Sunday, December 16, 2007

O Christmas Tree

Graham and I went back and forth on whether or not to get a Christmas tree this year--we've been really busy lately, and we'll be in Madison the week between Christmas and New Year's, so we weren't sure it was worth it--but the Christmas Spirit finally got the best of us yesterday, and we couldn't resist any longer.

The tipping point for me was that we're having our Game Night crew over on Friday (Kate and Melissa will be in town--yay!), and somehow it just doesn't seem right to entertain this time of year and not decorate. Plus, we live just a few blocks from Dunshee House (home of Seattle AIDS Support Group), which sells local Christmas trees for their annual fundraiser, so it was easy and a good cause!

Yesterday was a great day all around, actually. We hosted a Bagel Brunch for the Seattle Crew (with Oliver's presence, followed closely by baby Lyla's, being my favorite parts, of course), did some planning for our trip home, took a nap, got our Christmas tree around 4:30, and then spent the rest of the night decorating our house for the holiday.

We turned the fire on, I broke out my eclectic Christmas CDs (Manheim Steamroller, Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Tchaikovsky's Nutracker Suite, Jewel's Christmas, Handel's Messiah, Noel Chant, etc.), and we went through our entire Christmas box. We haven't decorated for Christmas since I moved to Seattle--and I can't remember now if Melissa and I had a tree in DC--so it's been at least three, probably four or five, years since I last looked through all my Christmas stuff.


It was so fun to see everything! There's the purple stocking I made for Graham (impressive, since I can't sew) and the stocking I bought for myself in Bolivia, the advent calendar that Lucy and Susanne made me (the window for the 15th said: "This rose has died for the winter. ~A Deep Thought by Lucy Benton"), my awesome collection of reindeer ornaments (I have at least 20), the pop-up-book advent calendar my Mom gave me (if you lift the chimney, the star on the Christmas tree lights up and "Silent Night" plays), the cute little tree skirt Susan made us, many many strands of icicle lights (remember when those were all the rage?), my star w/rings advent calendar from my Dad's house ("Each day after my story is read, I'll take off one ring and climb into bed. When only the star is left to shine, then I'll know it's Christmas time."), all the ornaments with dates on them (Meritz 1998, ABC 1998, Food & Friends 2003, '04, '05 and '06, etc.) and Graham's odd assortment of ornaments (the ones I got him during his "I like purple shiny things" phase, the beautiful ones KA made him, and the collection of snowmen he didn't realize he had (seriously, there are like 15 of them, how can you not notice that?!).

Graham spent hours untangling lights (a true Christmas tradition), and I spent hours finding the just the right spot for each ornament (a true OCD Sarah tradition). And when G got tired of my Christmas music, we watched parts of "All The President's Men" and "Die Hard 4" (parts, because the TiVo kept cutting them off after 1.5 hours!) ...

All in all, it was a perfect way to celebrate our one-year anniversary as home owners. :)


Merry Christmas, everybody!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Elf Yourself

Wanna see one of the funniest things I have ever seen? Click here to watch the BABES staff dance like Santa's Elves. Thanks for sharing, Caroline!

Monday, December 3, 2007

Tday retrospective

After looking at M's photos of our Thanksgiving Day celebration, I realized it really did merit a blog posting.



We spent a lovely, relaxing Thanksgiving Day hanging out with Emily and our Camp Spoonhowopic buddies, M & J. (Brian was out of town for his 10-year high school reunion, otherwise he would have joined us, as well.)

M brought her two specialties, pound cake and red wine (lots of red wine), and J baked some of the yummiest breads I have ever tasted. The other Em brought garlic mashed (purple) potatoes and chocolate volcanoes (mmm, lava). In addition to some old standby appetizers, the rest of our dinner consisted of raspberry vinaigrette salad, cranberries, green beans, cachaza sweet potatoes (we were out of bourbon, again) and vegetarian stuffing and gravy to complement Graham's first ever turkey. If you would like to look at 30 or so photos of Graham carving said free range organic carcass, click on the image above.

Happy Thanksgiving!

The end of days is near ...

Seattle on Saturday:



Seattle today: