Showing posts with label Celebrations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebrations. Show all posts

25 December 2014

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas from us and ours to you and yours!

Today I'm stopping by to share a few of the many special things we've done to celebrate the Christmas season (besides keeping the radio tuned to the 24-hour Christmas music station...much to George's dismay).

Visited Santa:

Took our annual family photo at the poinsettia tree (2012, 2013):

Posed for professional family photos:

Picked out Elliott's first Christmas tree:

Decorated the tree:

Redirected Madeleine to decorate her tree (much more successful this year):

Celebrated with our PEPS Group (2.5 years and counting):

Dressed the kiddos in matching Christmas jammies:

Visited a Christmas light display with some of our friends:

Enjoyed our out-of-town friends:


Hope your holiday season has been as fulfilling!

In lieu of tomorrow's Friday I'm in Love, picture me loving on the precious faces featured above. 

24 December 2014

Few Festive Decorations

I enjoy decorating our home for Christmas and - at the risk of sounding like my mother - it seems a shame that not many people get to see it in person. To counter that, I'm sharing a bit of my decorations here.

Last year, I went a bit overboard. Our 2014 decorations are a mix of old and new with nothing too complicated. I tried to keep it simple and limit the stress associated with creating, displaying, and tearing down decorations while still bringing a bit of holiday cheer to our home. 

Our tree is up in the formal livingroom again. It's smaller than last year (and definitely not as nice of a noble fir as we've had in the past), but we managed to fill the entire tree with just lights, an extended felt ball garland, and sentimental ornaments. No filler bulbs this year! 


Christmas trees are often a topic of discussion amongst parents of toddlers. Our rule is that anything that can be reached can be touched...with one finger. Madeleine has responded well to this (this year) because it doesn't feel so off-limits and, therefore, attractive, and she is still able to indulge her curiosity (mostly) without damaging things. I also strategically decorated the tree so that ornaments on the lower half of the tree are unbreakable, fixable, or replaceable. 


Even this guy loves to look at the lights and grab at ornaments. He doesn't seem to mind that the crazy thing is drying out at record speed. 

Our formal livingroom mantel is bright and cheerful without a lot of effort. I wanted to highlight the new piece of art (depicting the location of our wedding) but still make it feel like Christmas. I think that the new felt ball tree, our stockings, and those gorgeous Glassybabies (in new fern, happiness, dolphin, and crayola) do just that! 


I added letters to our stockings this year (inspired by this). I don't love the scale, but they'll be fine placeholders until I find the perfect font and size. And, yes, our initials spell out a word. It wasn't intentional, but we're embracing it! 


In the livingroom where we spend a lot of our time, I've dialed things back quite a bit. This year, I'm displaying a few ornaments on this awesome driftwood tree my mom and stepdad made for me, and I've reused an older bunting (tutorial here).


I stole the Santa photo idea from a friend. Each year, we'll get to look back at the previous years' visits to Santa while adding a new one to the mix. It's a little hard for me to believe that this is already our third Christmas with kiddos!


For the shelves, I pulled out some old favorites, including my Joy to the World. This will always be special to me because I made it shortly after I found out I was pregnant with Madeleine, while George was out snowboarding and I had an afternoon alone with my thoughts. 


Even though Christmas is just one day, I enjoy our special decorations all month long. Hopefully you've enjoyed seeing them, too! 

11 July 2014

The Big Oh Five

Ahhh, five year wedding anniversary.

It all started with a gorgeous Seattle summer day in which we vowed our love to each other before an intimate gathering of close friends and family from around the world at Gas Works Park and celebrated into the evening and wee hours of the morning at the incredibly special Canlis.

Photo Credit: Evantide Photography

Photo Credit: Evantide Photography

Over the last five years, we have traveled to some terrific destinations across the globe, shared wonderful (and some not-so-wonderful) bottles of wine at a handful of wine regions, visited and gotten more acquainted with each other's families, survived the last year of law school and bar exam, shared in each other's professional joys and frustrations, completed a lot of renovations on our first home together, welcomed our sweet little girl into the world, found the house of our dreams and started making it our own, made it through the challenging times of early parenthood, shared our passions with our little girl, learned to see the world and each other through her eyes, established family traditions that we hope to continue for many years to come, and are anxiously awaiting the arrival of the fourth member of our family.

If I had it to do over again, I wouldn't change a thing. I love you, George, and I am incredibly fortunate and grateful that I get to have you by my side in this journey of life. 

Any predictions on where we'll be (figuratively and literally) in five years?

01 July 2014

Madeleine's Year Two in Review

Last year, I did a lil' round up of Madeleine, and I thought it'd be fun to do that again. Be forewarned that I'm going to share a ton of pictures and brag about my little girl.

When we started this year, our wee girl was not yet walking; by Christmas, she was confidently moving and showing signs of being a toddler; and now, she is fully her own little person with thoughts and opinions. What a delight!

Photo Credit: Evantide Photography



Personality. We have gotten to see a lot of Madeleine's personality this year as her language skills have gone wild. She is adventurous and brave (sometimes even fearless) but sometimes just wants Mummy or Daddy. She is social, asking for her friends constantly (already!). Madeleine is pretty rough and tumble, recovering well from falls and disappointments, though she almost always asks for a "ban-aid" to fix her "owies." She is incredibly nurturing, something that has become especially noticeable in the last few months. Although she is pretty independent, plays independently, eats independently, and is well on her way to being able to dress and undress herself completely, she still has a lazy streak that we see from time to time with a "Mummy do it" or "Daddy do it" response when we tell her to do something for herself.




Photo Credit: Helen Al-Najjar



Nicknames. Miss M. Sweat pea. Snuggle Puss. Snuggle Pop. Monster. Madeleine Monster. Toddlerkins. Toddler Woddler. Silly bug.



 



Food and eating. With few exceptions, it's impossible to predict what Madeleine will or won't eat on any given day. We encourage her to try whatever food we put in front of her, and she enforces this herself. When she's unsure of something on her plate, I'll hear "I try it." She generally enjoys a wide variety of food from healthy local favorites salmon and broccoli to Malaysian roti canai to junk food pizza, tacos, and ice cream. It's rare for her to turn down mac and cheese, berries, yogurt, applesauce, or cheese sticks. Our food philosophy is a combination of self-regulation (she determines how much and how little she eats) and no special orders (unless the food we're having is far too spicy or too difficult to eat, she is served what we eat and can choose to eat it or go hungry).

Over the last year, Madeleine has mastered using her fork and spoon, though she does sometimes choose to not use them. She can drink from a cup, but I usually only give her a little at a time in a cup to ease my worry about massive spills. We're starting to work on table manners, like not talking with food in the mouth and chewing with mouth closed.




Sleep. Madeleine isn't the best napper with her single daily nap ranging in length from an hour to just over two hours. That said, she has been known to request her nap and has only recently started struggling with getting to sleep at nap time. She is an excellent nighttime sleeper (knocking wood...). Our bedtime routine is largely the same as it has been her whole life, and, once it's complete, she asks for her bed and sleeps for about 12 hours. She has grown incredibly attached to both her bear (a soft, pink Gund bear) and her quilt (this one), and I suspect that sleeping would be a challenge without them.



Interests. Madeleine is incredibly interested in garbage trucks and, really, in most kinds of trucks and buses. A few months back, she started getting carsick; as part of dealing with that, I spent most of my car time with her drawing her attention outside so that she would be seeing the same motion her brain was feeling. Thus, a vehicle obsession was born. She seems to have come through her fear of being near large vehicles (say, being at a park while a garbage truck goes by) and landed in a place of all out fascination.

Madeleine also loves animals, especially underwater creatures (wonder why...) and farm animals. Horses are a favorite, and she loved getting to pet a bunch of horses when our friend, Jessica, took her for a barn tour last week.

She loves to care for her babies and animals, and this includes feeding, clothing (mostly undressing), and diapering them. She loves to swipe tea towels from the kitchen to use them as blankets for whatever she is loving in that very moment. She loves to put things to sleep, and I love when it's my turn to be put down for a nap. Her nurturing attitude isn't limited to creatures as I've also seen her care for a balloon, her blocks, and her toy garbage truck. Fortunately, this love seems to extend to her brother, too, as she asks to kiss and cuddle my belly several times a day.

Anything George and I do is a source of inspiration for Madeleine. She likes to put on our shoes and try to walk in them, brush her teeth while we brush ours, wrap a towel around her waist like we do (at the pool), put on "make up" like Mummy, vacuum like Mummy/Daddy, talk on our phones, and the list goes on and on. It's adorable and, when she picks up on something we never noticed, rather enlightening. Along these same lines, she loves to "help" and, as she is getting more proficient, we are starting to enjoy her help. She can transfer dirty clothes into laundry baskets, carry in packages and our dairy order, and often provide an extra set of hands. Something tells me that I'm really going to appreciate this in a couple months.

After a hiatus from yoga, I enrolled Madeleine in a class over the winter, and she adored it. Ever since, she has been dragging my yoga mat around the house to do a pose or two at a time. We got Madeleine her own yoga mat for her birthday, and I hope that many more yoga classes are in her future. I'm also considering enrolling Madeleine in soccer in the fall as she enjoys kicking balls and insisted on stopping to watch a game of pick-up soccer when we were in Hawaii. She continues to enjoy swimming and has made huge progress this year from only just being able to go under to insisting on taking a few kicks at a time on her own.












Toys. It's hard to pinpoint a favorite toy. Fortunately, toy rotation has been pretty successful at keeping her interest in most things. She has gotten into puzzles and Duplo in the last couple of months, quietly mastering both during independent play. She loves her play vacuum and play stroller. As I mentioned, she loves her dolls (Stella and my Cabbage Patch Doll, Betty Fanny) and stuffed animals. She likes reading and can spend an hour looking through a stack of books; I love catching her rummaging through her piles of books looking for a particular one. She has assigned a word or two to each of her books and typically asks for them by these names. Outside, she has really enjoyed her "special park" in our backyard and can do more and more things every week.




TV. We started letting Madeleine watch TV at about 20 months. Per week, she is allowed one episode each of Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood and Sesame Street. This gets stretched a bit when she's sick, and other weeks she doesn't even ask for it. We do our best to keep Madeleine from characters and marketing but, despite it all, she is very, very fond of Daniel and his friends. She still thinks Mickey Mouse is a dog, Nemo is a fish, and Thomas is a train...so we're winning on some fronts!

Friends. Speaking of friends, we continue to meet weekly with our PEPS friends. It's fun to watch the kids interact with each other and see how they are each developing into their own person. Madeleine has also grown fond of her school friends as she is in part-time childcare. We love hearing about the adventures she has with her friends. She continues to adore and be adored by the kids next door.






Traveling. Madeleine has traveled to Oregon (twice), California (twice), Hawaii (twice), Texas, Ohio (twice), and Canada this year. She is a good traveler, although we've had some difficulty with her sleeping while we're away. We all still like the Phil and Ted Traveller crib, but we have reached the conclusion that we can absolutely not share a room with her. On flights, she spends most of her time fascinated by what's going on outside the window while on the ground or in the in-flight magazine while in the air. Only on our last trip did we finally pull out the iPad to show her a couple of episodes of her TV shows (thank you, PBS app). In general, Madeleine is very adaptable so long as we keep some basic routines in place.




Memorable Moments. The ordinary is really what is memorable about this year. I love the days that I get to spend with Madeleine doing ordinary things like running errands, going to parks, and working around the house. I love teaching her new things and watching her pick up on things that I do, previously unknown to me. She is a wonderful little mirror. I find great pleasure in seeing her experience the freedom of innocence, playing with the toys that seem most interesting to her rather than the toys society might think she should like. I love watching her build confidence by letting and encouraging her to try new things on her own. As someone with a strong maternal instinct, I must admit that I'm really enjoying watching that naturally develop in Madeleine.

This was the year when Madeleine made her first piece of art that I truly love (I'm that odd mom who doesn't think everything she makes is wonderful). This is also the year when Madeleine first said, "I love you, Mum" and "I missed you, Mum." I love her tight hugs, often accompanied by pats or rubs, after even the briefest of absences. I feel so lucky to be Madeleine's mum.



Cuddling the smiley face on the Costco receipt. Doesn't everyone?



Even with the "terrible" twos upon us, I can't wait to see where this next year takes Madeleine. I love you, Sweet Madeleine!