How many mom fails does it take to make an advent calendar?

I made an advent calendar.

Being the professional procrastinator that I am, I waited until 4:00 pm on December 1st to start.

It was 11 years in the making. I had hoped to start making family traditions and memories with an advent calendar that focused on things we would do together when our first son was born… 11 years ago.  Mom fail #1

Anyhow, I managed to get it completed a little after midnight so even though it technically wasn’t done on the 1st, I easily remedied  missing a day by making the first event, “ make an advent calendar.” Voila.

Instant family memories.

Of course, while I was trying to get it finished, I bribed my 6-year-old daughter with candy to watch my 2-year-old son, who sensed that mom’s busyness could work to his advantage and therefore also needed candy.  Mom fail #2

The kids were coming in asking for dinner, needing a band-aid, asking me to see their drawing, or their new Lego creation.

kaia's nativity

My 11-year-old wanted to hang out with me.I told him to go play video games for as long as he wanted instead. Mom fail #3

“Ugggh, I’m trying to get this done! If I don’t finish this tonight and we miss a day, it’s not worth doing. Don’t you want to have fun family time? Well, we can’t have any memories unless I get this done. Can’t you just leave mommy alone for a little bit?” Mom fail #4

And so I sewed and patched and sewed some more. I wrote on little tags and tied them with ribbon.  I let my kids eat cereal for dinner, at least I think it was cereal.

I thought up fun events we could do each day. That is, each day after mommy finished this.

  1.  Make an advent Calendar ( ok, so that’s kind of cheating…)
  2. Go to the Christmas parade
  3. Make and decorate cookies
  4. Go to the Nutcracker with Kaia
  5. Have a fancy family dinner
  6. Make an ornament for the tree
  7. Make a homemade nativity set
  8. Write to our Compassion and World Vision kids
  9. Go sledding
  10. Find every pillow and blanket in the house and pile them onto the living room floor, snuggle in and watch It’s a Wonderful Life
  11. Have a sleepover under the Christmas tree
  12. Have a Lego building party
  13. Buy a gift for a child in need
  14. Watch Elf and drink cocoa
  15. Volunteer at the community center
  16. Make treats for our neighbors
  17. Build a snowman
  18. Make a fort
  19. Cut out paper snowflakes
  20. Have a game night with Blokus, Quirkle, and Just Dance ( which I will dominate)
  21. Make gingerbread houses
  22. Drive out to Eagle Crest and see the lights
  23. Have Jordan and Sarah and all the nieces over for dessert and gifts
  24. Go to grandma and grandpa’s for Christmas Eve dinner and gift exchange
  25. Christmas, Unto us a Savior is born! Let’s celebrate!
christmas
Next year, we will start Advent with my  promise to get band-aids, see Legos and drawings, hang out, and make a proper dinner that may or may not be cereal.

Emmanuel and the Sculpey Clay Nativity

It would’ve been more efficient on my own. The pictures on Pinterest still freshly embedded in my mind and my own creative thoughts and ideas had left me with a very distinct vision, one that wasn’t quite materializing the way I had hoped.

I modeled how to pinch off just the right amount of clay and mold it around the wooden ball with each kid following suit. Their attempts were not as successful.  Poor Mary had one of her eyes smeared across her face and looked very much like she was experiencing some sort of facial spasm. The faces had tiny fingernail marks imprinted on them.   The wise men were starting to look suspiciously like Mario and Luigi and I made a mental note  to limit Judah’s  time playing Wii.

Nativity supplies

We were on day 8  of our advent activities. The tiny labeled tag read “make a homemade nativity set.”

 I had always sort of cringed at the Nativity scenes with the ornate porcelain figures.  Price and amount of room needed for such a display notwithstanding, I couldn’t imagine them surviving Christmas with my inquisitive two-year old.

Besides, something has always sort of irked me about all the little blonde Jesus babies. Ethnic accuracy aside, we have never had one to display.

Thus my brilliant idea to create one of our own.   Armed with Sculpey clay, wooden balls, and old thread spools, we gathered round the table to create our own Nativity.

This is where my confession must come in. “I am a self-confessed (thus the confession) control freak about these kind of things. I am the “ push the kids out-of-the-way to decorate the cookies better mom. The sure -you- can- help- me… find a project for them that has no direct impact on the look or outcome of the project mom.”

I am all for creativity and collaboration. Just not on my projects.

 But this was a family affair and so I was much less concerned with perfectly sculpted features than enjoying my kids and husband.

Nativity activity

sculpting heads

nativity

About the time Mary started to “smear” and one of the wise men was starting to resemble a sea-lion, I had to resist the urge to just “help out” and fix the problems.  After all, the point was family time and enjoying each other not a perfect nativity scene.  And it occurred to me as we sculpted away that in watching my kid’s enjoyment, my joy was entirely in the process.

The outcome would indeed be an authentic handmade (kid- made) Nativity scene, but the process would be tiny hands molding little faces, smiles and laughter and joking, because “Yes, that Wiseman does resemble a sea-lion.”

The result was something we would pull out each year with the memories wrapped tight and spilling out as we set up the little figures.

wisemen

And isn’t that a large part of Nativity anyway? Emmanuel, God with us. He came down.   He certainly didn’t need to. He was doing fine without us and definitely possesses the skills to accomplish all of his plans without any assistance from us. The mere fact that he allows our little hands a place in the process bewilders.  That he truly is the patient father, encouraging and engaged as we go about imitating what he has so patiently taught is the way our relationship with Him grows.

And just as I look on my kid’s faces filled with silliness and creativity, I know God is enjoying our glorious imperfections as we grow with Him.

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