Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Hooliganting: Wheeeeeee: Random Acts of Going Downhill

Hooliganting: Wheeeeeee: Random Acts of Going Downhill: This is winter in the north, or so the calendar says. In actuality, it feels a lot more spring like with our unseasonably warm weather. I fo...

Wheeeeeee: Random Acts of Going Downhill

This is winter in the north, or so the calendar says. In actuality, it feels a lot more spring like with our unseasonably warm weather. I for one am not complaining. However, it has meant that there is more snow on the ground and the snow is very slurpy. But the best part of having such warm weather....whheeeeeeee....with lots of giggles and spills.

Near where I live, there are lots of little hills. There are also lots of wee children that love to snatch anything with a smooth surfaced bottom and slither down the hills on them. There are runs with jumps and runs with trees. There are the runs that have dogs bounding around with glee. Runs that offer spins and funnily enough, this year there are runs that splash. We have had some glorious afternoons under the late afternoon sun.

There is something about the exhilaration and speed that you get as you coast down the hills at breakneck speed. I like the small saucers myself for sheer speed and reckless abandonment. They have the added benefit of resting low to the ground so that when you fall off, the bruises are minimal. The kids like the saucers for the breathtaking moments of airborne momentum that they can get. There are others for tandem runs and others for families. This year, it doesn't seem to matter....all the runs are good.











I thought I would share some of my favorites from this year....tobogganning is the best fun ever! I even like the icy flakes I got up my back...just shows I was going fast enough!

Monday, December 26, 2011

Hooliganting: In the Kitchen

Hooliganting: In the Kitchen: Sometimes during the holiday, you inevitably find that link to the kitchen. People lean on the counter. Scents waft from the stove and from ...

In the Kitchen

And they did dishes too... Nana and Grandpa D are amazing!
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Sometimes during the holiday, you inevitably find that link to the kitchen. People lean on the counter. Scents waft from the stove and from the oven. The sides are decoratively displayed to tempt you to nibble. There are clinking glasses and plastic cups that fall from the overstuffed cupboards. Paper plates and fine china litter the the sink. Crumbs fall to the floor and toys scatter the walkways. This is the holidays.

In the kitchen, you can be surrounded by delicious good, bad jokes and thick coffee. The senses are dulled from copious amounts of overindulgence. Visitors come and go, but the richness of the memories remains and still more delectable delights find their way into and out of the kitchen.

The kitchen is the hub of the home. It srtikes me as a bit odd that it is a place that I find that I have never quite felt comfortable. I manage to produce edible food from time to time. Every now and then I even have something that is awesome but still...most of the time...the kitchen is not my friend. I think this is why I live for those moments in time that my kitchen becomes a hub of activity and produces the most delcious concoctions. People invade with side dishes, main courses and desserts. Yummy.

Most important, is the memories created and shared. The stories told. Games played and people appreciated for who they are. It is the people that I treasure and the memories that are special. Even more so this year as I know some of these people in my life will be moving on and spending Christmas elsewhere.

So, thank you for invading my kitchen and creating wonderful holiday stories to last me until next time.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Hooliganting: Christmas Eve

Hooliganting: Christmas Eve: Magic. The stories of Christmas past, present and future. The breakfast is in the slow cooker, waiting to be switched on. One turkey is cook...

Christmas Eve

Magic. The stories of Christmas past, present and future. The breakfast is in the slow cooker, waiting to be switched on. One turkey is cooked and another waits to be stuffed. We have been to church and now...the calm before the storm. Step by step, we ensure that our traditions are kept and family magic is gifted to the children.


Christmas Eve is the night for dressing up and going to church. There are Christmas lights to be viewed and watch twinkling under the starlit sky. This year, we could have walked as it is blissfully warm out. Santa might need to find a red spring jacket in our neck of the woods. We have managed to bake the cookies and have put out milk for his royal red belly. We have hung up our stockings by the fireplace. We have put the magic key outside the door and my mother and I are debating how to dispose of the reindeer food to make it effective. It is about creating magic.

What makes me sad, is that this might be the last year that I have both girls believing in Santa. This year might be the last that I see the delight of the Norad Santa Tracker making them smile in sheer delight. This might be the last year that my eldest will find the traditions critical to making sure that Santa comes.

I wish I could hold onto the magic that Christmas brings all year. I love the pagentry and stories. I like that people are going out of their way to share joyous goodwill and smiles. People seem to manage to tuck away the negative and find their happy place on Christmas. The food is spectacular and the gift giving is fun,  pleasurable and magic.

Yes...I love Christmas. So...from my family to yours. Merry Christmas. Make it beautiful and bright. Magic!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Hooliganting: Relentless

Hooliganting: Relentless: This town and my life is relentless. It is perpetually in motion, changing and shifting perspective in a blink of an eye. I think I am strug...

