Thursday, January 6, 2011
Snow, snow, snow
Adventures in Sunbeams
I have been counting down to the day that we would switch to 9:00 a.m. church for quite some time now. I thought it would be the end of all my Sunday drama. Unfortunately, I overlooked the fact that a new year also meant a new class and new teachers for Oliver as he would be leaving behind the nursery forever. When I explained to him what would be happening he insisted that he was not grown up yet, he was still little and as such belonged in the nursery. So, I went and sat with him on the front row of Primary to see if I could convince him to stay. (This was quite a switch for us because he was usually running down the hall to nursery before the closing prayer was over in Sacrament meeting). He wasn't doing too well with the switch until his new teachers showed up, it was a husband and wife team and she happens to be drop-dead gorgeous. Once he got a look at her he leaned over to me and whispered that "the mommy teacher is really cool". He immediately dismissed me to go to my own class. The last thing I caught was her husband smiling and Ollie and Oliver giving him the evil eye.
I thought that his teacher's good looks had solved our problem, but no such luck. After we put him to bed Sunday night he came back out of his room to inform us that he didn't need any new teachers because he already knew everything that his teachers told him. My attempts at teaching him some humility fell on deaf ears so we finally convinced him that he needed to go to class to help the other kids who didn't know as much as him.
Once again I thought the problem was solved, but apparently he was still perturbed and decided to take the matter to a higher source. The next day at dinner Ollie was saying the prayer, and I quote "thank you for my new teachers, but I don't need any teachers because I already know everything that they told me." It was one of those "Amens" in which much discipline is required to keep a straight face.
I thought that his teacher's good looks had solved our problem, but no such luck. After we put him to bed Sunday night he came back out of his room to inform us that he didn't need any new teachers because he already knew everything that his teachers told him. My attempts at teaching him some humility fell on deaf ears so we finally convinced him that he needed to go to class to help the other kids who didn't know as much as him.
Once again I thought the problem was solved, but apparently he was still perturbed and decided to take the matter to a higher source. The next day at dinner Ollie was saying the prayer, and I quote "thank you for my new teachers, but I don't need any teachers because I already know everything that they told me." It was one of those "Amens" in which much discipline is required to keep a straight face.
Santa
We also listened to a lot of Christmas music and Ollie liked to combine all the different lyrics into his own version of a Christmas song. His favorite is Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, of which he can sing the entire thing - except he changed "yipee to woohoo!" From the beginning, when we explained the whole "Santa" thing to him and had him write a letter Oliver only asked for two things: a concrete mixing truck and a front-end loader. He never wavered once from then on, that was all he wanted and luckily Santa came through for him. We have been mixing concrete and building roads ever since.
Christmas Eve
Christmas Tradition
A Classic
Decked
Isn't it funny how your opinions change as you grow older, or perhaps they just mold around the phase of life that you are in. Either way, I have definitely had a change of heart in regards to Christmas trees. Growing up we had a family tradition of chopping down our own Christmas tree the weekend after Thanksgiving. The hunt was always fun, but the trees were never much to speak of. We called them corner trees, because usually only one side was worth showing off while the others needed to be hidden against a wall. I always begged my parents to get one of the full, bushy trees from the local tree lot instead. As if the sparse, leaning tree wasn't bad enough my mother insisted on mismatched decorations that we had made in preschool and primary throughout the years. I felt that the result was somewhat hideous and couldn't wait to decorate my own matchy-matchy tree.
Fast-forward fifteen years. Our first Christmas in our very own house. We decided that we wanted a real tree this year and after scouting it out I made Sam drive past all the nearby lots to a tree lot I had seen in American Fork that sold the kind of trees that look like you chopped them down yourself; sparse and kind of un-even. I loved it! We put on the lights and let the kids help with the rest. Because they got ripped off and thrown around so much we used only the cheap-o plastic balls from Walmart and after a few days the bottom three feet of the tree was completely empty void of ornaments. To top it all off, we got to add our very first homemade ornament to the tree, a popsicle-stick reindeer that Ollie made in preschool. I thought our tree was perfect. When I visited my mom's house and saw that she had a fluffly, perfect Christmas lot tree covered in matching ornaments and ribbons, I felt so bad for her.
Christmas Light Redemption
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