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what's up weekly.

On the first day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me photos of me sewing Juni's stocking.  (Fun fact: whenever I concentrate on a task like sewing or deep cleaning, I purse my lips so hard they're chapped for days afterward.  I hope to someday strike it rich so I never have to work hard enough to purse my lips ever again.  It's for the sake of my health.)



On the second day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me photos of the stockings hung by the TV with care.  (And, lurking in the shot, The Ghost of Christmas Todd and The Ghost of Laundry Ever-Present.)




Also, a nap with a sick kid.





On the third day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me word art on my freshly painted chalkboard easel.




Also, a kid who knows how to live her best life.



Also, a precious stuffy baby who couldn't sleep and just wanted to cuddle in the middle of the night.



On the fourth day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me a maestro who's not wearing any pants.




On the fifth day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me CHRI-IIIIIIII-ISTMAS EVE!



Also, cinnamon rolls for breakfast, 'breakfast burrito bread' for lunch, a candlelight Christmas Eve service, a feast day cheeseboard with jalapeno popper dip, opening (and donning) Christmas jammies, a popcorn party while we watched The Nativity Story, and a slumber party for all the big kids - five of them slept in the boys' room in anticipation of Christmas morning.  (Clearly, Christmas Eve was epic.)


Pre-icing.  Don't they look so pretty?









On the sixth day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me THE CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION TO END ALL CHRISTMAS CELEBRATIONS.  I will have to post about it next week - there were 600 photos of the day.  That is how well we party.


We opened stockings before breakfast.



JuniBear's First Christmas!




Family arrived for the big gift opening part of the day.




On the seventh day of Christmas week, my true love gave to me a day off to nap and cook and detox from all the sugar I'm no longer eating (as of the seventh day of Christmas week).  I took my rest day so seriously that I didn't even take photos, though I did manage to take a shower, which felt like a feat.

Today will be spent further resting, and scouring the internet for new living room pillows, one of my many amazing gifts from my amazing husband, who also bought me my two new best friends.


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"We are transporting 11 million sticks of dynamite, 17 thousand pounds of C-4, about 150 cute little classic bomb-type bombs, and TWO BEST FRIENDS!"


Well, friends.  Get off your phones and go enjoy the last weekend this decade has to offer.

what's up weekly, and juniper at eight months.

Well, it's already that time again!

I have had so little motivation this week to finish up school before break.  We did it, but dang, it was not easy.  I've been working on all kinds of last-minute Christmas stuff: wrapping gifts, sorting stocking stuffers, decorating our little tree, and making stockings.




Plus, the kids were sick.  Again.




This is earlier in the season than we typically start catching bugs, so I'm hoping we'll be over it sooner than usual, rather than just dragging this out for the next six months.  It seems like the pattern never fails: we go to church on Sunday, someone falls sick by Monday or Tuesday, they spend the week fighting it off, and then finally get better around Friday or Saturday... just in time to start the cycle all over again.

This week, one of the kids had diarrhea for five days straight.  (Luckily, the other kids only dealt with slightly rumbly tummies for a day or two.)  Additionally, Penelope got a really painful sore throat, Callista got a wet cough and a fever, and Laurelai ended up with tons of sinus drainage and congestion.  A couple of the boys and Juniper seem to have skirted the bug so far, but it's not out of our house yet, so who knows if they'll eventually catch it.

It's honestly fine; as long as the kids aren't barfing, I'm not usually overly fazed by the sickness.  But I do tend to go a bit stir-crazy, so on Wednesday night, I headed out to Target by myself while Todd held down the home theater.  It was so nice to get some mental space!



It snowed early in the week, and Columbia is terrrrrrrrrrrible about snow removal.  (Seriously, it seems to me they only have one snow removal guy on the payroll, and his main job is to just sit around in his warm office, crossing his fingers that the sun will eventually do his job for him if he sits there long enough.)  So between sickness and slick roads, we've been pretty homebound since Monday.




Luckily, the main events of the week took place before we got iced in.  On Saturday, our friend Josiah got commissioned as a 2nd Lt. in the Marines, and we were privileged to celebrate with him and his wife Meghan.  They have become super close family friends, and we all just adore them.



After his commissioning, there was a dinner we all went to.  (Banquet tables seat eight, and therefore Van Voorsts never have to sit by strangers.  Introverts have large families just as a social avoidance strategy.)





On Sunday morning, Todd taught on Joseph in prison, one of my favorite stories in Genesis.  I just love how Joseph was able to see past his own suffering in order to minister to others.  I wish I was more like that.

On Sunday, Juniper turned eight months old.  She is just a doll.  She makes the funniest, wrinkle-nose faces, and is beginning to laugh a lot more often.  She can wave, and is starting to figure out how to sit leaning against one arm.  She is getting so much hair, and it is thick and dark and has a ton of volume in the back.  (I'm therefore super jealous... of a tiny infant.)





This week, she had her first bottle since her jaundice, as she was seeming extra hungry and her diapers weren't as wet as they had been.  I'm hesitant to give bottles at all while I'm nursing, since I seem to have supply issues if I delegate out any feedings, but she seemed like she needed a little extra.  She only drank about half an ounce from the bottle after nursing, but it seemed to do the trick and she was able to fall asleep.



And because the Lord loves us and deals graciously with us, my grandma sent us Harry and David pears and See's lollipops for Christmas.  My extended family is from California, so we always had See's candy at Christmastime growing up, because my mom always had See's candy at Christmastime growing up.  It's fun to see the kids enjoying the same tradition!  And enjoy it they did.



Hahahahahaha, saucy.  This photo SLAYS me.




