Monday, September 08, 2008

Evan Turns Six!

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Evan has begged me to cook in the kitchen for some time.  You might remember this:

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I told him (this note was from about a year ago,) that come his 6th birthday he could have a chance to cook in the kitchen.  A cooking party it would be.

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But a cooking party takes a lot of planning.  There were chef hats to buy, utensils, and lots of ingredients.  Not to mention- cookbooks to make!  This was the table the night before, when Evan slowly moved his way into the kitchen to see what I was doing. 

The anticipation was too much.  He started off lying with his pillow at the foot of the bed and listening... then before I knew it he had his comforter and pillow on the floor at the foot of his bed... then in the hall... with a square tub for a bedside table.  (He needed somewhere to put his cup of water, naturally.)

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I had to be so "on it" the night before with prepping ingredients and such that I over-organized and found myself with time on my hands... taking pictures of random things.  Like this one, of his presents from us.

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He recently watched Superman when it came on tv (a newer one) and was way impressed.  He did, however, remind me that this was a Ratatouille party when he saw the Superman paper.  (Forgive me for diverging from the theme.)

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This is Charlie after his bath that night, wondering why I am standing on the kitchen counter taking pictures...

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and whether or not he would be able to catch me if I were to fall. (He would not.)

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This is proof that the top of my fridge is not getting dusted.  Oh, and these people are the employees at my printing company.  Sigh, we're like family...

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These are light bulbs that burn too short and cost too much...

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This is why there are light bulbs on the counter.  Part of Shaun's checklist, not mine... so let's move on.

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This is the cookbook Evan designed for his party.  He is cooking with his chef hat on at the stove and he tore out notebook paper and taped it on the front to indicate who each book belonged to.

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I meant to change the egg amount to more before having him write this, and the cheese, but I didn't.

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Did they follow the recipes anyway?  No.  So did it matter?  No.  Can you really mess up cheese and noodles and butter?  No.  Do 6 year olds do major improvising on their recipes?  YES.      

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This is the next morning, what Evan came out to when he declared "my party is going to be just perfect!"

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Madalyn came out of her room that morning, holding her blankie, and sang, "Good morning, birthday boy."

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We always put on their first year or birth video while people are arriving.  Reminds us what we are celebrating.

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This is my cake that was tilting like the leaning tower of Pisa. 

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This is where they were to decorate their aprons and chef hats while waiting for their masterpieces to cook.

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This is Evan's goofy six year old smile.

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This is Jacob's. 

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This is Ethan's.

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This is Corbin's.

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This is not a goofy smile.

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This is three generations.

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These are the aprons my mother-in-law gave us last Christmas.

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This is Jennifer and Jacob making the yogurt parfait.

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It was a dark, rainy day and actually really nice that way.  It kind of set the mood.  Shaun found French Bistro music for me.  It was cozy and surprisingly peaceful.

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Decorating their aprons while...

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the food cooked.  They made the macaroni on the bottom shelf there, but the tomato tarts I made ahead of time.  They are super yummy- my mom's recipe.  You just use a Pillsbury, ready-made pie crust and top it with mozzarella, fresh torn basil, fresh sliced tomatoes (I used Plum tomatoes,) and then a touch more basil, drizzle with olive oil, and bake for about 20 minutes at whatever the crust bakes at- or maybe 400, 425.  There's not an exact recipe, I'm sorry.  That's just how it is. 

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I'm also sorry I forgot to take any pictures of the bread or macaroni when finished.  Here is the parfait, though.

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Then, it was onto the cake decorating. 

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That is Jack's chubby arm helping.  Don't think he would miss out, although I'm not sure if he's adding candy, or taking it off.

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Did you just throw up a little in your mouth?  Your gag reflux get the best of you?  It's okay.  It's admittedly pretty bad in the way of sugar shock (and color shock.)  And see that dark spot, that is where Jack started eating the cake and the older kids tried to patch it up with M&M's.

I wonder why daddy had to have a root canal this week?

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Evan being shy while we sang.

