Category Archives: Christmas

12 Days of Christmas. Remix 2012

Last year, I sat down with my kids to write some new lyrics to the 12 Days of Christmas.  The lyrics, originally written down around 1780 in England don’t quite stand up to the test of time.  If you don’t believe me, find me 8 Maids a Milking and I will gladly concede the point.

Plus, I don’t have time; in the midst of the holiday season, to try and explain the difference between a French Hen and an American Hen. It is an endeavor I’d rather not undertake (rumor has it, the French Hen was too scared to lay any eggs…ZING!).

So once again, I pried my kids away from their iPods, the TV, their music, and fighting with each other (my 10 year old assured me that she and her sister were able to pay attention to all of their electronic stimulants when I asked her to turn at least one of them off) to sit down with their Dad to once again rewrite the 12 Days of Christmas.

Last year we had turkeys sweating, people drinking, and muffins.  I wanted to see if another year older would add a little more perspective about the holidays and change the silliness of the answers.  As you’ll see…not so much.

Enjoy!

On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  My very own front yard.

M: What does a front yard have to do with Christmas?

7yo:  So Santa has a place to land his sleigh because we don’t have a chimney.

10yo: And a place for the snow to fall so I can hit you with a snowball.

M:  Emma…that’s very insightful.  Hannah…challenge accepted. Next line!

On the second day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  2 White Buttons

10yo:  For a shirt.  Buttons.

M:  Really?  Kind of slacking this year don’t you think?

7yo: Big buttons!  Like the size of Dad’s head!

10yo:  That’s huge! (Both laugh simultaneously and uncontrollably)

M: I’m telling on both of you when your mom gets home.  Next line!

On the third day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  3 Snowgirls

7yo:  With snow-boobs!!

M:  I..Uh..you shouldn’t…that’s not…never mind.  Next line!

10yo:  Don’t forget a snow-bra!

M:  Next line!!!

On the fourth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  4 Dogs a Barking.

M:  We have one here, don’t you think that’s enough?

7yo:  I want another dog for Christmas.

M:  You know the rule, we get another pet, and I have to get rid of a kid.

7yo/10yo:  HER!!

M:  Next line!

On the fifth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  5 Golden Toilets.

10yo:  I was going to say 5 golden butt cheeks.

M:  I don’t know if me and your mom should talk to you two or we should schedule an appointment with a professional instead?

7yo:  Gold toilets…that’s funny.

M:  It’s scary how much you remind me of me Emma. Next line!

On the sixth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  6 Sparkling Snowflakes.

M:  Well that is very nice.

10yo:  I know.

7yo:  Snowflakes made of slime!

M:  Aaaaand that moment is done.  Next line!

On the seventh day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  7 Red Vampires

M:  That’s pretty cool.

7yo:  Dad, I’m Team Edward.

M:  Say that again and you’re grounded. When we’re done here, you and I are going to watch Blade and maybe even Underworld.  Next line!

On the eighth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  8 Bags of Trash.

M:  I know where we could get them.  We’ll start in your rooms.

10yo:  Dad!

7yo:  She does have a lot of junk.

M:  You too.

7yo:  Nu-uh!

M:  Yuh-uh!  Next line!

On the ninth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  9 Daddies Dancing.

10yo:  Just be careful you don’t hurt your knee again.

M:  Oh, I can still bust a mean move my dear.

7yo:  Nu-uh. Mom said you can’t.

M:  You’re mother is jealous of my insane moves…and my knee brace. Next line!

On the tenth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  10 Frogs a Frogging.

M:  What the hell is a frog frogging mean?

10yo:  What does a Lord Leaping mean?

M:  Good point.  Next line!

On the eleventh day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  11 Cats Smoking.

7yo:  Like the Pipers Piping.

M:  I’m pretty sure that’s not what that line meant.

10yo:  Yeah, but how funny would it be to see 10 cats smoking Dad?

M:  It would be hilarious.  It stays in.  Next line!

And on the twelfth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:  12 Babies Rockin’.

M:  Like rocking to sleep or rocking like rockin’?

7yo:  ROCKIN’!!

10yo:  Shakin’ their booties!

M:  Please tell me booties is for their feet and not for their rear-ends.

10yo:  Shakin’ their butts!!!

M:  *sigh* I really have an uphill battle with you two.  Ok, big finale!

