I’m Spending Christmas in Whoville. Want to join me?

Our visit with Santa

All I want in this world is for my children to know they are loved, that I love them and that I love them fiercely. It happened at the first kick deep in my belly. He was my son and I was his mom. My focus narrowed. My world changed. More than a job, a role, or a purpose, I was instantly on a mission to surround my precious children with love. I mean the kind of love that survives you and pushes your children forward.

Intense? Yes.

When I held my first-born in my arms, late at night, in between what felt like a hundred feedings from 2-5am… it happened. The fear. The terror. The lack of air. Every story I ever covered as a TV News reporter flashed before my eyes. EVERY story. And in that one moment, two awful bedfellows: the horror that played in my mind like a movie… and the sweet sleeping angel in my arms. It’s a vulnerability so intense that even writing about it is painful. Because right there in my arms is the one I love the most and yet we are living in a world where the unthinkable happens. And, the worst part of all… there is only so much I can do to protect my children. I had to tell myself to breathe. Focus on the breath. Air coming in. Air going out. I had to comfort myself with a sort of mantra,”right now, in this moment, everyone’s okay.” I prayed, sometimes begged for relief from the fear. And with time, those paralyzing moments became less frequent, more manageable.

Until Friday. Until Newtown.

Because those children are my children, too. We share them, you and me. Once a mother to one… a mother to all.

The news brought me to my knees… for the children, their mothers, their fathers, their siblings, their families and friends… and for all of our children.

Here on my knees, I pray, I breathe and I focus on my mission: To love my children, to love them fiercely. To love yours, too.

And as awkward and weird as it was to hold an innocent baby in my arms and revisit every single horrible thing I’d ever seen on my job… it is also awkward, weird and uncomfortable that the greatest celebration for children arrives on the heels of the worst day for children everywhere.

And so Christmas has to change, too. Perhaps it can’t be about the stuff, the presents, the parties and another opportunity to fill our homes with toys that will be this summer’s yard sale items.

And the truth is I can’t remember a single plastic toy received as a child (well, except for my Sesame Street 8-track player). Can you?

But what I can remember is love. I remember the wonderful occasions when people actually made a gift  just for me. I remember special time set aside just for me.

I want to fill my children to the brim with something that matters, that has meaning. And so I’m channeling Whoville. There will be gifts. But I’ve made some by hand. I’ve bought other presents, too. But they are not the latest toys. They are gifts that will send my children an important message: I am paying close attention to who you are, what piques your interests, and I respect the path you are on to becoming a big person. I love you. I love you fiercely.

I’m spending Christmas in Whoville, want to join me?

Anna

Christmas Adventure

Billy Graham Library Christmas Cross

Charlotte, NC – Something about twinkling lights and horse-drawn carriages that I can’t resist… especially at Christmas, and this Christmas in particular. Away from the News, away from worries of our own, we traveled only a few miles to arrive at a place that conjures up a very  special Christmas spirit: The Billy Graham Library, Christmas at the Library.

The giant wreath adorns the silo at the barn.

This giant wreath adorns the silo at the barn.

They have wrapped hundreds of trees with white lights, collected simple Christmas picture books for story time, and lined up private horse-drawn carriages for the taking.

Having my dad with us made this adventure special!

Having my dad with us made this adventure special!

The LIVE nativity scene left C awe-struck.

LIVE Nativity Scene at Billy Graham Library

I mean it even had a camel!

LIVE Nativity at Billy Graham Library

They also have LIVE Christmas music performances of all your favorite holiday standards.

The cost was $10 for parking. Carriage Rides were $7 for adults and $3 for children. They did not charge us for Baby Q!

It was my first time at the library and I was impressed. This was a great way to spend the evening. Can’t get to Charlotte? Where ever you are, get out there and enjoy all the special experiences this holiday has to offer. I think we could all use a little cheering up.

Peace.

Anna

Sweet Dress-up for Christmas Eve

Baby Q. will be turning one this week! That milestone is all at once happy (he’s a big boy) and sad (where did my baby go?) But there is something in my closet to soften the blow for Mommy. I started sewing clothes for C right around his first birthday. So Baby Q has a closet full ready to go!

Christmas Eve Jumper

And this one is a favorite!

Ready for church

From Oliver + S, this pattern is easy to make with her incredible instructions. And the actual patterns don’t require a PhD to fold and put back in the packaging. This is MAJOR!

I used a traditional plaid and velveteen with silver buttons – which was fun!

Silver buttons

But you can also make this up with fun prints.

