We spent our first day back from Sayulita quickly shifting gears. We layered our sun kissed bodies into long sleeves and jackets, legwarmers and vests, and found ourselves up the Blackfoot River searching for the perfect tree. We couldn't look for long because none of us were ready to be back out in the cold for too long, but Eliana spotted an appropriately Charlie Brownish tree and daddy quickly rigged it to the top of the car. We had such a lovely time taking out all of our ornaments and sharing our favorites with Eliana. We have a nice sampling from both of our childhood collections, so all of Jeffy's sailboats and my Peanuts gang guys have special significance. Eliana examined each one asking, "What is this? This one mom's or dad's?" and then ambling over to hang them on the lower branches of the tree (after insisting on being, "nakey noodle" because who decorates trees in clothes anyway?).
Then when Auntie was here, we found ourselves at the wine bar for dinner. Four mildly inebriated Santa's entered the building, carrying huge brass instruments. The Santa's bought themselves another round of drinks, shouted some robust, "Ho! Ho! Ho!'s", then busted a few holiday tunes on their tubas. Els then internalized that Santa says, "Ho! Ho! Ho!" but also of course assumed that Santa wields a loud brass instrument. So Eliana's impersonation of Santa involves a make-believe horn that she happily plays upon completion of her Ho's.
The following night we found ourselves at a Christmas eve dinner hosted by some friends. There were a dozen or so little kiddos there and the plan was that the papa host would dress up like Santa and unload a big bag of gifts, one for each kiddo. When the doorbell rang, the chickens raced upstairs shouting, "Santa! Santa!" Eliana was one of the younger ones in the bunch, but she quickly caught on and followed them, albeit a bit more slowly, up the stairs. When she spotted him, she anxiously looked for me. She clutched me tightly and whispered, "Where's the band?"
But once big S started unloading loot from his big bag, Els got into the groove. Of course, her little present was the last gift in the bag, so she got to watch all her buddies get excited and rip open their regalitos. Perhaps Santa's coolest gift were matching Wolverine costumes for her BFF's Solan and Jiah. I regretted the two wrapped books I put in the bag as I watched Soraya rip open a Cinderella Barbie and Cyrus get nuts with a remote control car. I guess I'm just getting into the groove of Santa myself.
Christmas morning proved to be was the peak of our holiday exploits. Eliana was psyched to see a stuffed stocking and even more so when she realized that it was bursting with the kind of treats that she never gets. Candy and gummies, chocolate and weird, cheap plastic toys that I found at the dollar store. At that point her favorite gift was "my orange candy". Maybe we should bust candy at 8 in the morning more often.
From stockings we moved into wrapped presents, most of which were for her thanks to generous grandparents and aunties. There were a couple big hits. Jalissa the Cabbage Patch kid whose kinky blonde curls mirror Els. Conversation at nap time on Christmas day, listened to by her parents on the other side of the door:
You have blonde hair. So do I!
It's really curly. Mine's curly too.
Your eyes are green. But mine are just blue.
It's really curly. Mine's curly too.
Your eyes are green. But mine are just blue.
We followed up gift fest with a trip to Pattee Canyon where Eliana tried out the skis that daddy bought her a few weeks back at a gear swap. This was another highlight of my day - the look on her little face as she zipped down the little slope for the first time. Equally beautiful was the smile on Jeff's face, his little girl excited about one of his greatest passions.
After necessary naps, hot tub trips and food preparation, we found ourselves with our dearest amigos for Christmas dinner. It was simple and quiet and felt just great. While I definitely had bouts of missing my California and New Jersey families throughout the day, being with our friends felt like being home. The kiddos were so sweet together, playing in their fort and eating together at the kids table. It all felt pretty cozy and together, just as Christmas should.
So here we are, a few days post holiday, post vacation, just back at home enjoying a week of nesting and togetherness before we go back to the craziness of our working lives. Except now Eliana wants to open her stocking and bake cookies all day. Cookies we managed (and by the third batch they actually seemed to look and taste okay). I'm going to head downstairs now to begin a project in the basement involving massive tubs of girl's baby clothes that need to be sent to my dear amiga and sister-in-law. I guess I'll be all about brown and blue. And next year Christmas will have a whole new bundle of joy to get funky in the mix.