Les un-Miserables

2 Jan
Look Down

Saturday night, my mom and 2 of my sisters and I ran away to see Les Miserables.  I intended to leave the Dear Husband with happy children who had already eaten dinner.  Instead, when I dashed out the door, dinner was smoking on the stove, 2 children were howling their heads off, and there were a couple extra kids in the house that we don’t even own.

We all giggled like school girls as we watched the previews and stuffed our faces with popcorn (so we could get a refill before the movie actually started.)

I mentioned in a post before that I have past emotional scars connected to the story of Les Miserables.  Anytime anybody would mention “Les Mis”  I would growl in my head and be like, “Stupid Movie, we hates it.”  It was Susan Boyle whose heartfelt rendition of I Dreamed a Dream on Brittain’s Got Talent (2009) finally broke through to me and I heard the beauty of the music for the first time.  Thanks, Susan.  Music makes everything better.

The movie was glorious.  Eddie Redmayne made us all cry.  Amanda denies that she cried, but we all know better.

Look at all those delectible freckles!  It’s about time we had a hero with freckles.  It’s pretty great that a red-head has the last name of red mane, also.  And I haven’t even told you about his voice yet.  swoon.  His singing tore the tears right out of our eyes. In a featurette about singing live during the filming, Eddie talks about hearing Anne singing: “That song which I thought I knew pretty well, suddenly I listened to the lyrics for the first time, afresh.”  This is exactly how I felt about Eddie’s singing.  No one has ever brought out the unspeakable grief like he did.

Samantha Barks & Anne Hathaway were heartbreaking.  We all agreed that Fantine should have had long hair when she came back as an angel.  Duh! Angels get to be beautiful.  They do not have shaved heads.

My only complaint about the movie was that Hugh Jackman sounded like he was singing through his nose the whole time.  It was awful.

Sunday afternoon while I was working on Primary stuffs, I listened to all the other men who have been prisoner 24601 on youtube.  My favorite is Alfie Boe.

I also like John Owen Jones.  He’s almost as good as Alfie.  Colm Wilkinson is maybe a little too Broadway for me. (Or maybe a little too grey for me, Ah Snap.)  He is the bishop in the new movie, so that’s a fun nod to the original Broadway cast.   However, after listening to 4 or 5 different professional Broadway singers, I went back to Amazon and listened to Hugh again.  Wow! He can’t be beat for raw, real feeling coming through the song.  Now I’m repenting of all the complaining I did.  Mary was right.  He was good.  I think for enjoying the purity of the music, I’d pick Alfie Boe, but Hugh Jackman was right for the movie, though like Amanda, I’m wondering how our phantom would have been as Jean Valjean.  (John Owen Jones has played the phantom as well.  So it’s a completely logical idea.)

All in all, I think I will be getting the soundtrack from the movie because of Eddie and probably another soundtrack so I can have Alfie, too.  I probably won’t get a copy of the movie because definitely PG-big people and my kids will want to see it if we have it.

P.S.  Dear Dad:  If you are reading this, all of the red words in my posts are links.  So if you want to hear Colm Wilkinson singing, or watch the featurette I was talking about, click on the blue words and the magical thing that is the internet will take you there.  Perhaps you’ve already figured this out, but just in case….because I know technology is not your native language….

Merry Mustache Christmas

1 Jan

Christmas Eve at Grandpa’s House

1 Jan
Holding Babies

Playing with trains

I’ll give a stone and a sheep for a brick.

Ha Ha, no.

Poor Eddie, his Kaitlyn isn’t here yet 😦

We decided that Memphis eating ham constitutes canibalism.

Grandma’s Ipad always has a line of eager kiddies waiting for their turn.

Even Owie Boy wants a turn.

Yay! Cartoons!

A Christmas Eve nap is always good.

Some people are naturally cute.

Mom & Mary slaving in the kitchen to make food for the hordes.

a little silliness

What’s going on?  I need a new diaper.

a bad picture of a fun advent calendar I made with a cereal box and some vintage clipart from the internet.

Baby Dumpling is 1 year old!

1 Jan

December first, we set up the Christmas tree.  We had a lot of fun– so much fun that I forgot to go to a baptism that I had faithfully promised the missionaries I would attend.  It was for two of my primary children.  I still feel pretty bad about forgetting.

Baby Dumpling was so excited  about the tree and the Christmas penguins that she walked across the room for the first time.

That makes her our child who walked the earliest–almost 2 weeks before her first birthday!

Baby Dumpling can say lots of words, which is also unusual for such a little baby.  She says Mama, Dad, pig, dog, kitty, and cracker (but she means any food).

