Enjoying the Small Things

Enjoying the Small Things

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Hit the Road: Family Adventuring on Instagram

December 15, 2015 By Kelle

Tracking PixelGrowing up, the day after Christmas meant one thing: balling up in a pathetic heap of sadness as I mourned the end of Christmas and fully welcomed post-holiday depression. It didn’t even matter that my birthday came four days later–I took Debbie Downer to the moon. 364 more days to Christmas = the depths of despair. Now that I’m a grown lady, I know that we have some control over our feelings, and that there’s much to be enjoyed in any given day. It also helps that we started a tradition a few years ago of packing our bags and hitting the road for some family adventure post twinkle fest. And that has to be one of my most favorite things in the world–hitting the road and adventuring with my family whether it’s a quick staycation or a long road trip to far off places.

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We’ve stashed a lot of memory miles over the years and look forward to the explorations 2016 holds, which brings me to an exciting partnership opportunity I’m thrilled to announce. I’ll be joining some other family adventurers over at Alamo Rent A Car’s Instagram account next year for all the inspiration you need to get out the door and explore with your family. From little trips to nearby cities to bucket list destination vacations, Alamo’s Instagram account will be your travel guide next year, providing adventure inspiration for families–fun photos, packing and travel tips and ideas for making family adventures more meaningful and fun, and a community of explorers who know that it’s less about the destination and more about the journey there.

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Whether you’ll be exploring more of your own state next year or hope to travel a little beyond the lines, Alamo’s Instagram is going to make exploring with your family even more fun for you–help you find those adventures and drink every last drop of what they have to offer.

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So pull your phone out, follow their feed and get ready to join us as you find your own ways to explore the world with your family and write your own stories of hitting the road.

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I call shotgun!

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Nobody’s crying after Christmas.

Filed Under: Travel 4 Comments

Last Minute Kid Gift Guide

December 14, 2015 By Kelle

I bring you good tidings tonight, exemplified A): in my ability to casually use the phrase “good tidings” and B): by this Christmas angel…

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Lainey announced to me a bit ago that she put Christmas stickers on “every single light switch in the house–even the one behind the washer in the laundry room,” and from the quick glance I just made in my office, I’m estimating 6 hours of scrubbing sticker residue and half a bottle of Goo Gone in my future, but you know what? Gotta hand it to Sister for her Christmas spirit. Let there be tacky snowmen on the light switches. Let there be a festive display of this blessed season, and yes I just said BLESSED SEASON. I have no organized collection of thoughts to offer you tonight, but I have a grateful little heart that’s bursting at the seams with love for tinsel and people and music and Christmas footy pajamas that are too big and hang off Dash’s feet like floppy mittens soaked from a day of sledding. Also, I made a pact with myself that all written similes this month keep a winter theme. Hence the floppy mittens. Sorry. Can you handle a stream-of-consciousness bundle of holiday crazy? If not, click away. Go check your e-mail or “Alt-Tab” over to the Christmas JibJab video you just made.

Which is what my kids want to do every second of every day. Christmas Jib Jab. Except Nella can never remember the word “Jib Jab” so she says “Sponge Jab.”

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I’ve seen so many of these over the years, and they still make me smile. If we know you and you are especially reserved and quiet, know that your photo is the first one we pick to be the head on the crazy Christmas disco dancer.

Our Christmas entertainment this year? Waking up to see what toy’s been shoved onto the Nutcracker stage in the village. Thus far this year the ballerinas have performed with Barbie, Ken, Paquel, a plastic dinosaur, Tommy Ketchup Shopkin, a zhu-zhu pet, an American Girl doll shoe and Batman.

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And before I run off to finish watching Elf and cut more snowflakes, a few fun last-minute kid gifts if you need ideas:

 

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1. Alphabuild Learning Toy. A brilliant and fun learning toy, this magnetic set comes with all the pieces you need to make every letter of the alphabet, or just play freestyle and make whatever you like.

2. Hot Chocolate Design Mini Chocolaticas Popcorn Shoes. Packaging Win? These shoes come in a hot cocoa carton. I cannot take how fun these are–mismatched themes like popcorn and best friends and sweet watermelon. Give them a party on their feet this Christmas.

3. Melissa & Doug Garbage Truck. We love the Melissa & Doug vehicles–solid construction, durable and simple designs. This one has a little garbage lift that really works.

