The midnight balloon
Funny thing: I’m still suffering from holiday-hangover. My classes just started (keeping my fingers crossed that my fin-aide goes through—I filled out the wrong form, true to my imperfect self), though the minis have been back at it for weeks now. The what-day-is-it fog is still very thick since most of our activities are different; and the Officer’s schedule just changed (it’s that time of year, people) so I’m even more confused than normal. All these things culminate to mean that I have no clue what day it is. At all. So much so that, as you know, I haven’t sat down to pen a blog post in almost a month. I feel a little twinge of guilt about that, but again, an identifying premise for this blog is Mommy-imperfection. So at least I’m nailing that.
Since I’m
convinced that I packed my muse up with the Christmas lights, I’ll show you
what the kids and I (the Officer took part for a bit, but had to work the next
day, so had to sleep that night) did for New Year’s Eve. This way all you uber planners will have
something up your sleeves for next year.
Or it could be adapted for Valentine’s Day (pink, red, and white
balloons with heart confetti – wait, I think I like that idea…). This year was the first time the three of us
made it to midnight; well, the first year I let them try. The Koala was begging to be allowed to sleep
by 11pm. Begging. And promptly at
12:10am, they both raced up to bed without having been asked. The good news is that they did sleep until
11am New Year’s Day…
Partying like
it’s 2013
I’m sure
you’ve all seen the ideas on pintetrest involving hourly activities in
anticipation of midnight. That’s pretty
much what we did; and I have to say that the evening flies by when you have a
new activity every hour. I will keep
that in mind for future birthday parties/sleepovers.
Also, none of those awesome-mom sites ever tell you how stinkin' hard it is to get a small strip of paper, on which you've written that hour's activity, into a balloon. Trust me, this is exceptionally difficult. It took me a few tries to figure out how to get the glitter in there, too. Most of the early attempts ended with glitter all over the kitchen, me, and anything standing nearby [the poor dog].
Activity #1 -- because who doesn't love crazy hair?
Activities:
4pm: Crazy
Hair boutique for NYE2012 [Reality: Mom
scrambles to finish decorating, kids help]
5pm: Dinner and Silly
String Fight [the kids loved this one]
6pm: Light
luminarias and prayer – though a Christmas tradition, we’ve adapted it as our NYE
tradition to symbolize that we
want our new year to be filled with the light of Christ.
7pm: Playdoh sculpture competition and make ice globes*
8pm: Play
Hide-and-Seek and Sardines in the dark; and do Fire-crackers [the Officer had
to get to bed and I didn’t want to really
tick off the neighbors]
9pm: Snack and board game marathon
10pm: Continue
snacking and play Wii as family
11pm: Make
hobbit hole and read The Hobbit
12pm: Watch
ball drop and throw glitter bags**
Supplies:
1.
Balloons
2. Glitter
3. Small sparkly pom-poms [in the craft
section]
4. Silly String
5. Playdoh
6. Fire-Crackers [or poppers]
7. Paper bags [we used the white lunch
kind]
8. Tea lights
9. SMALL balloons
10. Food coloring
11. Pin or tack [for popping the
balloons]
12. Board game
13. Snacks [we had Jordan almonds,
popcorn, hot chocolate, Christmas candy]
14. Sandwich bags
15. Curling Ribbon
16. Tape
*To make
ice globes, fill small balloons with water, then add food coloring. Place the balloons outside (it will need to
be below freezing for this to work), cover with snow, and let them sit
overnight. Ours froze, but they were
lop-sided. Also, I would suggest using small balloons and starting with this
activity so the globes have time to freeze completely.
**Glitter bags are, quite literally, just smal sandwich bags I filled with glitter and pom-poms that we could throw into the air at midnight. I tied them with curling ribbon and at the stroke of twelve, we hurled the last of our glitter at one another. Again, if you aren't a big fan of messes that last for weeks, perhaps a celebratory cup of egg nog would be a good replacement activity.
Fun ideas.
ReplyDeleteThe silly string stunk up our whole house so terribly. Had to open all windows and froze for the next hour. Still smelled for days. Lots of fun, but not practical for indoors.