She loves to play peek-a-boo and for me to carry her around all day. 

She likes to play with cell phones and I can hardly use mine because the second I pull it out, she starts screeching for me to give it to her.  I blame Grandma’s Ipad.

She loves to watch the dog and kitty playing outside and she loves to dig the dirt out of my houseplants and eat it. 

Hiking at HaHa Tonka State Park

1 Jan

Hiking in the cold was harder than I thought it would be.  But we still had a great day.

 But the castle was very interesting.

 The spring was beautiful and mysterious, and the kids had fun counting the 300 wooden steps down to it.

 Baby Dumpling got a free ride.

 Why so serious, Blueberry Pie?

 This little girl is my cousin, but she’s the same age as Cherry Pie.

 Cutie Pie had lots of energy early on.

Cherry Pie is getting to be sort of grown up. 

The best part was stopping at Uncle Jon’s on the way home for some fish tacos!  Scrumptious.  So scrumtious.

Personal Flaws

19 Dec

Consider flaws…like personal flaws….

Is there a flaw that while you would never never judge anyone else for having and in fact, love other people who have this flaw….

if it turned out that you had this flaw, would you be horrified, embarassed, and deny it vehemently?

I have a head cold this week and am rather stuffed up in the breathing department.  Other times of year, I have seasonal allergies that stuff up my nasal passages.

My husband says I snore.   (aaah I can’t even tell you how horrified I am to even be typing this.)

I say:  

#1 loud stuffy breathing (where the sound comes from your nose) is not the same as snoring (where the sound comes from your throat)

#2  Snoring absolutely does not fit with the mental image I have of myself in my head.  Therefore it is impossible that I snore.

#3 It is very ungentlemanly of him to mention something that happens when I am asleep and completely unaware of it.

See?  It is impossible that I snore. 

I’m off to purchase some Nyquil. 

Pet Peeve #2

18 Dec

I thought it was bad enough that the second news hit about the shooting in Conneticutt, everyone around me started groaning about  “now they’re gonna say we need more gun control.”

Seriously?  You just found out that 22 children and 6 adults have been slaughtered by a madman and your first thought is, “Oh no, they’re going to try to take away my gun.”  ???

I hope we do have a discussion about what can be done to prevent horrors like this from happening again.

I thought the gun-control griping was bad, but it’s gotten worse.  I’ve seen several self-righteous memes like this one smeared all over Facebook:

Pardon me a huge eye-roll. 

This ridiculous t-shirt is not going to bring anyone unto God.  It makes Christians look self-righteous and it demotes God down to about the power of Santa Claus.  

God is in the hearts of my children.  He is in the hearts of millions of other children and teachers all across the USA.  He is in the school and no laws about group prayer or not posting the 10 commandments are going to keep Him out.

Mosiah 24: 11-13

11 And Amulon commanded them that they should stop their cries; and he put guards over them to watch them, that whosoever should be found calling upon God should be put to death.

 12 And Alma and his people did not raise their voices to the Lord their God, but did pour out their hearts to him; and he did know the thoughts of their hearts.
 13 And it came to pass that the voice of the Lord came to them in their afflictions, saying: Lift up your heads and be of good comfort, for I know of the covenant which ye have made unto me; and I will covenant with my people and deliver them out of bondage.

5 Dec

If you’ve been looking for the post that will have your emotions seesawing between laughter and desperate envy, look no further. Here it is. Wouldn’t I love to be a part of the internet glitterati. ( also the author is my cousin’s husband so I’m just going to bask in the glow of being able to claim that I’m related to the 1%)

Brigham Griffin's avatarDirect Communications Corporate Blog

I always knew that someday I would make it into the 1%. I have been aiming to be a part of it since the day I arrived off the boat with just a suitcase in my hand. Unfortunately, I am not talking about my adjusted gross income,Β  which according to the IRS still puts me right amongst the riffraff, or for the true 1%, β€œrif et raf,” meaningΒ  β€œone and all” in French.Β  But, now that I have 100Mb broadband speeds to my home, I can boldly claim to be part of the new 1% internet glitterati, which is almost as good.

If you don’t believe that internet speed is the new status symbol, replacing both the BMW and paid-off mortgage to let people know that you have arrived, just look at how the Washington liberal elite are making the National Broadband Plan their new priority. The current administration has…

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A month of Christmas!

1 Dec

When I was little, my mom started the tradition for our family of celebrating Christmas they way they do all around the world, basically we celebrated as many different ways as possible.  We celebrated Scandinavian Christmas, English Christmas, German Christmas, Russian Christmas, even Hannukah which isn’t Christmas, but does happen in December.

