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happy new year

“save the last dance for me”

New Year’s eve is like every other night; there is no pause in the march of the universe, no breathless moment of silence among created things that the passage of another twelve months may be noted; and yet no man has quite the same thoughts this evening that come with the coming of darkness on other nights. ~Hamilton Wright Mabie

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sense of accomplishment

Well, I finally did it. I grouted the kitchen backsplash tile. It’s only been waiting to be done for, oh, I don’t know, 6 months? :P

It feels good to look at it and know that it’s finally done, but being the perfectionist I am, I see the mistakes I made and the sections that don’t look that good. I think I might have to redo them. Of course, I don’t have any more grout powder left, so I’ll have to get more just to do that… oh well.

anyway, cross something off the list (semi-cross, I still have to caulk and seal it… and mabe redo it… hee hee)

wow, can you believe it, it’s 2007 on Monday. That means it will be 10 years of wedded bliss! :) Amazing.

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vienna

i’ve been trying out vienna this week for aggregating my news feeds, and so far I like it. It kind of looks like iTunes for RSS. check it out, it runs on OS X, and best of all it’s free. And then you can subscribe to my blog and get all instantaneously updated and stuff. cuz you know I’m the coolest. LOL

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kicking

T had a 101F temperature last night. At 12:30, which doesn’t sound that late, but when we just went to sleep at 11:30… grrr. Not a jolly time. N goes to get her, and she comes and sleeps with us. Which, until she settles down, is a lot of head butting N and kicking me in the stomach / back… depending on which way I’m lying.

Let’s just say I was a little tired today, and N even more so.

On the other hand, T slept the latest of all of us (7:20), had a 2 hour afternoon nap, and was full of energy and happy all day. Ah, kids…

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perpetuating the myth

So we survived another Christmas, and I say that in the best way possible. Because Christmas Eve was on a Sunday this year, we had a pretty busy day and evening. After evening service, we drove home the ’scenic’ route, both to ensure the kids fell asleep, and also to pass by Nathan Phillips and the Bay Christmas windows. They did a Narnia theme this year for the windows, and while they were cool, they were not that interesting for little ones, nor were they particularly Christmas-y. J made it to just past the windows before passing out. T took a litlle longer, but was safely asleep by the time we got home. By that I mean she could be moved without waking her. She’s a super light sleeper, so if we’re not careful, we can wake her up if we take her out of the car at the wrong point during her sleep. Which kind of sucks.

Anyway J had been talking all week about putting out some milk and cookies for Santa. She wanted to do it on Monday already! When I asked her where she got the idea from, she said she saw it on TV. Good old TV. Anyway, we decided that we would perpetuate the myth this year. Previously, it hadn’t really come up, because they were either too young, and we had just moved, and Christmas was still kind of a new thing in the kids’ consciousness. Anyway. This year, we did it right. J made a cookie for Santa in her kids program. She had written a note to Santa last week, which read:

FROM J. H.

SANTA I WOULD LIKE A BLASTER

Hm. Ok. By “Blaster” she means one of those big water guns, that everytime she saw in Superstore her Grandpa said, “Hey look, a blaster!” to which she responded with gales of laughter. We’re not big on letting them play with weapons: toys or otherwise. So how to respond? Well, I decided that Santa would leave J a note, explaining why no blaster, thanking her for the cookie (which I found to be sweet, covered in sprinkles and frosted, but lacking in the necessary chocolate to take it over the top), and wishing her a Merry Christmas and so forth.

Christmas morning we awoke, and surprisingly, the kids were not chomping at the bit to go down and open the presents. I expect that will change as they get older. Anyway, as we went down, I led J over to the table, where I had placed her note next to Santa’s note, and the empty cookie plate. I read her the note, and then we opened Santa’s present and looked in their stockings at what Santa brought.

According to my wife, we are reversing their family tradition, which was to have the ‘big present’ be from Santa. We are having the stocking stuffers be from Santa, and the bigger gifts be from us. This year they got books and scissors and a “Lucky Ducks” game from Santa. Maybe this way they won’t put so much expectation on what Santa might bring… and not get too excited or disappointed, either way. We’ll see.

The greater issue is what we say about Santa to our kids, and how long we keep up the myth? I’m guessing that it won’t last for too too long, although I was surprised that J was so into it. I thought she would be more skeptical, since she seems to be so analytical about everything. However, she had little to ask about Santa. I thought she would ask how it was possible, or how he would get in the house, etc. She did ask N what would happen if Santa had to go downstairs to the basement to use the bathroom, which is a totally J kind of oddball question to ask…

The even greater issue is, I wonder if we give more thought to how to explain Santa, than we give to how to explain faith? Without making everything all “Christian-y”, but actively engaging life with faith, living with a radical transformed perspective? Living an alternative life-style to the world’s in the world, rather than creating for ourselves alternatives that are out of the world.

well, it seems that my little blog break is over, J has awoken from a very good and very rare nap. Cheers!

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