Gingerbread treats

Yesterday I had a rare day at home. Almost spoiled by a last minute (8am!) call from the principal asking if I could sub. I said yes, then no, then felt like a crazy person, but settled on no because I was really, really looking forward to a day at home. It’s been awhile!

I got caught up on a few things, but mostly spent the day preparing this:

gingerbread surprise

A gingerbread surprise to welcome them home.

Making the dough, rolling, cutting, baking, preparing icing, gathering toppings… all for a sweet surprise for my little ones. I also made salad and exercised, to somewhat balance out the sugary day.

The kids were THRILLED when they came in the door! They did their after school jobs lightening quick and were decorating in no time. :)

Eve, just getting started.

Eve, just getting started.

Lex at work.

Lex at work.

sweet

What a sweet table! :)

messy

It got a little messy. I was really glad I thought to give them trays to work on!

eves bag

Eve made a bag on her gingerbread baby. Of course, with the way she creates, by the time she was done decorating it you could no longer see the bag. :)

cookies

Cookies galore!

done

All done! It took us all afternoon, but we all had fun.

We decided that we didn’t need 41 heavily decorated gingerbread cookies in our house (ok, that part was my decision!) so we packaged them up with a gingerbread poem and a holiday greeting and brought them to school this morning.

packed up

Gingerbread boys and girls headed off to school!

Presents under the tree

Sweet presents have started piling up under the tree. Lex brought home a gift from school a few days ago and Eve brought one home today. Eve made a gift for Lex and tucked it under the tree. Lex made Lego treasures that he sweetly tucked into each stocking. It’s beginnings to feel a lot like Christmas.

presents

Sweat treasures under the tree


Plus we had a visit today from FedEx and UPS, in addition to the regular mail delivery!

A quick rant

I haven’t ranted here in awhile. I’d love to say it’s because life has been all roses and sunshine, but mostly it’s just because I’ve been too busy! :) There have been lots of roses and sunshine, or Christmas lights and fairy books, but that’s not all that’s going on.

This evening’s rant concerns parenting books. I’ve read a few in my day. Not all, but many, and there is one thing they all have in common. They offer up a nice “easy” solution to a very specific problem, but they never address the fall-out. For example: mealtime in my house is a recurring issue. Every book I’ve ever read says that if the child is behaving appropriately then you take away the meal. That’s it. Dinner is over. Easy peasy. Right? What they fail to discuss is what comes next. Do they assume the child will say, “Ok, thanks for dinner. I’ll go put myself to bed now.” Or, “Meal time is over? Oh, I guess I’ll try harder tomorrow. Good night.” NO! Of course not. Instead what happens is that fighting ensues. The child won’t leave the table. The child cries, knocks things over, hides under the table, bugs other people, etc. Now we are in tantrum mode, leaving you the recommended option of ignoring or physically removing the child.

Now we flip to “tantrum” in the parenting books and they all say the same thing. Ignore the tantrum. Walk away. Don’t engage. This may work in the grocery store (the most common example in the books) when you want the child to recover from the tantrum and follow you, but it sure as heck DOESN’T work at the dinner table when you just want the child to go away. Maybe you can ignore a bit of crying in the other room, but it’s mighty hard to ignore the kid under the table, kicking siblings’ chairs, crying, and being generally disruptive. By this point everyone is engaged! Ignore. Walk away. Tell me how that’s supposed to work?

So instead one falls back to threats (whee!) and physically removing the child. My kids are getting a bit big for that option! Threats get them out of the room, but that only serves to move the fight upstairs where screaming and door slamming ensues.

All because you followed that one sweet little piece of advice and removed the plate when the behavior at the table was unacceptable.

Just once I’d like to see a parenting expert walk through the whole process, with a real kid who escalates and pushes back, literally and figuratively! That’s probably where they get paid the big bucks though, Super Nanny style.

Maybe they’re all full of it, or maybe I’m just reading the wrong books!

Ok, rant over. In general my kids are wonderful, of course! There are just those few nagging issues that, when I try to address them, invariably escalate, leaving me exhausted and wishing I hadn’t bothered in the first place.

It reminds me of a stormy night, seven years ago. Lex was a newborn and we were driving somewhere in the dark. A friend of mine from parenting class called and we chatted a bit. Alan was driving, don’t worry. Lightening was everywhere. She was about 15 years older than me and a very nervous mother. She called, in tears of frustration, and kept telling me, “The parenting books are wrong! They all lie!” Now… if only I could remember what words of reassurance I offered her. (just kidding, I know and of course those same words apply to my rants as well.)

Ok, seriously done because now my rant has turned into a ramble. Read below for a happy Holiday Milkshake post. :)

Holiday Milkshakes

Today’s advent box activity said to “Drink Holiday Milkshakes” so we whipped up some milkshakes for afternoon snack. Vanilla bean cream, peppermint extract, crushed candy canes, and milk. Topped with fresh whipped cream and sprinkles of their choosing and a candy cane on the side. They were both very excited! (well, Lex was excited once I told him every single ingredient in the milkshake and the whipped cream, he’s definitely my boy there!) Serve with popcorn and see two very happy children!

sprinkles

Adding sprinkles

milkshakes

Milkshakes

yummy

Yummy! Happy Holidays!