Most of the year, I’m a pretty lazy mom as far as celebrating stuff goes.  My kids do not get big elaborate birthday parties.  All the other holidays get maybe a special dessert and we get together with extended family or friends for a fun afternoon, but that is it.  There have been years when for Halloween I bought a bag of candy and we stayed home and watched a movie.

However, in December, I go all out, sort of.  I still try to keep it sane, because I’m only human, after all.  Here is my plan for this year.

December 1: Decorate the Christmas Tree.  Make an advent calendar.  (Looks like once again I do not have something beautifully sewn or quilted, so we’ll be doing the paper chain with 24 links, one to be removed each day. Maybe in January we’ll have a blizzard and I’ll get one quilted.)

December 2:  First Sunday of Advent.  Advent is celebrated all around the world.  The word literally means “coming”.  It helps us stay focused on Christ and prepare for his coming.  On each of the four Sundays before Christmas, we will be reading from the prophesies of Isaiah and other prophets who testified of Christ.  We’ll light a candle and read from the scriptures words of light.  The first Sunday is the Sunday of Hope.    We’ll be reading scriptures that focus on hope, both the hope Christ brings and the hope of the people who watched for his coming for ages:

Isaiah 9: 2, 6-7, Jacob 4:4, Moroni 7:41, Mosiah 16:6-9,
Joel 3:16

We’ll sing “Oh come, Oh come Emmanuel” as a family

December 3: For family home evening, we will put out our nativity scenes.  Italian nativity sets are called presepio.  We will also set out a small empty wooden manger.  As the children do acts of kindness for others, they can add a piece of straw to the manger in preparation for the arrival of baby Jesus.

December 6: Saint Nicolas Day  In the Netherlands and Belgium, children put out their shoes on December 5, with perhaps carrots or hay for St. Nicolas’ horse.  Saint Nicolas fills our shoes with nuts & sweets and perhaps small gifts.  Read the story of St. Nicolas here.

December 8: The first day of Hannukah.  We’ll play the dredel game and eat potato latkes (pancakes) and jelly doughnuts.

December 9: Second Sunday of Advent, the Sunday of Preparation & Peace
Luke 1:26-38, Isaiah 11:1-4, Isaiah 52:7
We’ll sing “Oh Come All Ye Faithfull.”

December 10: for family home evening, we’ll go caroling to our neighbors as they do in England.  When we get home, we will not burn a Yule Log (as we have no fire place) but we will eat a Yule Log nougat candy. (A disgustingly sweet confection that my dear husband’s family always ate, so he is nostalgic about it.)

December 13: Santa Lucia Day.  The children of our house will get up early and led by their oldest sister, bring hot chocolate and cinnamon rolls
in procession to their parent’s bedroom, where we will have a lovely “surprise” breakfast all together.

December 16: Third Sunday of Advent, the Sunday of Joy.
Isaiah 12:2-5, Mosiah 3:3-12,
We’ll sing “Joy to the World” of course.

December 17: For family home evening, we’ll make some special birdseed treats to hang in our front yard as they do in Norway.

December 23: Fourth Sunday of Advent, the Sunday of Love.
John 3:16, Isaiah 49:13-16, Moroni 7:47-48,

We’ll sing “Angels we have heard on High.”
Also, we have the Dear Husband’s family coming over for a big Christmas dinner.  I’m planning to have a pinata as they do in Mexico

December 24: Christmas Eve
we will read Luke chapter 2 and sing “Away in a Manger.” 

December 25: Regular old American Santa Claus will have left presents (always including fruit & toothbrushes) in our stockings.  We’ll give gifts to each other.  We’ll eat cold cereal and no doubt have a big Christmas feast with my extended family that afternoon.

December 26: Boxing Day We’ll do something of service, perhaps take food to someone in need or something…not sure yet.

New Year’s Eve: We have our Good Riddance Party!

New Year’s Day: We eat Hoppin’ Jon Soup and Rice Pudding.  Whoever finds the almond in their pudding gets good luck for the whole year. (Yugoslavia)

January 6: Three Kings’ Day We set out our shoes again as they do in Spain, this time with straw for the camels of the Three Magi.  They leave us a present, usually a new journal for the new year πŸ™‚

On all the inbetween days, we’ll be reading Christmas stories, watching as many different versions of Charles Dickens “A Christmas Carol” as we possibly can, and making presents for each other and for our friends.  It will be grand.

Birthday Kisses

29 Nov

Julia: “Mom, what do you get for your birthday?”

Me: “Hugs and kisses from girls that I love.”

Julia (giggling with excitment) : “I’m a girl.”