Word of the Week: Cosset

cosset : /vt./  to treat as a pet, pamper.  coddle.  overindulge.  dote on, cater to.  cuddle.  nurture.

cosset  /vt./  1.  For Christmas (and much to my delight), David cosseted my vain side and gave me a whole bunch of MAC cosmetics.  Of course I had no idea how to use them properly, so I made an appointment for a make-over at Nordstrom's on Friday morning.  David went with me, and explained that he had bought me all this make-up, but had no idea if he had chosen the right things.  Then he had to step away to take a phone call from work. 

After he left, the girl who was doing my make-up asked, "So did you get anything fun for Christmas, besides a whole lot of MAC cosmetics?" and then before I could answer she said, "That was really nice of your friend." 

I thought, "Friend?!"  And then giggled and hooted inside at her assumption.  

David asked me why I didn't just explain.  I told him it would have blown her mind.  Married 12 years, 4 kids, and still don't know how to put on make-up.  She didn't even think I could manage to keep him as a boyfriend...let alone all the rest.   The kind and merciful thing to do was to leave it alone. 

cosset  /vt./  2.   I have been relishing every minute of the last week...with all of us home, together.  And have spent most of the time cosseting my husband and children.   We have spent hours and hours playing "Ticket to Ride" (US and European versions) and "Mexican Train" and "Settlers" and a whole lot of "Canasta."  David and Caleb even got in one long game of "Axis and Allies."  Hibernation is delightful.

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cosset  /vt./  3.  I took one small break from all that hibernation to cosset my young women and take them ice skating.  We had a great time playing on the ice...especially once I got my skating legs under me again.  I only had one bad fall and thankfully my knitted beanie cosseted my head and saved me from cracking it wide open.

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cosset  /vt./  4.  Real life is going to be a brutal re-entry on Wednesday morning.  I have been completely cosseted this past week and a half...sleeping in, staying up late, pajamas and games all day, everyone home, including David.  Spoiled indeed.  I have been having that melancholy-Sunday-evening-feeling-of-looming-abandonment for the past couple  of days.  Mourning the moving clock and regretting the march of the calendar.  I am definitely dragging my feet and will probably be really and truly grief-stricken by tomorrow evening. 

Hard Knock Life

Savannah got three tickets to Annie for Christmas.   She graciously invited me and Olivia to come with her.

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So last night we went to Gammage (our version of "Broadway") and had a great time together.  The musical was wonderful.  Our seats were not...way up in the balcony, but it didn't matter.  The music was so fun and my girls sang all the way home.  To tell the truth, I did too.

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Afterwards the girls wanted to get autographs, so we waited by the stage door.  They were thrilled to get to meet Molly, Duffy, Tessie, Pepper, Daddy Warbucks, and of course, Annie.  These little girls were only ten...I can't imagine what that life is like touring around America, but we were delighted to enjoy their talents on our night out.  I will never get tired of evenings like this...me with my girls, dressing up, the girls carrying their lip gloss in their little clutches, enjoying the music and beauty of the cultural arts, mothering with a bit of Broadway magic.   No, "I Don't Need Anything But You."

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My Christmas Letter

We've unwrapped and we've feasted.  Our Christmas day is almost over.  I can hear the kids laughing in the other room...with no signs of stopping or heading for bed.  It has been a wonderful Christmas.  The only thing missing was my long winter nap...maybe tomorrow.

Before I leave this holiday, however, I thought I would post my Christmas letter from this year. I sent this out with my cards (some of you have already read it).  Just for the record, this holiday means so much more to me than the tinsel and the gifts.   I am more grateful for my Savior's grace than I can adequately say, but this is my attempt:

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Dear Loved Ones,

Every year I think it’s going to be different. I think, “This year I’m going to write a happy, sugary letter about our magical trip to Disneyland where everything was perfect, even my hair.” But it is not this year. I know you’re all starting to think I just have a bad attitude, and you can imagine the objections voiced by David (bless him), but we are a family acquainted with grief, and through our extremities we have come to know our Savior a little more this year. I offer these two stories as testimony to the things we have learned in much harder and wrenching ways than these…

In December, the elementary school has “Holiday House,” where the kids can bring their money and buy presents for their families. One of our kids announced at dinner one Monday night that her class was going to Holiday House in the morning and she didn’t have any money. David offered to give her some. The next morning she called from the school because she had forgotten her money, and asked me to bring it to her. Are you keeping score? David gave her money. I brought it to school. We are kind and beneficent parents. When I arrived at the school in my pajamas and two-day-old makeup (another point for us…look at that sacrifice!), she was upset (yes, there were tears) and frustrated (yes, there was yelling) and put-out (yes, there was complete meltdown) that I was making her late for class.

What?!!

Where was the kiss? the hug? the “You’re the best, Mom!”? or even the smile?

I mean, look at the score! I have given my whole life for this girl. I was violently ill for a good three weeks just creating her mouth, which was now screaming at me. To say nothing of the ensuing years I have spent attending to all her needs. And now she’s upset because I gave her ten dollars? Surely, I did not deserve this kind of treatment. I could not even look at her. I had to turn my head and wait for her to slam the door.