Skating

We made it, barely, to the Skate with Santa program this evening. It’s really hard getting out the door with kids in the evening. We were all tired from the day. I worked all day and after school I took Lex to get his hair cut so we didn’t really have much time at home. I asked them to do two simple chores before dinner and they didn’t do them, or homework, so we had a bit of a struggle, but eventually we made it. It was one of those situations were I wasn’t looking forward to the getting there or the home afterwards parts, but I knew we would all have fun when we were there. So we went, and we had fun. Turns out Santa doesn’t know how to ice skate. He sat off the rink and was available for (expensive) photos. I don’t think many people did it. He kept trying to talk with Eve while we were getting her skates on and off. She giggled, but wasn’t interested in engaging with him. :)

Here are a few pics and a short video. In the video you can see Lex in the middle wearing a bright orange hat. We forgot helmets. Oops! Several grown-ups there were concerned for their little noggins, but fortunately we all survived!

Lex

Lex

Eve

Eve

I’m always amazed at how quickly they pick things up! It was also fun to see some of their classmates who were practically born on skates. Skating is a big deal around here. These kids were playing tag and hide-n-seek and other silly things, all on skates. They were as fluid on skates as they are in sneakers!

An odd day and a quick catchup

Hi! I feel like I haven’t been here in awhile. I see it’s only been two days, but I guess life feels busy. Imagine that!

We got some snow last night and had a two hour delay this morning. I think it’s our first! I had to explain to the kids what that meant. They were pretty thrilled. They played chess, decorated each other, had pancakes for breakfast, and went sledding. They were less thrilled when I said it was time to go to school!

Early morning chess game

Early morning chess game

christmas eve

Christmas Eve

little elf

A sweet little elf

sledding

First sledding of the year!

I was subbing as an aide today so I got to experience the schedule shifting first hand… without having to deal with it personally! :) They were shifting schedules to accommodate the delay, but also to accommodate classroom meetings with the school counselor. She met with each class to discuss the happenings in CT last Friday. I was with the 4th grade for their meeting and was saddened to hear how much those kids have seen and heard! I told my kids the bare minimum and only because I knew they would hear it eventually and I wanted them to hear it first from me. It was a popular topic at school today. :( Luckily we have excellent counseling and I think it was handled well. They decided not to talk with the kindergarten classes today as apparently the kindergarteners weren’t talking about it. No need to address a problem that doesn’t exist!

Think about a school full of kids, one week before Christmas, riled up from a tragedy, and coming in late due to the first snowfall of the year. So we did that. I had recess duty and got to watch the excited kids bust out the sleds at school. Several even built snowmen.

After school we met several friends at the science museum. It started as me and a friend, then I mentioned it to the mother of one of Eve’s classmates and she mentioned it to another parent, so we had quite a group.

museum fun

Fun at the science museum! Eve and two of her classmates.

Then home for a fast dinner, shower, and bed. I was so tired I fell asleep with Eve! Poor Lex had to wake me up to remind me to lay with him as well. :)

The calendar for tomorrow is packed FULL, including, hopefully a Skate with Santa! That should be fun. I’m sure there will be pictures.

“The Gingerbread House Incident” and my thoughts on the month of December

Sorry to keep you all waiting. I have TONS of thoughts in my head at any given time. They all merge together, like light merging into a great blank whiteness! Sometimes I’m able to grab one and document it before it disappears into the mental abyss. How’s that for a thought?!

I am currently ignoring the kids while they play with Legos and say silly things to one another. We just had friends over (brother/sister friends who are the same ages/classes as my two!) and now they are tired and relaxing. Just the way I like them. :)

Anyway, on to the actual point of this post. The Great Gingerbread House Incident! Haha… it’s really not all that great, in any sense of the word! Last week we made a gingerbread house. Remember? I was expecting to see the pieces of candy slowly disappearing over time. Heck, I was expecting to aid in that slow disappearance! ;) The next morning was a school day. Eve was sleeping hard in my bed and Alan offered to bring her to school a bit late, while Lex and I got there a bit early because I was subbing that day. When I got home with the kids that evening we discovered that nearly a third of the candy from the house was GONE! I knew Lex didn’t eat it because he was with me the whole time, so I asked Eve about it. She denied it at first, then told me she ate “just a few pieces last night.” I knew that wasn’t true because it was still in one piece that morning. She eventually told me she ate a few pieces that morning. I had assumed Alan also had “a few” pieces. I told her that I was surprised her belly didn’t hurt in school that day. She just shrugged her shoulders, neither confirming nor denying.

Later that night, after they were in bed, I asked Alan about it. He was surprised! Apparently he had not noticed and had not shared in the eating. He did, however, mention that she threw up in the mudroom on their way out! I didn’t bother to ask why he didn’t either a) notice it was minty chocolate vomit or b) keep her home from school if she threw up! Either way, she went to school and apparently felt fine.