4. Alice & Ames Twirly Dress. The twirliest of twirly dresses, this is a classic for little girls, and it comes in several colors. My girls wore theirs to the Nutcracker this year, and it continues to be a favorite pick, especially for Nella who will point to her closet and demand, simply, “Twirly.”

5. Best Choice Products Walking Dinosaur T-Rex. This year, our Dash gift picks are based on one question: “does it move?” This ferocious but friendly dinosaur does which will have all the little kids screaming and running, pretending to be afraid but really…just having fun.

6. Djeco Vehicles Tap Tap. A great occupational therapy toy for any kid to practice fine motor skills, these build & design kits come with interchangeable pieces that lock into place on the cork board with a simple tap-tap of the included hammer and board tacks.

7. Jumbo Checkers Rug Game . Think Cracker Barrel breakfasts. Strike up a fire Christmas morning and after the kids open gifts, you can take your turn playing winner on this fun and affordable floor checkers game.

8. Melissa & Doug Magic Kit. Abracadabra! Lainey is all about magic tricks this year, and this set puts a slew of kid-friendly tricks together. And once again–great construction and quality from Melissa & Doug.

 

And finally, a little bit janky video but all the Christmas feels from the past few weeks. It’s not all twinkly and beautiful around here, and Lord knows we have our lows, our sads, our just-trying-to-keep-it-togethers. But there are so many things to celebrate…we find them.

 

I have to add one disclaimer before I gush just a little more about Christmas…
If you don’t celebrate Christmas, please just smile at my foolishness this time of year and know that I can’t turn it off but I also love your Hanukkah and your Kwanzaa and whatever it is you do to celebrate tradition and family and love. The world is big, big, big. Also, twinkle lights are universal, you know. Because…stars.

With that said, comment, comment with the good stuff because I love to read other people’s opinions on this:

Tell me!

3 Favorite Christmas Songs
3 Favorite Christmas Movies
1 Favorite Christmas tradition that makes you feel in love with the world.

I’ll go first because I’m the obnoxious kid with my hand all up there waving, waiting for the teacher to pick me.

Songs: Judy Garland’s “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” Nat King Cole’s “Cradle in Bethlehem” and any choir’s rendition of “Lo How Arose E’er Blooming”
Movies: The Family Stone, Elf, and the newer Miracle on 34th Street with that hot guy from The Practice and that cute little girl from Mrs. Doubtfire who says, “You forgot to thew up the turkey’th bottom.”
One Favorite Christmas tradition that makes you feel in love with the world: North Pole Party…coming this weekend.

Filed Under: Holiday 58 Comments

Going Home, Coming Home

December 10, 2015 By Kelle

I flew home to Michigan early this week to celebrate my dad’s retirement party and flew home last night, truly full after some heavy family time and all the Christmassy things we packed into a few short days. As evidenced: my dad and Gary picked me up from the airport wearing Santa hats and had another one waiting for me in the car. We pretty much just rode a virtual sleigh for the rest of the week.

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Also, this is what “Act Normal” looks like for us:

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After my initial Oh-my-God, I’m-in-a-box-that’s-flying-through-the-sky-and-held-up-by-nothing-but-some-opposite-forces observation/panic that begins all of my flights home, I went into the familiar reflection that the space in the sky between two homes provides. I’ve been there many times before, mentally transitioning between going home to be a daughter and coming home to be a mother; feeling small and safe and protected at the same time I feel large, the safe place, the protector.

Seated on the plane, I fished through my purse to find a pen and smiled when I pulled out the one my dad let me use the other day—the one he retrieved from the inside pocket of his sport jacket and handed to me, like he’s done many times, with, “Always have a good pen on you, Kelle. I always have two. And don’t settle for those cheap things.” In our family, we talk about pen types like car models. This one was a Pilot Precise Rolling Ball—V7 to be exact. Glides nice. Thin tip but good distribution of ink. I opened my journal and wrote a few memories I wanted to remember from the week. Falling asleep next to the fire with my siblings in the same room. Feeling the cold wind behind me from the sliding glass door I purposely left open while I wrapped up tighter in the electric blanket, the same one I used through winters when I was in college. Sipping drinks around the table at my favorite restaurant on Main Street, telling stories about our childhood, remembering my grandparents, watching my dad pull out his credit card and hand it to the waitress with a proud “I got this” as if the simple act of paying for his kids’ meals gave him a good surge of that protector/safe place/largeness that parenthood grants. And yet I saw just moments earlier—when we were talking about his mom—the need to be held up, to belong to someone, that never really goes away.