If you are sewing for girls, there is a sweet dress version of this pattern. And even better, from the creator of Oliver + S, Liesl Gibson, is a miniature version of this dress for your little girls’ baby dolls. The book is Little Things to Sew. I have made many of the projects from this book and love it.

Enjoy!

Anna

Sewing Up Christmas for a Boy!

It can be hard to come up with ideas when it comes to sewing for boys. Here is the first Christmas outfit I made for little C. when he was closing in on his second birthday.

Santa Longall

The applique was done with a regular sewing machine. If your machine has a zig zag stitch then you can do this, too! SewMamaSew has a great tutorial on this technique.

Instead of using cotton fabric for Santa’s gloves and boots, I used grosgrain ribbon. It added a great dimension.

And since little ones are either crawling or running away from you, I choose to decorate the backside as well!

Longall Back View

This pattern is the Johnny from Children’s Corner. I’ve made it up probably 3 dozen different ways (at least). Check out my tutorial for this pattern here.

Enjoy your holiday sewing!

Anna

The Benefit of the Busy Travel Season

Whether you are visiting family far away or staying close to home, you can still enjoy this silver lining of crowded airports, full of passengers flying everywhere.

Pack lunch, load your kids into the car and head to the nearest private airport. It’s tailgate time. If you can find a private airport adjacent to the commercial airport, even better. You’ll have an incredible view of the planes and all other runway activities (right from their parking lot).

In addition to lunch, throw some binoculars into the car.

For little ones, ear protection is a good move. Private jets make a lot of noise. Plus, they’ll look the part!

Got a Smart Phone? Download an air traffic control app and listen to all the air traffic as you watch the planes land and take off. We use LiveATC and love it.

Have older children? Jot down the tail numbers of the planes you see and check out their flight plans by looking here at FlightAware.

We do this on a regular basis at our local airport but I also keep this idea handy when out-of-town and looking for something to do!

TODDLER TAKE-AWAYS

  1. Nurture a sense of adventure
  2. Introduction to aviation, travel
  3. Increase vocabulary
  4. Spark interest in the world and travel

Enjoy!

Anna

Happy Thanksgiving!

From our family to yours, Happy Thanksgiving!

A Holiday Miracle Within Your Grasp!

Having noticed how much my soon-to-be 3-year-old enjoyed helping his daddy fix things around the house, I thought, “Wow, I should get C a tool bench for his birthday.” Soon, I settled on the perfect one made in France… completely of wood. Surely that’s better than adding another cheap plastic import to our toy collection. I was 12 months dumber back then. Little did I know a wooden hammer on a wooden workbench can make so much noise. Every strike seems to reverberate up your spine, taking one small bit of sanity each time.

And so whenever poor little C would set out to play with his prized tool bench and beautiful French wooden tools, I responded with, “Not so loud!” or “Let’s save tool time for tomorrow.” or “Why don’t we play with a quiet toy?”

Can you just imagine if every single time you took out one of your favorite toys (for me, it’s my sewing machine), someone asked you to keep it down or take it to another room? MISERY!

And so when I walked into C’s preschool class and saw him pounding golf tees into a pumpkin, it was like the clouds parted and the angels started singing. When the hammer hits the tee, it makes the quietest little thud. It’s almost a pleasant sound.

And so I headed to Target to buy a bag of golf tees (took me three trips by they way, because even though the tees were my sole purpose for shopping  there, I became distracted, bought other stuff and left without them. THREE TRIPS.)

The best part about this activity, is it swallows the munchkin’s attention. C went for an hour without saying one word. Look at his eyes! He stayed focused like this until he covered that pumpkin. So if you need a little help keeping your children occupied while you prepare the Thanksgiving feast, this is the ticket.

All you need is a pumpkin, golf tees and child’s play hammer.

I started some of the tees for him until he mastered that himself.

The baby even got a chance (UNDER EXTREMELY CLOSE SUPERVISION) to hammer those tees.

Thank you, Miss Jennifer, for inspiring this activity.

TODDLER TAKE AWAYS

  • Fine motor skill development
  • Eye-hand coordination
  • A Fix for whatever toddler addicting sensation hammering produces

Enjoy!

Anna

P.S. if you want to take this activity to the next level, ask  your preschooler or kindergartner to pound in the tees in the shapes of letters or to make words as they hammer away!

A Fall Coat for My Littlest Pumpkin

This pattern whips itself into a jacket in a matter of hours. It’s the Casey Jacket from Children’s Corner, inc. I’ve been carrying around this fall tree fabric for about three years! I was not sure if it should be overalls, pants or a backpack. But suddenly, while I was pregnant with sweet Baby Q, the inspiration came to use this fall twill to make a coat for him.