Relentless

This town and my life is relentless. It is perpetually in motion, changing and shifting perspective in a blink of an eye. I think I am struggling to keep up with me today...vitamins. I need more vitamins. The dark...definately need less of the dark but it is such a beautifully clear night. Have you stopped to notice how the seven sisters shine beside Orion and the Big Dipper? The northern night sky is truly spectacular on a clear night.

From trying to not get that horrible cold, to trying to get the things on the list that my mother sent me, plus ensuring that there is enough food in the house to feed all the folk that are coming to stay/visit, it was hectic. Add in a trip to the bottle depot so that school commitments are met and a trip to MacDonald Island waterpark so that the children can burn off some energy and have fun, and we had a full day! The funniest part was how my littlest turned up her nose at the smell in the recyling. I wonder what she thought it would smell like? I suppose I won't find her drinking beer any time soon. That might be a good thing.

Christmas is being relentlessly fast in its approach. I don't feel organized despite having my tree up for ages. I don't feel like I know what is expected of me nor do I much care at the moment. I do know what I expect. I guess that is something. I also know what I want...excluding the Milk Frother as my lovely friend already got that for me for Christmas and made me open it early...

I want to be able to enjoy my Christmas. I want to spend it with people that think that my existance is worth something and actually give a damn. Respect and honor my requests with responses that are honest and from the heart. If no is an answer...that is ok...Answering no to "please clean your room before Nana gets here" might be honest, but is not acceptable after three days of asking. Getting your sister to do it for you is also not an option. Cancelling Santa's visit was an option and a phone call was made. Once the room was clean, I called him back. So we will see what happens on that front. I digress. I would like to have children that are happy and healthy, getting along with each other. I would like to have friends around me that love and support me despite my flaws. After all, no one is perfect. I want to be able to enjoy having my mother here for Christmas without having her distressed over the chaos that I will inevitably create. I would love to have a nice dinner without me burning the kitchen or setting something on fire. Ok...maybe a candle or two...but that's it.

What I don't want is the fighting and the arguing that this season seems to generate. I don't want the greed or the hypocrasy. Quite frankly, there have been enough people stomping on my feelings lately and making the world all about them. I am not you...or you...or the person that you think I ought to be...I am me. Once again, I find myself saying that if you don't like me...don't pretend. I am fine, thank you. I will give until I have nothing left. I will support and help and love you all.

I will also put my boundaries in place and take time for what I need.  I need mediation time. I need quiet. I need happy thoughts. I need to have Christmas that is about Christian worship. So...with that...I am making a decision to do what I need to have done.

My house won't be perfect, but the door is open.
My heart isn't perfect, but the door is open.
My head isn't perfect, but the door is open.
My arms aren't perfect, but they will hug you.

Appreciate the little things, love the big things and meet people where they are at. That is who I am. Who are you?

Monday, December 19, 2011

Hooliganting: Boss of the Kitchen

Hooliganting: Boss of the Kitchen: For those that know me well, you know that mornings are my least favorite time of the day. The glory of the sunrise is no compensation for t...

Boss of the Kitchen

For those that know me well, you know that mornings are my least favorite time of the day. The glory of the sunrise is no compensation for the dented pillow and snuggly covers of my bed. In addition, I have two little people that agreed with me more than I agree with me. So, I was getting ready for work when my phone rang. In a semi-coherent state, I answered it.

The voice at the other end informed me that my house was being invaded by munchkins and adults that needed to escape the fury of the carpet cleaning professionals. Thinking through details, I couldn't remember even half of what my day was supposed to look like other than I had to get to work. So, I delivered my children to my day home and made sure they had the key to my place so that they could return to my home as soon as the carpet gurus arrived.

I worked for my day, and then returned home. I walked into my kitchen and wow...magical things were happening. Between my lovely girlfriends, they had transformed my kitchen into a host of heavenly scents. There were pots prepped with potatoes, asparagus, carrots with brown sugar and ginger, and three chickens plus stuffing. My eyes popped and my tummy grumbled. All I had to do was relax and enjoy the coffee that was perking on the counter.

Did I mention wow? I was blessed to have the opportunity to have cuddles with my kids. I could enjoy the play of the other little people. There was enough to add extra folk to the table including my brother who stopped by for two plates! Leftovers abound and all the while, there was great conversation and funny jokes.

I may not be the boss of my kitchen, but I know who is. You can invade my house anytime...even live here if you are going to cook like that. Impromptu dinner parties...the best idea EVER!

Oh and in case you missed it...THANK YOU!!!!!!!!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Hooliganting: Christmas Lights

Hooliganting: Christmas Lights: Walking in a winter wonderland takes on a whole new meaning when you are surrounded by blinking lights. Since childhood, I have loved the me...