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I heard a lot of stories this week. At my dad’s retirement party, friends he’s worked with over the years, patients whose hands he’s held through losing loved ones and family who drove in special to celebrate, all shared stories about the last thirty years since he started his job. “I wanted to tell you how I met your dad,” one woman explained to me, her eyes already pooling with tears. “Many years ago, I was here in the hospital and had just received some really sad news. I was making my way through the main hallway back to my car, and everything suddenly overwhelmed me. My knees buckled and I started to fall to the ground, but someone caught me. Out of nowhere, a hand grabbed my elbow and lifted me up. I turned around, and there was your dad–a complete stranger. He lifted me up that day, he helped me, and I came back to volunteer for him here later. I just thought you should know that.”

In a way, I already did.

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Whether it’s holiday nostalgia or the evaluation of where we are and where we’re going at the end of the year, I think a lot about belonging this time of year. I want my kids to feel a strong sense of home, of belonging to this family and being loved by us. I cozy up everything—hang twinkle lights, play music, tuck them in at night with winter poems. Bake cookies, keep traditions, watch movies snuggled into the couch with blankets, searing memories into my own minds as well as theirs. At the same time, I feel my own needs to belong—I miss my family back home, I want my mom’s cinnamon rolls, I remember what it feels like to fall asleep with new pajamas, snuggled in bed with my brother and sister, waiting for the magic the next morning will bring. I think about what this all means—the holiday, the things I used to believe, the things I believe now. Who do we really belong to? I feel strong and secure in my uncertainty, in the openness of all the possibilities and yet this time of year, sometimes I miss the ceiling and walls of the church where I felt scared/confined/judged but also quiet/inspired, especially when no one talked, when candles were lit on Christmas Eve and the flicker of lights would dance on the stained glass windows. Where I could close my eyes and listen to the choir sing “Silent Night” and for a moment feel like I completely belonged…to what, I don’t know, but I felt it. I feel sad especially this time of year for the people who don’t feel a place of belonging, and in my own little holiday quest to make my children feel warmth, to find my own warmth, I try and let that sadness seep in—to teach it to my kids—because it’s important.

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(My brother and I picked out this house–the one at the top of the hill, with the fire crackling inside. This one’s home.)

I let it all seep in last night, while I temporarily belonged to the middle space of clouds and dark sky lit only by the tiny blinking lights of the plane’s wing. The woman in the seat next to me could have easily been my grandma—late 70’s probably, her white hair brushed and sprayed into a perfect round fluff like the top of a cotton candy cone; her hands, like my grandma’s, maps to where she’s been—lots of wrinkles, faded brown spots and large purple veins that run like rivers from her fingers to her wrist. I was too tired to talk, but I looked over nosily at the Woman’s Day magazine she was intently reading, the open spread full of holiday recipes and craft how-to’s: Spiced Cider, Scented Sachets, Cozy Mug Cuffs. She dog-eared the page, and I fist-bumped her in my mind for her holiday spirit before trying to figure out which of the three ungodly sleep-on-a-plane positions I’d attempt (weird side curl, crooked neck hunch or seat tray head drop). I opted for the latter, opened my tray table and hunched over it, stuffing my scarf between my head and my crossed arms. I didn’t think I’d stay there long but found myself waking up, what had it been—30, 40 minutes later?—opening my eyes to the horror that I had slumped over and was resting the entire weight of my head in the woman’s lap. Embarrassed, I slowly resurrected, yawned and tried to play it off. “Sorry, guess I was more tired than I realized,” I quipped.

She smiled a smile I’ve been lucky to see many times in my life. “I was holding you up,” she answered.

There’s so much to belong to, there’s more than one thing holding us up. The forces of flight, the people we love, the stranger next to us who shows up out of nowhere and lifts us, the stranger next to us who needs us to show up and lift her. We belong to all of them.

The wheels of the plane found the ground, the rumble of the landing quieted, and I pulled out my phone to text my dad:

Landed. I’m home.

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Filed Under: Family, Holiday, Home 39 Comments

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