[Welcome, visitors from Scribbit! If you want more holiday tales, you can always check out this post, or this one. Or any post from any December, really. Go ahead - it's free!]
We got up bright and early last Thanksgiving Day - not voluntarily, o course, but when you manage to get your 2-year-old to bed by 7 in the evening, you've got to accept that she is going to be chirping merrily in your ear around 6:30 AM. I went downstairs ull o plans to make the house presentable and to inish cooking the dinner or our guests. Larry, it seems, had no such concerns about holiday hospitality. I mean, unless he elt that painting the ront door this morning was the best way to show people how welcome they are in our house on Thanksgiving. So he painted or a while, and then he decided to while away some more time chipping o the extra concrete around the ront stoop railings. A must-do item on anyone's get-ready- or-Thanksgiving list, I'm sure.
When is a day o not a day o ? When I do all the things I normally do, plus try to keep the kids rom wrecking Daddy's home improvement project. And I can't even go out tomorrow, as I have no desire to be mingling with all the crazies who get up at 4 AM to purchase some special at Best Buy or WalMart. (My apologies to any crazies who may be reading this, but really - you are reakin' nuts.)
Where was I? Oh, yes, our arsenic-phobic neighbor and her husband decided not to come over. I'm betting she heard that I cook the turkey in one o those plastic oven bags and decided not to risk it. The meal wasn't all I had hoped, as I managed to dry out the turkey and oversalt the stu ing. But no matter - I was so sick o all the ood a ter cooking or 3 days straight that I had no desire to eat any o it anyway. My parents and my brother ate everything politely, and then my brother valiantly read several Curious George-type books to Rachel. I don't know how he managed to do that a ter eating turkey; even without L-tryptophan coursing through my bloodstream, I start alling asleep hal way through any o those stories. A weird, drugged sort o sleep, that I imagine to be kin to the eeling you'd get i you were slowly being poisoned by carbon monoxide.
Maybe it's old age. Or, perhaps, just a sur eit o parenting.
I don't want any more ood ever. Well, except vanilla ice cream. I want that. Maybe I'll ask Larry to go out and get some. 7-11's open, right?
Oh, and I need to remember that I shouldn't buy sweet potatoes or Thanksgiving. No one likes them. And the kids just pick the marshmallows off the top. Next year, I'll skip the cooking and the scooping and the mashing and simply throw a bag of mini-marshmallows on the table instead. Problem solved.
Love your marshamllow idea. We cheated this year - paid $59.99 to a local restaurant and they cooked the whole meal - we just picked it up. NO STRESS!!!
ReplyDeleteNice blog - I'll be back!
Hallie
That's funny - mini-marshmellows!!! Our day was pretty good and my turkey turned out fine. It is too much work for something that lasts only about 20 minutes. See you soon. Kellan
ReplyDeleteI'm with you - I don't understand people who shop on the Friday after Thanksgiving. It's nuts. No sale is that good.
ReplyDeleteI make the sweet potatoes just for me...I love 'em! And wouldn't you know it...this year I just made a small batch because I figured no one else would eat them. Everyone scooped them up adn gobbled them down almost before I got a chance to put a small dollop on my own plate!
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving!
By the way...someone found my blog by Googling your name and then they read through all of my archives over the next few days. So...thank you!
Ah, the memories. I haven't had Thanksgiving in over 15 years. Keeping the kids out of Daddy's hair, now that's a fun way of spending the day off. Just think that on Monday they'll be back to school. So, you said over at Diesel's that you want a banner? If you e-mail me, I'll try to explain how I did mine. I asked for help too, but nobody did, so I had a hard time figuring it out, but I finally did (although I'm sure my way is not the most efficient way). We non-tech people have to stick together. My e-mail is esfingecolibri at gmail.com (just substitute the "at" for @, and take out the spaces, I don't want any spammer-robots to get a hold of it).
ReplyDeleteI got a text at 7:00 AM from a friend who was up and out the door at 4:00 AM. I couldn't even fathom rolling out of bed at 4 let alone getting dressed and shopping.
ReplyDeleteSorry about the dried turkey..that's a bummer but hey they ate it!
WWofW - Don't gloat.
ReplyDeleteKellan - I had the same thought myself.
Sue - Unless we're just justifying being lazy....
fmlp - hey! You're stealing my audience!
theresa - thanks - I'll be in touch with you definitely.
jen - maybe the draw was that she got to go out without the kids...
I'm sure it was all much better than you claim, and everyone appreciated your effort and the company! And KUDOS to you for takign on teh challenge in the first place. I have no desire EVER to be responsible for Thanksgiving dinner. SCARY!
ReplyDeleteExcellent post! And not just because I agree with everything you said, either!
ReplyDeleteYou are funny!! I hated sweet potatos until my sister made some for me this year. No marshmallows there. I called them candy potatos and even my two year old ate them.
ReplyDeleteMy husband normally goes out shopping with all the crazies while I stay at home and sleep. This year there weren't any really good deals.
Oh how sad because I LOVE sweet potatoes--and the way I make them they're just glorified dessert :)
ReplyDeleteLove the marshmallow tip! Great post...
ReplyDeleteI'm not a Fan of Black Friday, either. I'd rather stay home and shop cyber Monday, myself.
ReplyDelete