You can use any weight fabric you wish for this hooded jacket. I’m going to try a super warm plush one next. The buttons are covered in the lining fabric, which may look hard but is the easiest task in sewing I’ve yet to try (seriously). The lining fabric used is Fox Trails by Doohikey Designs for Riley Blake.

Isn’t it nice when your outfit matches your toy? Even if that is a warning sign that you have yourself a crazy mommy… at least you look good!

Okay sewists, I know this project looks hard, but it is not. So try it and tell me about it!

Enjoy!

Anna

In Search of Settlers…

We are spending a lot of time reading about Thanksgiving, talking about the settlers and native americans, and I realized that all of it is going completely over my little one’s head. He gets the turkey, the pie, and family… but as far as why this feast came about… crickets.

So I headed to Old Salem, North Carolina for help. This is an 18th century historic neighborhood that is alive and thriving today. Beautifully restored private homes sit along side those owned by the museum and open for tour. They are complete with guides and educators dressed in period clothing who demonstrate the crafts and trades of the day.

While this experience represents colonial life about  hundred years after that first Thanksgiving meal, it does get us closer. Good enough!

And what I loved the most is that C. really seemed to get a lot out of it. Even at 3, he was intrigued by their way of life. I feel like we added some more stones to the foundation here which really was my goal.

So here are my tips for a fun visit to Old Salem with a 3-year-old and alomst 1-year-old (yikes!)

TICKETS OR NO TICKETS: You can stroll the streets of Old Salem for free. It is a real historic district and therefore the streets, sidewalks and green space or public property. If you want to tour the houses that are owned by the museum, you’ll need tickets. All children 6 and under are welcome, free-of-charge. Here’s what I recommend for the adults – a two-stop ticket as opposed to an all access pass. Let’s face it, our little ones just aren’t going to have an attention span long enough for anything more.

STROLLERS: This is where our story gets a little sad : ( The houses on tour will not allow strollers (even though they are plenty spacious). So bring a baby carrier or a friend to stand stroller watch while you take your toddler into the historic houses. Also, the sidewalks are brick, so when choosing a stroller, bring your Bob!

FOOD: The bakery is heavenly, full of Moravian confections, a MUST visit. The Tavern is the colonial restaurant and after waiting 30 minutes for our table, the manager informed me I could not park the stroller next to our dining table. They did offer to let us leave it in the hallway, but since it was filled with a precious sleeping baby… um, no! So though their menu did look yummy, I have an even better idea. Pack a picnic. There is a great green space in the middle of the historic town, complete with a well pump.

SPEND YOUR MONEY HERE – Moravian Books and Gift Shop. It is a charming shop filled with things that will capture your little one’s imagination and yours! We picked up a gingerbread cookie cutter made there in Old Salem. Right now, this independently owned shop is stocked full of holiday decorations with an old world feel and toys inspired by antique play things.

TODDLER TAKE-AWAYS

  • A direct connection to history
  • Adventure and exploration

Enjoy!

Anna

P.S. the photos I saw of Christmas decorations at Old Salem will make this a repeat trip for us some time in December!

Fun Fall Cooking with your Kiddos

This recipe is a great one for your Thanksgiving meal or any autumn evening. The best part is it’s the perfect recipe for your kids to help with.

Shopping List:

  • Butternut Squash (two bags frozen or two large squash peeled, seeded and cubed) Note: Fresh butternut squash will hold their shape better – more firm, less mush – but frozen is certainly easier
  • Two baking potatoes (you can use sweet potatoes as well)
  • Two apples (we used honeycrisp) peeled and chopped
  • 1 cup of dried cranberries
  • A teaspoon each of cinnamon and curry
  • 1/4 cup of olive oil (give or take)
  • 1/4 cup water

(I think pecans or walnuts would be a welcome addition if you have them on hand)!

DIRECTIONS:

Using a 9 x 13 inch casserole dish, toss in your cubed potatoes and butternut squash.

Add cranberries

Add olive oil and stir ingredients.

Add water. Sprinkle your spices across the top. Cover and put into a 375 degree farenheit oven.

When you can pierce the potatoes easily with a fork, add your apples. Stir the ingredients and put back in the oven, uncovered.

When the apples are tender, you are finished!

TODDLER TAKE AWAYS:

  • Math (measuring, temperature, time)
  • Science
  • Nutrition
  • Cooking skills

This makes enough to serve 8! And the best part is that the often picky 3-year-old will eat because he made it!

Enjoy,

Anna

Silly Spooky Spider

This craft keeps creepy on the fun side of Halloween.