12 Babies Rockin’

11 Cats Smoking

10 Frogs a Frogging

9 Daddies Dancing

8 Bags of Trash

7 Red Vampires

6 Sparkling Snowflakes

5 Golden Toilets

4 Dogs a Barking

3 Snowgirls

2 White Buttons

And my very own front yard.

7yo:  Dad, don’t forget about the snowboobs for the snowgirls!

Merry Christmas

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Now She Knows

And finally, I told her, “So that’s the truth; about all of them. Now you know.”

After Christmas last year I had decided, for my own reasons, my 9 year old needed to know the truth about Santa Claus.  Maybe as misguided as my reasoning was, I thought it was time she learned the truth about Santa and his brethren of mythological icons.

In my mind, the conversation would be easy to begin and subsequently get through (As easy as I thought Physical Geology 101 as a senior in college was going to be. Needless to say I was wrong…about both).  I had found myself hesitating and blaming it on patience for the right moment to tell Hannah.  I thought better of telling her before bed, holding a sign at the school bus stop was out, blurting it out after she passed the mashed potatoes at dinner didn’t seem like the best time either.

So I waited.  As I waited, I planned my strategy out further.  I was like the kid playing Dungeons and Dragons, who always took longer than he needed to figure out what to do with his Mana points.  Each time I took a step towards telling her, I backed up and thought about it a little more.  So I rehearsed my speech.  Tweaked it, edited it for time and for bad jokes, and said it out loud multiple times.  One version had me wearing a leather trench coat and handing her a red pill and a blue pill. Another version I was going to set up a row of cups and chalices and telling her to choose one. And yet another version, I had her watching the Matrix and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade so she could pick up on my references.

Maybe it was me, but I started to rethink this position of her needing to know.  Maybe I was being selfish as I slammed the door shut on a very big piece of her childhood?  Who was I to tear down the Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy, and Santa Claus from Idols to Taylor Hicks?  Did Hannah really need to know?

So I pushed it out further and further.  I resigned myself to be happy knowing by the time she got to junior high she wouldn’t believe anymore (it worked for potty training and elementary school so I was willing to give it shot).  After a while, I understood it was me. My hesitation for the past 3 months came down to one thing, I wanted her to stay my baby…and I’m an idiot for wanting to tell her (ok, two reasons).  I wanted her to be that little girl whose eyes told me she believed in Easter Bunnies, Tooth Fairies, Santa Clauses, and the magic her Dad can wield.

It was about me overcompensating because I was scared to lose another piece of my daughter’s childhood. A childhood she is rapidly growing out of.  So I thought I would tackle it head on, like a man. Ignore my feelings and grab it by the reigns and control the situation (or in other words, act like an imbecile).

My manly control of the situation came to a crashing halt this past Saturday afternoon while I was at work (big surprise) with one question from an inquisitive 9 year old.

“Mommy.  There really isn’t an Easter Bunny is there?”

“No.” My wife used Hannah’s question to let her behind the curtain.

She explained to Hannah the intricacies of our reasoning to keep all of this from her.  It didn’t end with the Easter Bunny either.  Hurtling to the ground came the Tooth Fairy (although to be fair, according to Hannah, “I knew that Mommy because Daddy told me about her in his joking voice, not his serious voice”) and toppling lastly and loudest, Santa Claus.  All toppled unceremoniously and without any sort of eulogy befitting their memory.  Just the simple truth which allowed for another chapter in my daughter’s childhood to close. A chapter that held a good deal of significance for her but I suspect not quite as much as it did for me and her mom.

As my wife relayed the accounts of the afternoon to me, she told me Hannah took it well.  There was a brief moment of sadness and teary eyes but nothing that lasted or affected her past the moment.

I was at work when all of this happened so when I got home I pulled her to the side so her younger sister couldn’t hear (We’re still all about lying to her). I reassured her, told her the same reasons her mom told her for doing what we did, told her I loved her, and gave her a hug. And finally, I told her, “So that’s the truth; about all of them. Now you know.”  As I said it, I got a little sad because I saw her grow up in front of my eyes.

And her response?

“Yup. Can I go play now?” It obviously had affected my daughter more than I thought…or maybe that was just me?

The Walmart Campaign of 2011

 “To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving the peace”

– George Washington

The other night I was asked (ie. ‘told’) to go to Walmart to pick up Christmas cards I thought my wife and I agreed we wouldn’t be sending out this year.  I remember distinctly the conversation we had about the cards being an unnecessary purchase this year.