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He is outgrowing his baby teeth.  Boo hoo!

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They got to take home their aprons and hats and measuring cups/spoons and whisks to play with outside or in the tub.  It was a fun day.  And our bathtub has A LOT of cooking utensils in it now.

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The fun didn't end with the party.  The next day, daddy took Evan to a Chef Mickey dinner at Disney at the Contemporary Resort with Ethan and Mr. Wattles.  (Even with a major toothache, in need of a triple root canal, daddy took him.)  Now that's love. 

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He got to play in the cool pool with the slide, too.

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And then, as if that wasn't enough, we went to my cousin's wedding this weekend where one of the family members was a real chef and I introduced them.      

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Very fitting that this is what he was doing when I brought her to the table to meet him.  She found it interesting how he was keeping his food sorted by types after he chopped it.  Who would've thought that the kid once scared of the texture of cake and macaroni and cheese would turn chef one day?  Just goes to show life is entirely unpredictable. 

Keep cooking, Little Chef, and if we're all lucky, one day you can cook for us.

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Some Birthday

Evan,

This morning you had daddy get you a cup of water at 5 and were back in bed with us at 6. I was the peanut butter in the sandwich and you rubbed my back periodically. When daddy went to shower, I moved from being the middle of the sandwich to taking over his side of the bed on my stomach. You rolled to your side and propped your legs on me like a pair of scissors.

...shortly after came Madalyn and I was a sandwich again. You said to us, "I don't feel good, I'm hungry." Madalyn answered, "Evan, you can't eat if you don't feel good."

"That is SO RUDE!" you protested. "I can TOO eat!"

Shortly after you were throwing up just a bit... daddy said you were just congested and gagged is all, and I guess he was right because not long after you were begging to please go to school.

Having already celebrated with your party, I completely forgot it was your birthday today until I got Aunt Julie's prayer for you in my inbox while you ate breakfast. It's true. I confess. Some mother. (I tell you what, when you're in high school and I won't let you go to a party or you really want a dog or something, just remind me of today and permission granted, okay?)

SO! The moment I realized, I rushed into the kitchen and told you that today was your real birthday, and happy birthday to you.

You smiled, pleased with yourself for being five.

Shortly after we remembered we had homework to do (I'ma lready training you in the art of procrastination,) and began searching in magazines for items starting with the letter 'i'. Of all letters, "I" is a toughy. We weren't too creative: ice, icing, island, and interesting (a dog made out of broccoli... who doesn't find that interesting... or at the very least, peculiar.)

Then we ran in Publix on the way to school and got some really cool multi-colored cupcakes with stars on them and a number 5 candle. Your friends saw you across the parking lot when we arrived and said "there's Evan! Let's go see Evan!" We told them it was your real birthday and I watched your chest puff up a bit. "Happy birthday!" said Ethan.

Your teachers were very pleased to have cupcakes and promised to save one for the little sister who stood by the door in patriotic attire, waiting to go to her class, and feeling a bit left out on the cake.

When I drove away I thanked God for your school. It's been such a great way to start the school world. You are so happy there and it's so wonderful to know you are well cared-for and well-taught.

I love how you love to learn. I love how you want to build a rocket and go to space, how you want dolphins to pull you in the ocean on waterskis, (when you're 6 or 7,) and how you asked this morning if you could ride on a horse and carriage sometime soon. I love how you are unique; intense, sensitive, creative with a capital "C". You amaze me a hundred ways every day.

I love how you care for your brother and sister. Just last night you went to bed in Madalyn's bed, and she threw her arm around you while I searched for blankies and cups. That's how it is. She rubs you and loves on you, and you smile and receive it. Sometimes you hug her back in a firm embrace and I worry your little necks might snap, so tight is the hug.

You are everything a boy should be: passionate, tender-hearted, wild, intelligent, and usually covered in dirt from head to toe. With your arrival five years ago, I learned the true definition of "blessing." As your name proclaims, you are nothing short from a gift of God.

Love, love, love,

Mommy xoxoxo

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