Friday, December 30, 2011

A Patio Party Tonight

We ended up having a spontaneous cookout and patio party tonight because Greta and Daniel arrived suddenly. It happened like this:
1. David gave me a new fire bowl for Christmas.
2. Heather and Jared borrowed my van to move some furniture today, and the boys stayed here with us while they did it.
3. Luke and Patrick helped me put the fire bowl together after lunch today.4. Then we just had to try it out.
5. I couldn't get a fire started, so David and Jared stepped in.
6. We needed more logs, so Jared tried to chop up our huge tree sections with a teeny, tiny hatchet. It didn't work, so he went to Home Depot to buy a real axe.
7. Then of course he had to try it out and he ended up splitting about a dozen of those logs into perfectly split firewood.
8. Finally Jared and David got our rather damp logs and kindling dried out enough so they would burn.
9. The fire got going very nicely.
10. Heather posted a picture of our campfire on Facebook and Greta was curious what we were doing.
11. She said they would come over too.
12. We decided to roast hot dogs and make s'mores over the fire.
13. Chuck went to the grocery store to buy the food we needed.
14. We roasted and ate and roasted and ate some more.15. It was very fun.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Beethoven's 9th and Christmas Tree Lights

We targeted today, December 28th, as the day to dispose of our Christmas tree. Taking off the lights is the most tedious part. As I take off each string of lights from the tree, I inspect the string for burned out light bulbs. I do this by plugging the lights into an extension cord and checking each bulb. I replace the burned out bulbs with a good one from a stash of bulbs collected from a dead string with a few good bulbs. I then wrap the lights up in a compact way that protects them.

While doing this, I was listening to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Beethoven's Ninth is rich for me, not only because I love the music, which is skillfully crafted, each segment building on the previous that washes over me unlike any other symphony -- but also because I have many memories associated with the Ninth.
  • In second grade, I saw The Bell Telephone Science series "Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays" where Dr. Research (in real life, Dr. Frank Baxter, an English professor at the University of Southern California) introduced me to the mysteries of cosmic rays (as known when the film was made in 1957). In that program, part of the choral music of Beethoven's Ninth was at a pivotal point pondering the mysteries of the cosmos -- and that music burned into my conscious fabric about the universe. I didn't know then where the music came from, but I wanted to find it.
  • One day, a couple of years later, while listening to my favorite music station in Los Angeles, 92.3 KFAC FM, I heard Beethoven's Ninth for the first time. I heard the NBC Nightly News music in the second movement -- and then the hauntingly beautiful music of the "Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays" revealed itself in the choral section of the last movement. I had loved Beethoven's other symphonies and his ninth was instantly my favorite.
  • Soon I wanted to buy all of Beethoven's nine symphonies and finally did it when I about 10 years old. I saved up my allowances and gift money and purchased a collection of vinyl LPs. I treasured that set.
  • Growing up in church, on occasion we'd sing the hymn, "Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee", or I'd hear it in a performance, all along knowing the music came from the last movement of Beethoven's Ninth, with the words substituted in place of Friedrich Schiller's Ode to Joy that Beethoven used. I love that hymn.
  • In high school, in German class, the German teacher wanted a class devoted to listening to German cultural music and asked if anyone had any music. I volunteered Beethoven's Ninth symphony. The teacher played the last movement in class; I regretted it for two reasons. First, the teacher played my LP on a school record player, and I cringed at what it must be doing to my precious album. Secondly, a cute girl who sat next to me (who never talked to me before) leaned over and said, "This must take a special temperament to listen to this." I looked around the class and saw boredom in everyone's expressions. Big mistake.
  • I attended my first live concert of Beethoven's Ninth when I was in college. The Riverside Symphony Orchestra played the symphony. I loved it.
  • The love of my life loves "Joyful, Joyful We Adore Thee" and she wanted to come down the aisle to it in our wedding. So Beethoven's Ninth showed up at our wedding.
  • We transitioned from vinyl LPs to CDs. I decided to give up my Beethoven vinyl collection - a difficult thing for me to do, but we weren't going to keep a turntable just to play them. I no longer have a complete collection of Beethoven symphonies. Someday I'd like to have all nine symphonies again. I do have two different CDs of Beethoven's Ninth.
  • On Christmas Day in 1989, we watched on PBS as Leonard Bernstein conducted Beethoven's Ninth in Berlin. The Berlin wall had just come down weeks before. I was a child of the Cold War and this performance put a capstone on that Cold War period.
  • On rare occasions, very rare now, I will humorously pontificate in song my fractured edition of the opening chorus words of Beethoven's Ninth, humming out the orchestral part between the words -- all in German (well, my ridiculous attempt at German). It has become part of our family lore and tradition, one that our new sons-in-law had to endure at least once.
So, if I ever appear distracted when Beethoven's Ninth is being played, the beautiful music and the memories it evokes are the cause...