Christmas Lights

Walking in a winter wonderland takes on a whole new meaning when you are surrounded by blinking lights. Since childhood, I have loved the merriment and fun of the Christmas season. I really love driving around the houses on Christmas eve to look at the spectacle that people create to shed some light into what is the darkest month of the year. I will happily brave the -20 temperature, go and warm up the van, and hop in to drive through rutted winter roads, just to explore. This year, there are some beautiful homes. From the blow up ornamentation, to Christmas messages to sleighs and reindeer. I am totally coveting the red sleigh with two white lit deer that resides a few blocks over. If it goes missing, you might want to check my back lawn (or the white patch formerly known as the lawn.)

Of course, I have grown up calling them Christmas lights. But, I am curious as to why so many houses are not lit. Is it the cost of the electricity? Is it because your place is a rental? Is it because you don't like the way they look? Were you too lazy? It has been a mild winter to date so don't tell me it was the cold. Or do you all see them as Christmas lights too and have a religious aversion to them?

For myself, let's start calling them winter lights. They are so beautiful and light up the snow in an array of color. The lights bring cheer to a frosty morning. I am partial to the multicolored strings myself and really like seeing the trees brighter for color, but there is beauty in all of it. I am very appreciative of my neighbors who took time and energy to light the back yard in the alley as well. Next year, I will do the same as it makes my walk to the bus stop in the morning much more enjoyable. The twinkling lights beckon as you turn the corner.

So, what do the lights symbolize? The holiday spirit? Christ as the light of the world? The festive season? They just look nice? Why do some people bother and other's don't? I am genuinely curious. Our community is competing for the winter communities in bloom for February. All we have in February is lights. Might I suggest that some of you invest in a two dollar string and light up your world? Color your world people, I love it and think you should too.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Perils of Parenting

The title came over me like a wave of icy snowflakes enters into the soft top folds of your winter boots. I was trudging at the time. When the northern climate decides that it has lulled you into a false sense of security, it lets loose the clouds and scatters snowflakes gleefully deep in the back alley. So, I trudged. I trudged a path from my back deck, along the back alley (thank you to the skier that left tracks) and to the bus stop to collect Ailish. The wind whipped some color into my cheeks and then, I waited for the bright yellow school bus. I shivered and tried to catch my breath, keeping an eye on my youngest who was refusing to trudge and waited in the green way.

Ah yes, the perils of parenting. At this time of year, anything can happen and everything does. We had such a glorious weekend in Edmonton shopping for toys with their birthday money and seeing the Nutcracker. On the way home, I was sensing that they were spoiled rotten and actually did wind up taking all their birthday toys away. We had whiney voices, snarky voices, mumbles and complaints. All I wanted was quiet.

Turns out, the youngest was developing pink eye. So, the school naturally didn't want anything to do with her. So, I took her to the eye doctor at Emerg to get it checked out. (For the record, in the Mac after hours there is no such thing as a walk in clinic, nor did my doctor have anything available). A scratched eyeball he stated, and no she is not contagious. Good news! But then, she started to snuffle and huffle, whine and run a fever. Off to her specialist appointment we went and came home with antibiotics for the sinus. She is now miserably sick, been off school all week and will miss her Christmas Party. I am so not looking forward to having to break the news on that one.

As you can imagine, I have had to call my boss. I am not coming in and why. Now, she is fabulously understanding and I don't get any grief from that but there are deadlines that need meeting so now I add in some work from home after the wee folk are abed. However, it also means calling the dance studios, the teachers for child check and the lists go on. My phone gets a hefty work out.

I am tired from being up all night and up all day. Of course, my eldest is feeling like a second class citizen because she is healthy at the moment. She actually wanted to get sick as she wanted to be treated specially too. Ack! So, I had to stop and find some time to help her understand that she still had to go to school and do her things as she had a responsibility to be there. Also, she would miss her parties and things at school if she stayed home. Truth be told, I do want her out of the house so that she doesn't get ill. Ack! Snuggles and cuddles and the girl will be fine but it is so hard when one is sick and needs you, while the other isn't sick but needs you too. Perilous!

So, work is done and the clock tells me that it is past midnight again. I am feeling less stressed for having accomplished something. I am within the time to go check on the fever status. But, I am pondering.

Why don't they come with manuals?

Monday, December 12, 2011

Hooliganting: Time is of the Essence

Hooliganting: Time is of the Essence: Time is of the essence: a phrase that was in a contract that I read today. It made me stop and think. Time is the essence of what exactly? I...

Time is of the Essence

Time is of the essence: a phrase that was in a contract that I read today. It made me stop and think. Time is the essence of what exactly? I am battered and swayed in the winds of change and by the sands of time...essentially the same as everyone else. So, what does this ambiguously pompous statement mean?