“You thought wrong.” So said my wife.

Going to Walmart can be an arduous enough task on a regular Wednesday night without Christmas being right around the corner.  But this time of year, Walmart’s doors are blasted wide open for the hordes of consumers hungry for last minute items.  The aisles are congested with shoppers, parents dragging their crying kids, and the one lady on the motorized scooter taking up the entire greeting card lane (and yet there are still only 3 checkout lanes open).  The freaks, mutants, parolees, and parents who come in their pajamas with their kids after midnight even show up.  It’s like the worst collection of partygoers at Studio 54 ever (think Grace Jones ten times worse and with three wailing children attached to her hip).  So this is not a trip I take lightly. A trip, if I am to survive, I have to prepare for.  Did I mention the kids were with me too?

I had to prepare them for the worst too. Lord knows that store looks like day 25 of the zombie apocalypse so I needed everyone on the same page.  I turned the television off, because they listen to that better than they listen to me most days. I stood in front of them mustering up as much confidence and courage as I could.  I was like George Washington prepping the Continental Army at Valley Forge.

“Ok kids, listen up; we have to go to Walmart.” Groaning ensued.

“I’m not happy about this either but your mother needs us to pick up the Christmas cards.”

“Daddy”, the 9 year old has a question, “I thought we weren’t doing Christmas cards?”

“Neither did I but that’s not the point.  The point is, we all have to go to Walmart and we all have to get home from Walmart.  This means you two are next to me at all times.  No goofing around. We’re not there to browse.  I want to get in and get out so we can get back home. I suggest you wear sneakers because we’re going to be moving quickly.  We are going for the cards and then we are out of there.”

The 6 year old had a question, “Daddy, can we look at the toys?”

“Did I not just say…no. No toys.  Any more questions?” the room was silent, “Good, get your sneakers on and let’s go.”

We pulled in to the parking lot of our Walmart which was like a demolition derby played to the background music of 40 Salvation Army volunteers ringing their bells incessantly.  I snuck around to the back of the lot.  Parking 3 ‘clicks’ away from the doors was a small price to pay to avoid waiting for the guy with the overflowing cart and a broken wheel try to get through the crosswalk. Not to mention the maniacs given a Class C driver’s license by the state of Pennsylvania all searching for the closest spot to the front.

We started towards the doors. They were already lagging behind.

“Hannah, Emma, let’s go! I want to get home.”

“Daddy”, the 9 year old again, “I’m Miranda and this is my cousin Jessica.”

On the eve of entering the retail battlefield, my kids decided it was time to play pretend time and change their names.

“Miranda. Jessica. Let’s go.”

We bolted past the Salvation Army volunteer. I even looked down as I passed by him (I’m not proud of this but dammit I had a mission to complete).  The kids stayed on my heels.

The store was a sensory overload and a grand mal seizure waiting to happen.  Christmas music was blaring over loud speakers, a thousand conversations going on all at once, the familiar sound of parents yelling at screaming kids, husbands sighing, and motorized scooters scooting added to the din.  People wandered aimlessly all around us holding on to full bags and shopping carts. It was like a busy day at the markets in Calcutta (I’m pretty sure I saw baby pigs skinned and hanging from large rusty hooks by the deli department).

“Hannah, Emma, stay close.”

“Daddy, we’re Miranda and Jessica.” I had to give them credit, they didn’t break character.

“Whoever you are, let’s go so we can get the cards and go home!”

We darted. We ducked. We side stepped. We slid. We turned left. We turned right. We detoured through the lingerie section (I giggled at the granny panties). I used my arm like a machete to chop past bulging racks of clothing and empty carts obstructing our way.  When we emerged we were right in front of where we needed to be.

I breathed a sigh of relief that no violence was necessary.  Thanks to my detours we barely brushed shoulders with anyone, and the cards had been prepaid so when it was our turn, it took all of 37 seconds to get what we came for.

We made our way out of Walmart faster than the Continental Army left New York in 1776. I had the girls with me and more importantly I had those Christmas cards.  The Walmart Campaign of 2011 had been a success.

“That wasn’t too bad. Miranda. Jessica. You did really well. I’m proud of both of you.”

“Oh, Daddy…”

“Yeah kiddo.”

“We’re Hannah and Emma again.”

“Of course you are. Let’s go home.”