One day this fall, as I was driving Caleb home from swimming, the discussion turned serious. As the tears slid down his earnest cheeks he explained how he had been having some strange dreams. And then he said, with a heart brimming with heavy burden, “Mom, I think maybe Heavenly Father is trying to tell me something, but I don’t know what it is. I’m worried I can’t understand what He’s telling me.”

My heart broke as I looked at the load my son carries, the ache in his heart to be as perfect as he can, the earnestness with which he has always lived his life. He has lived his ten years with intent, on a mission, like he has something to do and so he better just get about doing it. His guilelessness was my undoing. And I wept for my boy that has a head full of such serious thoughts.

As my heart throbbed and my throat burned, I remembered another boy who came to earth with a heavy mission to fulfill. I saw a little more clearly, what that really cost him. He gave up his whole life, not just his life. And I thought of His mother and wondered about her grief as she watched him grow to manhood with the weight of the entire world on his slender shoulders. With her weight as well. And I wondered how she could stand it.

Look at the score. He came to earth, born with the burden of eternity already on him, bound by his word and his covenant to save us all. And yet, He never looked at the score, never counted the cost, gave everything without requiring anything in return.

As I drove away from my daughter that Tuesday morning, my heart ached and I sobbed all the way home, realizing that I had not treated her as Christ would have, that I could not manage to treat my own precious daughter with true kindness, with true beneficence. My sacrifice was a stingy sham, only an imitation of the real thing. I was awestruck, again, at how Christ does it. How he could make such a complete sacrifice, and then never turn his back when we forget, when we make mistakes, when we are angry about the way He gives his gifts. He never resents us or turns His head. I found this unfathomable. I went home and knelt down and prayed for forgiveness, again. And He graciously granted it, again.

“O to grace, how great the debtor

Daily I’m constrained to be!”

This is why we kneel and worship Him at this Christmas season and always. Because no matter our reaction, his response is always love. I imagine his little newborn heart beating away, already heavy because of what was to come. Not because of destiny, but because of His choice. He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief, and a boy also. We give glory and humble praise to Him who knows how to love us and succor us and save us even when we don’t deserve it, and whose kindness and beneficence are real and everlasting.

With love and wonder at His love,

David, April, Caleb, Olivia, Savannah, and Ethan

Beauty Routine or Salad Bar Accident?

Last night as we were locking up and turning off lights David said, "Ap, come here.  You've got to see this."

I followed him into the girls' bedroom and found this:

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The other day Olivia asked me if I knew what a facial was.  Apparently it's been on her mind.  My favorite part is that she made little holes in the middle of the cucumbers so she could see.  That, and how very wilted the cucumbers are...we had a veggie tray at dinner and she must have surreptitiously taken a couple of extra cucumbers and hidden them away for later.  (Can you just see the wedding video?)

Savannah went for the more traditional (though admittedly less green) method of beauty sleep.

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Yes, I am completely in-over-my-head with these two.  Forget about sugar plums, these two slept with visions of their sparkly eyes and radiant beauty melting the hearts of their "true loves."  Oh my.

Word of the Week: Denouement

denouement /n./  the outcome of a sequence of events, the end result.  any final revelation or outcome.  climax.  completion.  windup. 

denouement /n./  1.  I finally reached the denouement of my Christmas preparations.  This has brought joy, and relief, and also a bit of anxiety about "what I forgot."

denouement /n./  2.  My kids finished the first half of the school year this Wednesday, the denouement to five months of spelling lists, AR reading, math facts, spanish vocabulary, and papers on the Hopi Indians.  I'm not sure we'll make it through the second half.  I plan to do nothing but play with them (my own version of hibernation) for the next two weeks.   

denouement /n./  3.  We finished The Best Christmas Pageant Ever this week.  My kids were on the edge of their seats for the denouement, just sure the Herdman's would ruin the pageant.  When I was younger I played both Gladys and Imogene (in different years) in a community play.  I still remember yelling at the shepherds, "Hey!  Unto you a child is born!" and standing on that stage holding the baby Jesus, tears running down my cheeks.   The real denouement for me, though, is that full-circle feeling of reading these same lines to my own children.  Makes me dizzy to think about it.

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denouement /n./  4.   We had a little cousin-Christmas party tonight at our house, the denouement of my children's pre-Christmas activities.  We ate dinner and made gingerbread sleds (houses were way too ambitious), and the kids exchanged gifts.  The best line of the night, "Thanks, Brina!  I always wanted a harmonica!" said by Ethan, who just discovered harmonicas for the first time this past Wednesday night. 

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denouement /n./  5.  My brother, Timothy, and his wife, Christine, had their first baby this week.  Luke Timothy Deaton. 

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His birth was the denouement of a pregnancy fraught with worry and concern.  Luke was born with spina bifida and underwent surgery early Thursday morning, just hours after entering the world.  The surgery could not have ended more miraculously.  Luke went home with his grateful parents today (!) and is right now snuggled in their arms in their very own home.  An unbelievable denouement under any circumstances, and an absolute miracle in these difficult ones. 