The situation here is compounded by the fact that she has been lying quite a bit lately and even stealing on occasion. I hesitate to call it stealing because that seems like such a harsh word for a five year old, but when I talked to the school counselor about it she said to definitely call it stealing and take it seriously. Three* times now Eve has come home with little toys from school. The first time it was just one and I somewhat believed her story that she had found it on the playground. The next day she came home with a whole handful of the same little toys and the exact same playground story. I, of course, no longer believed her. It turns out they came from a bin in her classroom and she returned them to the teacher with an apology. A week later she came home with a handful of similar small toys from a nearby bin in the classroom. Once again she returned them with an apology, and this time with a lot of tears.

So that, combined with the gingerbread house and the hidden candy canes makes Eve quite the untrustworthy little imp these days!

She is so cute and she made a hair brush out of Legos.  How can she possibly be a sneaky liar?  We won't survive the teenage (preteen?) years if we don't nip this in the bud soon!

She is so cute and she made a hair brush out of Legos. How can she possibly be a sneaky liar? We won’t survive the teenage (preteen?) years if we don’t nip this in the bud soon!

Which leads me to my general opinion of the month of December. I’ll try not to sound too scroogy because I happen to love Christmas, but as a parent it is a very different thing. Only in December do children start each day with a piece of chocolate (yes, I know that is within my control to change) and spend the month doing different and exciting and often exhausting activities. Only in December do kids go through the month torn between the “magic of the season” and their complete rational disbelief. They must doubt the stories and the normally completely trustworthy grown-ups. Only in December is the house turned upside down and filled with bright lights and fragile decorations. The grown-ups are stressed out and hurried, there is more sugar in one month than in the whole rest of the year, and I set out a beautiful “decoration” on the table that is made entirely of sugar and then tell two kids not to touch it. Yeah, right?!

I realize that as a parent, Christmas is largely mine to create. We don’t do a lot of the fun and exciting things that many other families do. The Elf on the Shelf does not visit our house and I don’t push the Santa story too much. We have a tree, of course, but I try not to over do it on decorations around the house. I do supply most of the sugar content for the month because I love to bake for Christmas.

So we have excitement, sparkly new things to touch, sugar to eat, and a bit of confusion/magic/disbelief surrounding the holiday, then we coop them up inside because it’s actually December in Vermont, and ask them to sit still in school and do their homework at night. It just makes for a strange month. Ho ho ho and fa la la!

* FOUR TIMES! It is evening now. I didn’t get a chance to finish this blog post earlier. While putting Eve to bed I happened across another bunch of those little toys from school. She told me she took them at the same time she took the last batch. Seems she failed to mention them to me when she was returning the last batch. However, at this point I really have no idea what to believe from her. Sigh. Then, to add insult to injury, after we had a nice talk about how serious and wrong stealing is, I put the toys at the top of the stairs to take down with me later. While I was laying with Lex, Eve got up to use the bathroom and sneakily took the toys back!! She hid them in her drawer and said “nothing” when I asked what she was doing with her drawers in the dark. They will be returned to school in the morning. Any words of advice from you teachers out there?

Holiday treats and advent boxes

This year I’m doing something a little different in the advent boxes. They still get a piece of chocolate every day at 6am, don’t worry, but instead of the tiny toys I put in the boxes in the past (and regretted for the rest of the year as I constantly found them underfoot) I decided to put slips of paper with a holiday activity for the day. The kids have taken the change quite well. Some activities go over better than others, though we haven’t gotten to the “chose one toy to donate” day yet! ;) The “drink hot chocolate with candy canes” day was a hit! Today was “make a special holiday treat” and I thought it would be a good one. I gave them three options this morning and they couldn’t decide so I ended up buying supplies for all three at the store today. Mostly because I wanted to make all three!

This afternoon they came home from school and they both had other plans. Lex is working on a time crossing paper airline (paper planes that travel through time). Eve was working on a present for Lex (more on their sweet presents later) so I ended up making the holiday treat myself! Hmm… they both thought that was the best option. Turns out it was pretty messy so maybe it was best I did it alone. Oh well. At least we all hung out together and chatted and listened to holiday music and everyone had fun. That’s what really matters anyway.

santa treats

Santa treats

Now, about that treat. Once again I found something cute on Pinterest and then tried to wing it from memory. I never rarely read the directions, I just peek at the picture, scan the ingredients, and go for it!

Ho Ho Ho...

Ho Ho Ho…

Sooo… as I was putting these together I realized that they don’t quite look like Santa hats. I sort of remembered them not exactly looking like Santa hats anyway, but mine were a little bit more of a stretch. After I put the kids to bed I fired up the computer again, went back to the site, and realized I was putting the marshmallow in the wrong place. Oops! Oh well. They are cute and tasty and Alan recognized them as Santa hats when he got home, so I’m going to call this a success! :)

kids

I’ll have that one, please!

leftover candy pizza

What do you do with the leftover melted chocolate, sprinkles, and crumbs from last week’s peppermint bark? Make a leftover candy pizza!