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moments in time

On May 17th, 1920, my grandfather was born.

On May 17th, 2003, I graduated from college.

My grandfather was gone by then ~ he’d left us the December before.

My family is really good with names and numbers.  Not necessarily math.  But dates, times ~ coincidences.  We remember things.  My dad knows more sports minutiae than any one person I’ve ever met.  I have a knack for birthdays.  My mother and my aunt ~ wickedly good memories.  They know every address for every home they have ever lived in, including the postal codes.  And that’s really nothing compared to everything else they have stored in their brains.

Even if I wanted to forget significant dates, I can’t.  For me, May 17th will always be the day I graduated from college on my grandfather’s birthday, right after he died.  I guess it sounds morbid, but for me, it’s not.  It’s always a chance to remember my grandfather ~ a gentle man who used to read while listening to classical music, and watch billiards on television.  A man who took my brother and I to the local library in the British village he and my Granny lived in, and with us propped in his lap, read about dinosaurs from one of our books.  He taught me the intricacies of the game of cricket, and listened as I told him all about my semester in Rome.  He built model ships, and spent hours bird-watching.

I miss him ~ I wish I’d had more time with him.  And I wish I had something more to talk about today, but really, that’s what is on my mind.  Every time I saw the date, every time I had to write it down ~ I thought about how May 17th reminds of my grandfather, and of college.  And really, that’s not too bad, in the whole scheme of things.

celebrate good times

The man officially has a new job (!!!), and we celebrated tonight with some bubbly.  It’s been quite a journey to this point, and my heart is full of pride for him and this new adventure.  Life takes you down paths you wouldn’t expect, and things are changing in our household ~ but it’s all for the better.  I am so unbelievably full of love and excitement for what he has accomplished.  Selfishly, it’s such an amazing thing to watch a person you love achieve great things.  I get a huge kick out of it.  I’m so happy for him. And that is such an understatement in relation to how I feel.

ANYWAY!  The point is, CONGRATS TO THE MAN!!!  (I love you, babe!)

I also put my parental units on a  flight to the UK to celebrate my Granny’s 90th birthday (belatedly ~ her birthday was April 24th).  As we drove together to the airport, we reflected on the fact that if my dad’s dad were still alive, he would have been 100 yesterday.  And if my mum’s dad were still alive, he would be 92 on Thursday.

Life.  Time.  Funny things.

My thought for the day?  Celebrate the one you love.  I know they are worth it.

 

my mother, my friend

To all mothers everywhere, I hope you were spoiled today by those who love you.  I am not a mother, just a puppy-momma, but I love my little girl more than anything.  I also know that being a puppy-momma is hard work, so I can imagine that motherhood is both the most rewarding and the most difficult thing any woman ever does.

I’d just like to raise my glass and my heart to my own mother for giving me life, instilling values and morals, a love for reading and writing and education, travel, strength and finding the positive in life.  I am not half the woman my mother is ~ she inspires me every day.  And I would also like to say thank you to my ‘other’ mother-my aunt- who has been my friend and an ‘other’ mother when I needed one.

Sometimes, as children, we are unaware that our parents are people, who have interests and quirks and passions and sadness outside of being a parent.  We only know them as our parents, the people who make us eat veggies, and go to bed on time.  But also our idol, infallible; a superhero.  I’d like to believe that I see that part of my mother entwined with the woman I got to know as I grew up.  But I also think that my mother the person is one of the most amazing, thoughtful, good-spirited, articulate, educated, compassionate, talented, beautiful people I have ever encountered, and anyone who has had a chance to know her is better for it.  She is absolutely my real hero.

finally friday!

Every other Friday, Lucy gets to spend the whole day with her Grandpa (my dad), and after work, the man and I drive down to Chester County and enjoy a relaxing night in the country being fed yummy food.

Luckily, after a few really grumpy days, the weather was beautiful as we drove through the countryside tonight: beautiful skies, green fields, and the beginnings of a very hazy, colorful sunset.