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The Good Kind of "Listless"

Things have been a bit crazy around here...what with the lists and the Christmasing in full-swing.  My kids and husband have been home for a couple of days and so I've been trying to finish my list on the sly. 

But I finally laid the list to rest last night.  Finished the grocery shopping and the Christmas shopping, the mailing (!), the annual service project, the wrapping (mostly!), the hand-made gifts, The Best Christmas Pageant Ever, and all the rest.   I even made gingerbread twice this year...a first for me...I just pulled the last little men from my oven.

Deep breath.

I'm tired.  And at last, "listless."

Today we played monopoly.  I don't know if I've ever finished a whole game of monopoly, but today we did.  I had Park Place and Boardwalk, but I still went bankrupt.   Sounds about right. 

We took the kids to a movie, and then went and saw the lights at the temple.

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Made me wonder why I think so much of lists in the first place.  

SPT: All Snug In Their Beds

Well, I wish I was snug in my bed, but we're a week away, people!

So this is what I'm doing tonight...a few scrapbook pages for my parents-in-law. 

This is not a fun thing for me.  I'm not good at it.  Scrapbook stores cause mild anxiety attacks for me...all those cutesy little things in packages from floor to ceiling and I start having heart palpitations...and not the good kind.  But, under duress, I went to my local scrapbook store today and said, "Do you have any pre-made pages where I could just stick the photos on?"  The girl looked at me like I had used the Lord's name in vain.

This is how much I love my in-laws.  True love.  9:34 at night and I am putting glue dots on matching paper and adding color coordinated "brads."  Almost enough to push me over the edge.  The only saving grace:  the salesgirl said, "We have some velvet ric-rac that might look nice."  Well ric-rac I can definitely get excited about...and velvet!...lead the way.

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The clock may say nine-thirty, but look at my eyes...they tell a completely different story.  Like I said, true love.

Word of the Week: Incandescent

incandescent /adj./  very bright.  shining brilliantly. beaming, effulgent, radiant.  a high degree of emotion, intensity, or brilliance.

incandescent /adj./  1.  My husband finally got all the Christmas lights hung and our house is again dressed for the season in all its incandescent luster.  For over a week, he had only the trunk of one orange tree strung with red lights.  The rest of the house was dark.  It looked like the burning bush, and I told David that people were going to think we worship Moses.

incandescent /adj./  2.  My heart lept with incandescent joy, when I found this card from Barb in my mail among my Christmas cards and bills.  My first "good mail."  I hung the card on my sewing room wall, next to my Will Rogers postcard.   (I secretly think the woman in the card is incandescently giddy over her "seat assignment.")

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incandescent /vt. and adj./  3.  I was thrilled to finish a few Christmas projects this week...namely the Christmas cards

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and a project I have been working on as part of a gift for my girls.  They are "pencil rolls," which I made and filled with markers and colored pencils.  I am absolutely incandescent about the way they turned out.  And I can't wait for the looks on their incandescent faces on Christmas morning.

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incandescent /adj./ 4.  There are moments in motherhood that are so full and sweet that it makes all the other moments "worth it."   Incandescent is the only way to describe my heart as I went to Caleb's violin recital this week.  He kept smiling at us throughout his performance, to reassure us that he knew what he was doing and that he was enjoying himself.  I just sat there grinning at him as he played through all the variations of "Twinkle," looking up to smile at us every few measures.

He's the one with the incandescent grin in the middle of the back row. 

Mayday

So I finally made a list.

Of things that have to be done by Christmas.

Honestly, I think this only increased my anxiety. 

Last night I showed my husband the list.  His eyebrows went up.  (He always thinks I don't know what he is thinking, but his eyebrows are little novels to me.)

I said, "You have to help me."

Crazy-inside-me said, "You HAVE TO HELP ME! Do you think this is a Christmas pleasure cruise, where you get to just float along enjoying the delights of the season?!"  Luckily, she was inside-me.

He just stared for a bit.

Then after I huffed and got up to leave the room, he said, completely baffled, "What do you want me to do?"

Clearly there is a communication gap at my house.  I'm sinking and he has no idea.

I just sighed, but CIM whispered, "Burn the list."

SPT: It's Ornamental, My Dear Lelly

We have an ornament tradition at our house too.  Every year we all get a new ornament to add to the tree.  The tree used to be mostly berries and bows with a few ornaments, but this year we didn't even have room for the bows.  The thing about eating an elephant applies to Christmas trees as well, apparently.  The only sad thing about this tradition is when the process reverses itself and my kids leave our little nest taking their stash of ornaments with them.  I can just picture us twenty years from now tying bows on our empty tree.  Gulp.  Oh, that already hurts.

Here is my SPT for tonight...it took quite a bit of coercion to make this happen.  I will let you imagine the groans.

Whhhyyyyy do we have to do this?

Um...some lady in North Carolina that I've never met would like to see them.

Huh?

Somehow the explanation died on my lips.  Blogging is a wonder that is sometimes quite unexplainable.

Here are our ornaments from this year.

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Can you guess mine?

With a little more "persuasion," I was able to manage this:

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