Before:
After:
This morning one of my brothers came over with his family. He made the pancakes and I made the bacon. The boys played quietly and nicely while we cooked and chatted. We used light Hershey's chocolate syrup for the syrup. The boys gobbled it up. Marcie was enormed of her cousin Ethan. She wished she was old enough and strong enough to hold him.
The morning after I set it all out, when I came into the front hall, this is what I found:
Looks like a storm blew through, knocking over the palm tree (did they have palm trees in Bethlehem?) It took me all morning before I realized that the Nativity Scene was haunted . . . Casey was just having some fun. I can't keep him away from it, despite his very own Fisher-Price set. But at least he's showing an interest in the reason for Christmas.
Tonight he told us at story time that we give presents at Christmas to help celebrate the Baby Jesus's birthday. And he's really looking forward to putting that little baby figurine into his place in the nativity scene.



Below is one of our favorites, though we didn't order any prints. We think it's hilarious because it shows exactly who Casey and Marcie are. Casey is sticking his tongue through his lips making a "nuuuh!" sound, and Marcie is laughing at him. It's them at their most playful, captured on film. Of course, if you don't know Casey, he just looks silly-- but anyone who knows him and knows this sound, which often accompanies him crying out, "CASEY MOO!" (we don't know why, it's just his thing), knows what I mean. Casey is definitely a character. And Marcie loves him for it-- really, who doesn't?In the photo, she's begun taking the sweatshirt and shirt off, which is why the right arm looks so funny.
As it turns out, Casey had been giving Marcie "rides" on a green blanket, pulling her up and down the hallway. He was unaware that she carried a cup of chocolate milk sans lid, and looked awfully surprised at the turn of events.
After I calmed down and stopped laughing, the kids enjoyed a nice, warm bath-- and no one was worse for the wear. And as mad as it made me at the time-- the mess of it all-- it really was funny. . .