All you need is two inverted paper plates, some paint, construction paper for the legs and eyes, Elmer’s glue, hole puncher and string or ribbon.

Paint the wrong side of the paper plates. Cut eight strips out of construction paper and fold accordion style. Cut out circles in white and black for your eyes. Assemble and display!

Easy and fun. We also cut out fangs for our fun little friend.

TODDLER TAKE AWAYS

  1. Creative exploration of the holiday
  2. Fine motor skills
  3. Exploring new ways to work with art media

Enjoy!

Anna

Spooky Handprints that WON’T Make you SCREAM!

Here’s an easy Halloween craft! All you need is construction paper and washable paint.

Meet our spooky spider – we painted the palm and four fingers and printed palm on top of palm for this arachnid. This is a great opportunity to have your preschooler figure out how many fingers must be painted to come up with eight legs for your spider. Have them come up with a theory and test it out until you get an eight legged friend.

For the ghost, again just paint four fingers and palm. Black hole punches for the eyes and we cut on oval out for the mouth.

And the best part is the ghost that isn’t perfect… is the best one – a lesson for a Type-A whose name we will not mention. 🙂

TODDLER TAKE AWAYS:

  1. Creative play
  2. Fine motor skill development
  3. Connection to the holidays
  4. Math

Happy Halloween,

Anna

Type-A Recovery: 6 Easy Ways Your Kids Can Beat it out of YOU!

This weekend’s cooking/crafting project (almost typed ‘problem’ – Freudian slip) got me thinking.  If  you are a Type-A and realize this is mostly an obstacle when it comes to 1. Other people enjoying you or 2. Relaxing instead of fixating on your unfinished to-do list or 3. Raising laid back children – though they might do this just to spite you. So where can we go for help? How can we change our ways? Well, have I got a plan for you. And it isn’t 12 steps. No, it’s 6. They are as follows.

STEP 1: Get pregnant – This is the first step in experiencing your imperfection. While you haven’t accepted that you have flaws, this is still a first step.

STEP 2: SLEEP DEPRIVATION. Wake to feed screaming child every 3 hours for months. Or even better, when you wear down, let them sleep with you (something many parents swear they will never allow, but then do it and lie about it). You will put milk away… in the bathroom. You will be at a loss for basic words like, let’s see… ‘the.’ You will be a bumbling idiot, if you can find enough strength to form a bumble. You are now accepting that you are not perfect and neither is the inside of your house.

STEP 3: Move. Yes, you must move. Not just houses, not just neighborhoods. You must move far enough away that no one knows your former self (the smart one with regular manis/pedis). The only person your new friends know is someone who can’t think straight and probably shouldn’t be driving a car let alone operating very complicated baby equipment. For a Type-A this experience is like being lost in the wilderness with no survival skills. And no, flirting with the bear will not stop him from eating you. Admit it. You are powerless.

STEP 4: Have BOYS. Make sure your offspring are boys. As soon as they are physically capable, they will jump on you, climb on you, knee and elbow you, head butt you, and yank your hair. All by accident. Next, they’ll target your furniture. And if you think taking them outside to play is the answer, they will turn your hair gray in a week. They perform death defying stunts right in front of you. Even in a flat yard with no playground equipment or strangers… they will somehow manage to jeopardize their lives. You will lose your breath. Your heart will cease to beat. And then it will be time to go inside and make dinner.

STEP 5- Build a haunted gingerbread house with your children. Go ahead and look at the box. Take in the perfect gingerbread houses in the pictures on the box. So orderly. Decorated so perfectly. Now make the icing and call your children to the table. Thirty minutes later when your dining room table is covered with icing, small candy balls that seem to run away from you (at the same time and in different directions – go ahead – chase them, it’s good for you)… yes, when your child has inserted the tip of the icing bag in his mouth and is squeezing out mouth-full after mouth-full… and when you realize the black icing will not wash off of your skin, stop to ponder what it’s doing to your son’s teeth and his clothing. When you can do this without raising your voice or feeling even one shoulder scrunching scintilla of stress (or taking over the project and making something beautiful) that’s when you know you’ve almost made it to the other side. And when you do, call and tell me a bout it. I’d like to hear what that’s like.

STEP 6: LOVE. Yes, LOVE like crazy the very tiny human exposing your every weakness. Love to the point that you brand yourself a fool in public doing anything required to make them laugh or smile. Love to the point that when they cry, you are close to tears yourself. When they are old enough to talk (something you don’t need to encourage, trust me) love that little person to pieces when they make fun of imperfect, lovable you. Love to the point that when you look at what must be the world’s ugliest gingerbread house, you smile and tell them they did an incredible job! And then put that atrocious confection on display until Halloween night.