This weekend is IT for me ~ my race is finally (almost!) here.  So this evening, the man and I are going to enjoy the family, some duck for dinner, and laughing at the adorable-ness of  Miss Lucy Lou.  We hope you enjoy your Friday as well!

 

 

Easter lunch

roses from my mama bear

Last year, the man and I hosted Easter luncheon for the first time.  I used left-over tissue paper to line the plates and separate the soup bowls.  I had a crazy notion to make a chilled soup to start (I found an excellent recipe in Delia Smith’s cookbook for avocado gazpacho, and it was pretty successful, if I do say so myself!).

We sat outside with my parents for most of the afternoon, drank a lot of white wine and ate delicious snacks from Trader Joes.  My mother and I filled our entire apartment with smoke from the leg of lamb, and the man managed to break not one, but three wine glasses.

It was a good Easter.

tulips

This year we were supposed to journey up to the man’s parents, but plans changed at the last minute, so we invited my folks up (and wrangled them into getting lamb from their butcher, who is vastly superior to anyone in our area) and committed to having our first joint family holiday.

I’m not sure I’ve mentioned it before, but I have a deep passion for event planning.  I immediately whipped open my April issue of ‘Good Housekeeping’  (I remembered they had an Easter luncheon ‘make-ahead’ meal plan, and I was going to cherry pick that which I liked best).  I also went about envisioning my table settings.  (There is something supremely satisfying about beautifully setting a table to dine).

"Eastery Centerpiece"

On Thursday, my first scheduled day of prep, I was sidelined fairly effectively with one of the worst migraine headaches I’ve had in a long time.  Sidenote:  apparently, the pollen count is twice as high as past years due to the incredibly mild winter.  Store that knowledge away, because I think it’s pretty beneficial info.  I plan on using it to sound really informed at least three or four times this summer.

So after work on Friday, I braved Michaels, Kohls and the grocery store, to get prepped for the man’s parent’s visit and Easter Sunday luncheon.  I had such a strong sense of my flower arrangements, centerpiece and place settings (courtesy of Good Housekeeping) that I hemmed and hawed for awhile at Michaels, trying to find just the right supplies.  I also ran into Minda’s hubby, who was there to get crafting supplies to make her a surprise Easter gift (how adorable!).

When John’s parents arrived late Friday evening, we were dying Easter eggs.  I’d bought tiny galvanized bins and a little watering can, and I filled them with store-bought (aka fake) moss, and tulip buds.  For Easter lunch, I added the dyed eggs (housed in the refrigerator until then).

On Saturday (and on very little sleep, thanks to Miss Lucy) I prepped this year’s chilled soup ~ an asparagus bisque.  Having never bought (let alone cooked) with leeks, it was a long process – it’s length aided by my inability to focus due to extreme fatigue.  Someone (and I won’t name names LUCY) was up all night crying at the incredible injustice that she was in our room in her comfy bed rather than in the living room with her grandma, grandpa and their pups, Sera and Jack.  The recipe is here ~ and it’s delish.  The man made a great observation, too ~ the soup benefits from time in the fridge cooling down.

For dinner, I made buttermilk roast chicken (from Smitten Kitchen – and a huge success on WeHangsDay earlier in the week), pull-apart bread and a spinach, pear and almond salad.  (This was all at the request of the man ~ there’s nothing quite like getting a food request… it makes a girl feel very special!).  I’d wanted to prep the rest of Easter dinner, but after a shower and a long nap, it was all I could do to get dinner on the table.

Smitten Kitchen's Buttermilk Chicken

My invented Pear & Toasted Almond Spinach Salad

 

 

 

 

 

Today, Lucy and I took a three-mile jog and then set in for full-on Easter lunch prep.  The man and I set up two tables, draped them in clothes (which I bought in two contrasting sizes and shapes, because really, why make it easy on myself?), and I began decorating.

 

 

 

 

Our final menu ~

To start … Deviled eggs a la the man, Chilled Asparagus Bisque

For lunch … Boneless leg of lamb (prepared by my gracious mother, with grainy mustard, rosemary and breadcrumbs), scalloped potatoes (prepared by John’s gracious mother, with cheddar cheese, sour cream, butter, French’s Fried Onions and Campbell’s Cream of Chicken Soup), Apricot & Pistachio Salad (courtesy of Good Housekeeping) and Pillsbury biscuits.

