Sunday, December 2, 2007

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving started for the Kelly family the week before the official day. Rosa Parks Elementary, Grace and Hannah's school, held Thanksgiving lunch for parents to attend with their children. Because this is such a popular event it is held over two days. Each class is assigned a day and the day they don't have Thanksgiving lunch the kids eat lunch in their classroom. Lucky for me Hannah and Grace were each assigned a different day. I had my fill of turkey before the official date. Thank you Janice for the ham!

On the day of Hannah's lunch her class also put on a Thanksgiving program. The kids sang two songs and told the Thanksgiving story. They told the story by each taking a turn standing in front of the parents by themselves and reading a few sentences. Several of the kids read to fast and some spoke so softly you couldn't hear them. When Hannah's turn came she read slowly, clearly, and at the right volume. It was amazing to see my very shy child shine. I was so proud of her.
This year we spent Thanksgiving and the following day in Cincinnati. We ate a lot of good good and enjoyed spending time with my parents, my Uncle Dick, my brother Drew and niece Emily. By Friday we were hearing, "I'm bored" a lot from the girls. Mom and Dad have enough toys, crafts and other activities to entertain ten girls but cabin fever set in. Although cold my father took Grace, Emily and Rachael out on a bike ride on Friday. I was sure he would come back quickly with a story of carrying Rachael while dragging a bike. I was wrong. They rode 4 miles and Rachael rode the entire time and mostly kept up with the older girls. At one point Dad asked if the girls were ready to turn back and Rachael was the one to encourage everyone to keep going.

On Saturday we returned to Lexington to have some time with Craig's parents, his brother Sean, Sean's wife Huong and our nephews and niece Cam, Kess, and Caden. We had more great food and the kids had fun together. After we recovered from the food handover the kids decorated Nana and Papa's tree and decorated gingerbread houses. This is a yearly tradition that Janice started with the kids. They love it and look forward to it every year. Janice makes the base houses (that is homemade gingerbread and one house for each child - a lot of work!) and the kids go to town decorating. Each house is different and shows the child's creativity and personality. Over all we had a great four days of family and food and fun.








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