Oh yes, I need to finish those Christmas lights.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Christmas Day

Patrick's artwork on the left; Luke's on the right

The Professor and I got a Very Special Christmas Present this year: Luke and Patrick had made angels for us, with help from Mommy, of course. As they worked on them, Patrick told his mommy,
"Give Papa."
"Have eyes and face and beard! Mommy draw it."
"I do good job."
"Papa 'ov green. Papa like it."
"Papa say, 'oo, dat's pretty!' "
"Papa say, 'Dat's giffi-cult.' "

Luke apparently worked without much comment, but he mastered the scissor work and the hole-punching.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Christmas Eve

We have to share around here, so this year our family "shared" the married ones with their in-laws for Christmas Day, and we got the 26th for our Christmas Day. We also got the late evening of Christmas Day for our Christmas Eve. Got that?

On our Christmas Eve we had our annual traditional St. Lucia dinner, with Swedish meatballs, lutefisk, seafood, potatoes, lingonberries, and many other goodies. This year I also made a cookie tree using a set of cutters that I found at a garage sale in the summer. Love those bargains!

Later, we hung our stockings on the mantel. There were two very excited little boys running around. It was amazing that we got even one non-blurry boy.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Busy Day at Church

We woke up today knowing that our day would be very full.

Today was the inauguration of the "new room" at church, the room to yet be properly named, the room some are calling the overflow room. (That sounds so much like leftovers or something unwanted. Surely we can think of a better name than that!)
Ready for worship today

I worked 30 hours this past Monday to Thursday, helping to get the room ready for worship today. Others put in many more hours too. We started with a bare room, then built some wall extensions, patched and painted, then painted some more (that seems to sum up my life this year). I sanded the water-damaged ceiling, helped hang lights, I ironed 18 curtains and hemmed 10 of them; I helped hang curtain rods and I even helped hang the TV's. Then I "built" shrubs from greens and added Christmas decorations.
In process: the painting is finished and the carpet is being installed

So this morning I felt responsible to make sure all the details were in order in the new room. I am also the unofficial candle-lighter in the sanctuary for the Christmas season, and that takes a bit of time to complete. I also rounded up help to move the fake trees from downstairs to the "new room". That was all before church began.

After church, we stayed to help set up for a Christmas dinner in the gym this evening. I was put in charge of setting and decorating the tables. We had 32(!) tables filling the gym. All the decorations coordinated; they did not match. We used what we had, and we used up almost all the remaining bits and pieces of Christmas decor the church owns.
The starting point for the centerpieces was a tall glass candleholder and greens or florals in sprays coming off the center candle. Below are a few of the pieces we put together.

Everything was stored in large bins in the small closet off the sanctuary. We trollied the bins downstairs to the gym after church, built the centerpieces, then tore the florals apart again after the dinner and returned the pieces to the bins. I got help to trolly the bins back to the closet off the sanctuary. It was a lot of work, but it was worth it.

We arrived home ready to put our feet up!

Friday, December 16, 2011

Christmas At Church

Last Sunday at church the 2's and 3's sang Away in a Manger (a long-standing tradition at our church and their intro to singing in front of the church). Usually there are tears from at least one child, but not this year. That's not to say that they were all pleased with being up there; we did see a few unhappy faces.

Two boys who looked quite happy were Luke and Patrick. Luke sang and did all the motions. Patrick didn't sing a single word or do any of the motions. He stood up there grinning the whole time, and waving to the congregation. It was hilarious!Blurry picture, but you can see Luke in red, doing the motions, with a classmate next to him, mad about being up there.

Patrick in white, grinning and waving to everyone.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Thanksgiving Turkeys

Luke and Patrick came to visit Aunt Greta one day before Thanksgiving, and made clay turkeys. The turkeys then got fired in the big, giant, hot, hot oven. Patrick's is the one with the waddle on top of the head.


Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Happy Birthday Boy

Look who's four!
We were invited to the birthday party on Saturday evening, with the other grandparents, and most of the cousins and aunts and uncles. Luke asked for meatballs ("no sauce") for dinner, and cupcakes.


He hopped on his new bike and rode with no hesitation. He may be dumping the training wheels soon!

Monday, December 5, 2011

Celebrating Christmas

As December speeds by, we looked at when we could set aside time to buy a tree. Every weekend is already filling up, the Professor is scheduled to work late some evenings, and the tree lots might get emptied before we can get there. So I decided to go buy a tree all by myself.

And I did it: I walked in the nursery, saw a tall tree, pulled it out, and bought it. In something like 15 seconds. I even unloaded it from the top of the car and carried it to the backyard. Then I left it for the Professor to set up in the house. He also gets to string the lights. After all, I have to draw the line somewhere.
When he opened the bin of lights, he saw the lights as he left them last year. I have never seen such tidy, neatly wrapped lights as these. Aren't they cute little bundles?