I constantly hear people demand more time. Me time, quality time, time to relax, time to go, time for school, time for work, lunch time, recess time, home time, bed time, never enough time. The clock is ticking and what on earth for? Have you noticed how many times a day you use the word "time?" What time is it?

Surrounded by the Christmas hullaballo, and shiny trinkets that shout at you from miles away, you can't escape that marketing machine that scorns the frugal. Instead, it is Black Friday, Cyber Monday and Free Shipping Day splatted across the internet gleefully. Time to spend your hard earned cash on frivolity for others. Choose it, wrap it, spend it, deliver it....do you have enough time to get it all done?

Frankly, I am exhausted. For the record, I am close to being finished the Christmas list of to do things. I start early as I find it overwhelming and I like to enjoy the season. But I am tired. I have had lots of little things eat into what I call down time. What do I have to show for it? I have raced around to fit in doctors visits, school pick ups, rearranging schedules, working, laundry, recovery from the weekend trip to Edmonton which was spectacularly packed and still, not everything was done as we ran out of time.

Today, it the day that time is of the essence. Today is the day that I am going to stop and decide. Right now.

TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE.

For me that is going to mean the following:

1) If you are coming to visit me, my house will be as clean as possible - but will most likely be untidy. I am not going to nag the girls until they pick everything up just so more kids can come and tip out all the bins. I will allow them the opportunity to play with their stuff. It is not decorative art and I would do well to remember that.

2) I would rather worry about the state of your mind and heart, than the state of your house. Take the time to visit with me - no stress attached. I care about you - not your house.

3) There are Christmas concerts, sing songs, events all over the place. I am going to choose some to enjoy and that means I might not be cleaning my house after all. I will however, be spending quality time with my friends and family. This is the season that people get lonely for no reason.

4) My girls will only be little for a short time. I want to take time to savor their snuggles and appreciate their stories. While I still have to discipline, I need to take the time to listen to their feelings, opinions and reasoning. I will accept that I am not always right. (I was right to be upset about the holey door {and where do you get a door mid week anyway?}).

5) I am going to be OK with my own company. I will accept that people are busy and don't have time for tea breaks, coffee breaks etc. I don't always either. But when they are available, I too will make the effort.

Time is of the essence. Read the Christmas story. The message is hope, love, peace and joy in the message. I am not perfect. I am not always right. But, I have hope. I can change. I can make a difference. I just have to take the time to stop. Be still. Listen to the still small voice...

and stop typing cliches. I can do it. Can you?

Friday, December 2, 2011

Hooliganting: The Quieter Side: Snuggles

Hooliganting: The Quieter Side: Snuggles: The wind howled and buffeted the house as it tore a strip of the city. Christmas lights went beyond a mere sway to a full blown frenzy of mo...

The Quieter Side: Snuggles

The wind howled and buffeted the house as it tore a strip of the city. Christmas lights went beyond a mere sway to a full blown frenzy of movement over the ice strewn streets. Now and then, you could hear the gutters being stripped from their moorings and the shattering of glass from lights that had danced their last. This morning was gusty and required some serious alarm clock motivation to get beyond the comfortable quilt and into the wild grey yonder.

We managed it though and got through the day. School, work, markets and recitals - we did it all. I wrote Christmas cards (for those people that have moved NOW might be the time to forward me your addresses BTW) and wrapped gifts. I participated in the sticker club that my delightful sister in law thought I should do for both kids. I filled out the school forms, did laundry, cooked supper by dialing in Pizza and had a remarkably productive day. But that was not the best bit...

The best part of a blustery day is the snuggling. I had one "not my kid my kid" today for a couple of hours. I wouldn't have known as they were snuggled into Miss K's bedroom with dollies and teddies for over an hour. Coloring and play were also great, but then they came down the stairs and snuggled into the armchair together. They spent almost a full hour exploring the ornaments on the Christmas tree. Looking at the lights and the ones that shine, all the while discussing which ornaments were their favorite. "Not my kid my kid" liked the little red shoe best, while Miss K liked the opening and closing round ornament best. My elder girl liked the artistic ones best. It was lovely to watch.

Then, this evening after I settled in, I was able to snuggle with both my girls. First one, and then the other. These are the moments when you realize how fast they are growning in body, mind and spirit. You can feel the length of their knobbly legs as they wrap their arms around your neck for nose rubs. They still giggle and enjoy the snuggle time but they are stretching all the time. This is the time for quiet conversation about the day and offering advice, wisdom and comfort. There is time for prayer and mediations. These are my favorite moments of my day - when I can turn time off for a moment. Nothing is calling, nothing is pressing and all I have to do is just be content to spend the time with my girls while I have it. Snuggles are the most important part of my day. Sometimes, it just takes a blustery pooh bear day to remind me of it.