However, as you get older, it’s like part of that magic fades away. The anticipation of wearing that fancy Christmas dress in the back of your closet, the prediction of what Santa’s arrival will bring, the appearance of sparkly gift-wrapped treasures under the tree, the cookies and frosting and sugarplum fairies. With each trip around the sun, you believe a little less, you anticipate a little less. All of it gets choked out by the buying and the wrapping and the coordination of plans and the go-go-go mentality. You just get farther from how it used to be. But this year was different.
This year we did all the magical things I remember doing as a child that make the holidays so special. Claire had her own Christmas lights in her room (pink!) and a mini Christmas tree she got to decorate. We baked and decorated gingerbread cookies, eating more icing than we really should. It was fun taking photos in her fancy dress in front of the twinkling lights. Making our cinnamon roll Christmas tree on Christmas morning. Wearing special jam jams on Christmas Eve. We even baked a birthday cake for Jesus. Life is so much fun when you see it through the eyes of a child. Claire, in all her sweet innocence, brought back the magic of Christmas and I am so thankful. Waking up with her on Christmas morning was really the only gift I needed. She’s the reason I believe.
This was the best photo I could get of her in her Christmas dress. Sassy! |
Claire and her cousins on Christmas Eve |
Claire and her cousin Ethan in their matching Olaf jam jams on Christmas Eve |
Opening gifts on Christmas morning at home. Sporting her fuzzy pink ear muffs |
Opening gifts on Christmas Day at Grandma Karen's |