Anonymous wrote:Balloon PP back. Assume you know about NORAD tracking Santa? My kids have been obsessed with this for years and it is a huge tradition on Christmas Eve for the kids to keep track of Santa as he travels around the world. They also check the games each day and spend a few minutes playing them on the computer, though I generally limit computer use.
https://www.noradsanta.org/
Anonymous wrote:Balloon PP back. YES, it’s a lot of work! But DH is in charge of the balloon-blowing and he actually gets a kick out of it. We have done it for years (4 kids, including a Bonus Baby).
If Santa didn’t bring those balloons, it wouldn’t be Christmas!
As far as the balloons popping, I was downstairs wrapping gifts today and - swear to God - one of those balloons is STILL down there, floating around from last year. They seem to be magic! (They are also totally annoying, but even our grown adult son loves them.)
We have all kinds of Christmas traditions here, including reindeer food, cutting down a tree, reading ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas and the story of Christmas from Luke before bed on Christmas Eve...the list is long and probably too much for some. But DH & I enjoy making the holidays memorable for our kids.
I grew up an only-child, low-income household, with a widowed mother who still managed to make Christmas special for just the two of us. She passed away last month, in her 90s. On Nov. 1, I put up a little Christmas tree in her hospital room - just in case she didn’t make it to Dec. 25. It was the last thing she saw, which I’m glad of.
Christmas is what you make of it, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Gratitude thst you together and healthy. Special does not have to be things!
Anonymous wrote:“OP, get 1 package each: red, white and green balloons (or whatever colors - but I use Christmas colors). After the kids go to bed on Christmas Eve, blow up ALL the balloons and tuck them between the gifts underneath the tree and around the tree, in general. Be sure to turn on the tree lights before the kids see the tree and their gifts in the morning. The lights will reflect off the balloons, creating a much more inviting and full display. Plus, I promise, those kids will play with the blasted balloons for the next 48-hours, non-stop.
So yes, eventually you will hate me for this suggestion but I promise on Christmas Day you will be grateful for it.“
Yikes!
1. Won’t they pop from the tree needles?
2. Tons of extra work on Xmas eve. If it is a hit they will want it repeated.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of the most DCUM threads ever.
"Any ideas on how to make Xmas special? Kids miss their grandparents."
- "well, you could remind them that if they even look at their grandma, she will die and it will be able their fault"
- "how could you say this, when troops are overseas every Xmas. check yourself"
If this is really people's honest internal thoughts, we are F*%^cked