Oh, Tannenbaum

And as for this year’s Christmas tree outing, I think this photo about sums it all up:

stella steve and the tree

Little did we know that part of Stella’s vision of selecting a Christmas tree involved having to touch every tree on the lot. Twice. Thusly, you can imagine the argument that ensued once Steve and I presented our selection for her appraisal before she had completed her mission. (See preceding photo.) As a sign of protest, she kicked and spit at every tree she passed on the way back to the car. If I’d have gotten my way she would have been secured to the top of the car with orange baling twine whilst the tree rode shotgun next to Porter.

And now, to decorate…

And the 2006 Thanksgiving Holiday awards go to…

(in no particular order)

Steve Walston. For spending approximately 14 hours in the back seat of a car with both Walstonlings, and never once threaten to throw himself onto I-5. For keeping with Walston tradition, and managing to nearly sever his head from his body with a hand-saw while pruning the olive tree. For finally getting a haircut like George Clooney. For managing to elude yet another Scrabble-death-match with Dani.

Stella Walston. For being, by far, the most patient, pleasant and well demeanored passenger in the car. Both ways. For giving the “you. here. now” finger-point to unsuspecting Thanksgiving diners, requesting their participation in the Elephants on a String dance. For convincing her Grandma Judy that it was a good idea for the two of them to sleep in a twin bed together. For gracefully handling her first major holiday not as an only child.

Porter Walston. For being saddled with an ear infection before, during and after the visit. For diligently continuing to work on his goal of achieving Most Distance Scooted Either Sideways or Backwards. For tolerating being licked on the face, repeatedly, by Lily. For enduring (and surviving) his first official Walston-Anderson family holiday.

Judy Walston. For being out of her ever-loving mind and volunteering, nay, demanding that she and Bill give up their room (and obscenely large bed) in order to sleep in the spare room. On twin beds. With both grandchildren. All night. ALL THREE NIGHTS. For being barked at, ordered around and pestered relentlessly by a bossy three-year-old, and acting as though it were a priviledge. For not falling out of her chair when son and daugher-in-law showed her the price range of the properties they have been coveting. For displaying all of Stella’s mud pies decoratively on a cake pedestal.

Bill Walston. For being out of his ever-loving mind for letting his wife convince him that the aforementioned plan was actually a good idea. For single-handedly doing about 600 loads of dishes. For giving Stella’s nose back each and every time he took it. For being the ultimate good sport in all of the things he was cajoled into doing.

Andy Anderson. For playing human jungle-gym even though it nearly snapped his entire body in half. For teaching Stella the Neener-Neener game (for which, he will pay dearly). For cooking the stuffing on the barbeque when oven space became scarce. For hosing down the gigantic mess that was made when someone dropped the leftovers container of green-bean casserole on the patio.

Dani Anderson. For planning, and shopping, and cooking and cleaning, and then planning some more, and shopping some more, and in the end, pulling it all together to host 16 people to Thanksgiving dinner. For doing all of this even though it meant having to sacrifice her precious grandchild hours which, incidentally, was not compensated for by sleeping with Stella-the-sideways-sleeper. For allowing Steve to not have his ass kicked in Scrabble. Again.

Scott Walston. For repeatedly punching his “family time” timecard. For being yelled at NOT to clear tables. For always being the tallest guy in the room.

Honorable Mentions going to…

Sharan Benson. For providing a pumpkin cheesecake that, due to it’s most insanely pleasurable deliciousness, will probably send all of us straight to food rehab for even walking by it at the dessert table. For providing the most amazing gravy 911 of all time.

Gailie & Annie. For not only hauling themselves to this shindig, but also subjecting their families to the look-at-my-granchild-fest that these things always turn out to be.

Note to all recipients: “Gizzard”, your gilded turkey statuette shall be forthcoming.

Cue excessively long photo montage.

The Winged Walstons

Stella was resolute from the very first moment we asked her what she wanted to be for Halloween: A Beautiful Butterfly. As the pieces of her costume started coming together, however, it became more and more apparent that Beautiful Butterfly had actually metamorphosized into Disco Butterfly. The true turning point came when the thin, pink glitter belt was added. It looked as though she fluttered straight in from a Donna Summer video. As usual, this doesn’t come without some relevant back-story. Of late, Stella has found the wonderfulness that is disco. Her #1 request that she repeatedly implores from the back seat is YMCA. Yes, everyone, my child is hooked on the Village People. Running a very close second is We Are Family, as in – I got all my sisters and me. In both cases she knows the words, and sings them with great gusto. Reason 376 we know, unquestionably, that she is our child.

I took Porter’s non-verbal cues of BEING UP ALL NIGHT that he wished to go as something nocturnal. This, coupled with the fact that he is getting four teeth at once and BITES ON EVERYTHING, made it a no-brainer that he should be a bat. He looked adorable, natch, and (along with his sister) posed for about a zillion photos .

We opted for a loop around the Arcata Plaza again this year, and after witnessing the unsavory types that trick-or-treat our neighborhood, I decided we would invite ourselves over to Dore & Lewis’s house for the remainder of the evening, so as not to have to pass out candy to the taller-than-I-am “kids” that ring our doorbell into the late hours of the night. Plus, that meant we didn’t have any left-over candy that I would surely consume by the fistful.

Little did I know that we would get to see one of the more memorable moments of the evening when Steve, Lewis and Porter all went to the door to hand out candy, as Steve casually remarked that they were dressed up as a gay couple who had just adopted their first baby.

The Season of the Pumpkin

This year we planned a coordinated effort for our pumpkin patch outing. Taking into consideration Stella and Alex’s BFF status, it was natural that they do the next best thing to hanging out at the mall scamming for guys – roaming a dirty field for squash. 3-ish year olds love this kind of thing. No, really.

Whereas I used to be the kind of mother who wouldn’t even consider leaving the house without 2 spare changes of clothes, diapers, wipes, bottles, toys, birth certificate, umbella stroller and three additional apparatus for carrying, I realized halfway there that I had forgotten any kind of coat or hat for Porter. This is why you may notice a bluish tinge to his lips in some of these photos. Poor kid. He’s lucky I haven’t left him on the top of the car yet.

We waited a week to actually carve the pumpkins, and it was all I could do to convince Stella that a knife was not a kid-friendly tool…even the “safety” kind. She eventually acquiesced, and accepted that the best she was going to get was to have her hand on mine while I did the actual carving. She did have a fun time scooping guts though. Being that I am the only one who takes photos around here, and I had to be on the task of keeping her away from the weapons of destruction, there are not a lot of photos of the actual carving part. Instead, what you will see is pumpkins, one photo of Stella with a splayed open pumpkin, then all the pumpkins and jack-o-lanters neatly displayed for your viewing pleasure.

Being that Porter was napping during the majority of the carving activities, I had to stage some ‘Boy with Pumpkin’ shots for those of you who would likely complain if there weren’t adequate seasonal photos with both children (yes, grandparents, I am looking at you).