awful school pictures or ones friends have taken and printed out for us. Bad mother, I know. And I have one child. I have no excuses.

I keep saying I’m going to print some out. This year I really wanted to make Edie a book of pictures. My mom used to make them for her and I know she enjoys them, so I promised myself I’d do this. Even signed up for snapfish and got on their deals mailing list.

Tonight, I am uploading pictures from our NYC trip to their website. I intend to make a nice picture book for Edie of our trip. One she can pull off a shelf and look at time and time again. I need to do more of this. I need to upload more pictures and have them printed. This is me starting…….

I can’t wait to see how it turns out. Even better, I can’t wait to see how much she likes it.