This is Callista, copying what she thinks Rocco's face looks like.  Sassy.



You better believe this box lasted us about 24 hours.  Todd didn't even get one.  The kids were like vultures swarming a carcass.


I'm hoping to finish up the stockings today (there is a lot of hand sewing, and also I can't find my glue gun, so things are taking longer than they need to) and finish wrapping presents.  Once we get through our schoolwork, we'll be on break for the next two weeks, and I could NOT be more excited.  I have big plans to clean out my laundry room and hopefully move the downstairs fridge in there.  I know how to celebrate the holidays in style, that's obvious.

what was up last weekly, including a lengthy discourse on being peripherally Dutch.

So you know that thing where you overpromise and underdeliver and, in so doing, you end up being a liar?  I realize I promised this post would be up by noon on Friday... but here we are.

I think I should immediately start by letting the whole world know that we gave up potty training.  Callista did not have a single accident for three whole days (though she also only peed in the toilet once in that time - she waited until naptime to pee in her diaper), and then all of a sudden, she decided she was over it.  She started peeing in her undies constantly, but not telling me, so then I'd have to hunt around the house for the elusive puddle.


"Go out!"



I did not go out.


So whether or not she's ready to potty train right now, I discovered I'm not ready to potty train her.  So we're waiting for a bit until I'm a titch more mentally prepared.  (I got my new slang from Penelope, whose favorite phrase right now is "just a stitch and a titch'.)

In more upbeat news, last Friday was St. Nicholas Day, when the Netherlands celebrate their patron saint by... filling shoes with food.  Sometimes the Dutch do things that confuse me, but then I become freshly aware that whatever they do always includes some kind of incredible dessert, so I let it slide without too much backchat.



I've been collecting wooden shoes here and there through the years, as I see them in thrift stores and at garage sales.  We have quite a collection now, though I'm going to need to find another pair by next year, when Juni's shoe will need to actually hold something bigger than a token chocolate coin.  So if you have any leads on some old, unused wooden shoes laying around someone's attic, pass them my way!



This year, I have to brag about what all I put in them.  The kids got Dutch chocolate Santas (that I dressed up to be more religious-looking, because St. Nick was a real guy at the real Council of Nicea who purportedly slapped a real heretic in his blasphemous face.  That is our kind of bishop, one worth celebrating, and he deserves a pipe cleaner staff, doggone it.).  They also got Dutch chocolate windmills and Dutch chocolate wooden shoes and chocolate Dutch letters, because I'm nothing if not on-trend.  And also, chocolate coins and candy canes made in America, because why import those?  The coins stand for this one time St. Nick secretly threw some bags of money at some prostitutes or something like that (that's probably not how the story goes; I didn't have time to research); the candy canes are probably for his staff, but again, I'm not entirely sure.  I just do what the St. Nicholas Center tells me to do on their website.  (I'm still earning my Dutch degree; I don't have it all figured out yet.)



I got Todd a movie for our Advent collection (our limited family screen time during Advent is spent watching Christmas movies) and some Stroopwafels, which are v. authentic.  (Though, I got them at Aldi, which is v. not; at least, not as authentic as the ones his aunt Joann always used to make from scratch with her special Stroopwafel iron.  He says the Aldi ones are good, but I bet he wouldn't hate it if my Ph.Dutch program included a baking course.)  (Though, not necessarily a cooking course, as it seems to me they just boil a bunch of stuff in one pot and call it All The Meals.  But again, I could be wrong.)


Most of the kids were taking inventory; Callista was stealthily defrocking St. Nick of his foil.



Unsanctioned.




I purposely made eggs - lots of protein - for breakfast that morning, so that I could let them chow down on their plunder.  I kind of hate having candy around the house, so when we do, I basically let them gorge themselves, for two reasons - one, it gets it out of here faster and kind of concentrates the amount of time their pancreases want to bite the dust, and two, it helps them become hyperaware of how sick sugar makes them feel when they eat too much.  Win/sortofwin.



And, because I didn't want to be left out of the festivities, I filled my own shoe, too.  I got a few pieces of chocolate, and this bag of Dutch coffee - mostly to help me keep up morale while trying to mother sugarlaced kids.  I couldn't read the instructions, so I just assumed they said, "Brew as normal, except greet your coffee maker in Dutch."  So I obeyed with a hearty, "Hallo, koffie pot!" and discovered that must be the trick to brewing really fantastic Dutch coffee.





In news-other-than-this-diatribe-about-Dutch-stuff, nothing can put a damper on Rocco's spirits, including his cast.  He has been such a trooper - no complaining, no itching, no whining.  He needs help putting on his pants and shoes, and he will sometimes just fall off a chair or something because he can't use both hands to brace himself if he loses his balance, but beyond those things, he is acting completely normal.




I will say, he has a big scab on his forehead right now from an experiment to see what would happen if he rubbed his rough, fiberglass cast back and forth across his head really fast.  But, that's also totally within the bounds of his normal personality, too, so really - nothing out of the ordinary here.

He calls this his "Mystery Bible," and spends time fervently studying its pages.  I think the real mystery is why he calls it that.



I fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinally finished the shiplap project in the basement!  And it didn't kill me!  (I know; I'm as shocked as you are; possibly more.)  Now I've got my wheels spinning about future projects down there: curtains, pillows, rearranging a bit, painting the ceiling and other walls, etc. etc.




I've been sorting through old photos, and the girls joined me in a walk down memory lane.  (Well, Juni was just along for the ride, but she was good-natured about it, as in everything.)



Are these girls not the most beautiful humans you've ever seen?





And that was last week!