NOW, help the rest of us!

Anna

Sewing for My Plumpkin Pumpkins

I’m a little behind schedule on the holiday clothing production – so when I made Baby Q’s Jack O’ Lantern longall, I made it reversible so this outfit can last through Thanksgiving. It’s a decision that gave a certain neurotic mommy great peace of mind.

This is my favorite Johnny Pattern from Children’s Corner, Inc. Making this for the first time? Check out my tutorial on how to make a Johnny!

It’s easy to make a longall reversible. The only difference is that you add a second set of buttons on the other side of the straps. You’ll want to sew these buttons on by hand, sewing in such a way that your buttons have a little give. Imagine enough space between the back of the button and the fabric to accommodate the thickness of your buttonhole tab. In other words, if you attack the buttons as snugly as possible, your buttonhole tabs won’t have space to neatly settle under the buttons when fastened.

For my 3-year-old, I coordinated his look by making pants out of same the plaid used in Baby Q’s longall. I bought an orange t-shirt and added the same pumpkin face applique from Planet Applique.

The other side is a fall pumpkin which can inspire thoughts of Halloween or Thanksgiving. To personalize it, add a monogram.

If you don’t have an embroidery machine, don’t despair. You can applique with a regular sewing machine. It’s not hard. If your machine has a zig zag stitch, then it can applique. My best advice is to take a short class to learn this technique. You can also check out this tutorial as well. The pants are the easy fit pants from Scientific Seamstress – a staple in our house for pajama bottoms and regular pants.

Now that we are ready for Halloween, here comes Thanksgiving and Christmas!!!!!!

Enjoy!

Anna

P.S. The coat featured in one of the pictures is the School Days Coat from Oliver + S – it is the one project where I relished sewing each step!

DIY Jurassic Park

This Dinosaur walk at the Nature and Life Science Center in Durham, NC serves as my inspiration. Crazy thought – How can I recreate this at home?

Want to make your very own Jurassic Park? Less frightening and much smaller than the actual Jurassic Park, this miniature dinosaur habitat is still capable of captivating your munchkins’ attention for DAYS. This could also be a great centerpiece for a birthday party and would also make a cherished gift at the holidays.

I’ll walk you through the steps and supplies we used… HOWEVER, you can use whatever you have on hand or can find in your community.

Check out our favorite attraction: the bug crunching Venus Flytrap! We bought ours at Whole Foods.

Here’s what we collected to create our habitat:

  1. Moss (from a craft store)
  2. River rocks (also from a craft store)
  3. A Dinosaur Toob by Safari or any small plastic dinosaurs
  4. A galvanized aluminum tray or other container (make sure you seal any seams so water doesn’t leak out of your tray)
  5. Real Plants ( we chose a Venus Fly Trap, some small house plants, and fresh-cut Spider Mums in a glass.
  6. Fake Plants (grass and a fern sprig – all bought at a local crafts store)
  7. Water to fill the bottom of the tray (so your live plants can soak up water as needed.)

To get started we talked about the word ‘habitat,’ while reading a picture book about dinosaurs. We were careful to notice the things around the dinos like rocks, trees, plants and water. Then we took a look at our supplies and talked about each one.

I set out the elements and the empty tray. C’s job was to create the habitat. This turned out to be a great opportunity for him to express his independence. He arranged all of the components in the tray as he wished.

Our moss rests in terra-cotta saucers and plastic lids to keep it dry.

Lastly we added the dinosaurs and started to play.

A pack of dinosaur flash cards ($1) provided a matching activity.

C. carefully compared the dinos in his habitat to those featured on the cards. This was a great problem solving activity and an opportunity to flex those observation skills… “does this one have two claws or three? Are the arms long or short? Is the tail big or small?”

A bucket of crayons and a dinosaur coloring book offered another related activity.

And the best part of all for this recovering Type-A, I think this project is great looking! I never, in my wildest dreams, expected it to be attractive. But dare I say, it’s nearly Martha Stewart worthy… something that almost never happens in our house. If Martha were a drug, I feel like I just had a fix! And I am enjoying the high, at least until Baby Q spits up all over me.

TODDLER TAKE AWAYS:

  1. Vocabulary expansion
  2. Nature, science and history lesson
  3. Fine motor skills development
  4. Creative development and expression
  5. Problem solving skills
  6. Sensory development
  7. Gardening skills
  8. Responsibility for another living thing

Enjoy!

Anna