And, something sweet … Cheesecake Stuffed Strawberries, Peanut Butter Eggs, and Coconut Eggs.  The man has been waxing lyrical about his mama’s peanut butter eggs forever … and he was right.  They were delish!

It was an amazing afternoon ~ such a nice and gentle introduction of our families to each other (after nearly four years, it was about time!).  In my world, family is one of the most important things.  Family helps to mold you, is your safety net when you take leaps of faith into the unknown, lifts you up when you are dragging, and genuinely expresses pleasure when you succeed.  Family is priceless and should be treated as such.  I felt lucky to have the majority of my family with me (we were minus my little brother, because he marches to his own beat, is turning 30 tomorrow and probably celebrated today, and isn’t one for overly religious celebrations).  I feel lucky to be with a man who values the same things I value.

Life is good.  Happy Easter peeps.  😉 (Get it? … peeps!!!)

april fools

This morning, we woke to Lucy waiting patiently for us to get out of bed, feed her and take her for a walk.  She was waiting expectantly, eyes focused on us, cool as a cucumber.  It was adorable.

She’s been a good sport the past few weekends when we have spent most of each day re-organizing our entire apartment.  We usually like to make changes in the spring, but this year, we have successfully replaced nearly every piece of furniture we own.  We went a little nuts.

You can imagine that for Lucy, this has been a lot of upheaval.  All she really wants is to run through the woods, curl up in her bed, and have her people close at hand.

Today, after enjoying a Friday night birthday dinner for my dad (lobster, asparagus and baked potatoes prepared expertly by my Mama Bear and Zia), a Saturday filled with Ikea purchases, and furniture rearranging, it was only to be expected that Lucy would anticipate a long walk.  Unfortunately, we spent most of the afternoon finishing our massive project, racing to be done and curled up for the premiere of “Game of Thrones.”

Today is also my daddy’s birthday, so I usually forget that April 1st is April Fool’s Day.  (For Lucy, it must have felt particularly cruel when we took her to the park and did half the walk).  I can’t believe it’s April already ~ time just keeps slipping by.  Next weekend is Easter, and the man and I are hosting both sets parents – the first time in the nearly four years we have been together that our parents are spending time together.  My fingers are crossed that it all goes smoothly ~ seven people, three dogs, one small kitchen and lots of chefs!

 

flash blizzard & strong drink

Yesterday afternoon, after spending the morning at Jefferson Hospital’s Heart Health Day, I packed a bag for Lucy, and the two of us headed south to my parents for a dinner of Haggis and Mashed Neeps.

The haggis had originally been purchased for Rabbie Burns Day a few weeks ago, but I’d finagled my darling parents into coming to my house to visit with my brother and his lady, so the haggis had gone uneaten.  (Instead, we’d enjoyed Crab Stuffed Tilapia, boiled baby potatoes and green beans … yummers).

It sounded like a relaxing Saturday night, and as Lucy had never visited her Grandparents before, it was also an excellent socializing opportunity.  And if I timed it properly, we’d be home in time for a blog post and a snuggle on the couch before heading to bed.

Into Lucy’s bag went dinner, her Dragon, her antler chew toy, a blanket, her kitchen bed (not to be confused with her bedroom bed), and some water from home.  For safe measure, I also brought her big, blue collar (which she should have been wearing to prevent her from licking or scratching her incision, but she hated it so much I took it off).  Better safe than sorry.

We hooked up “A Clash of Kings” and settled in for the drive.  There were a few flurries in the sky, but all seemed okay.  After we turned off the highway, I pulled over to fill up my gas tank (it’s SO much cheaper near my parents house).

And then the weather just … well … completely changed.  The wind picked up, and Rooney Cooper was pushed around the road.  The big, wet flakes that had earlier been dancing to the ground became an angry squall of blinding white.  The temperature dropped nearly eight degrees in less than ten minutes, and we slowed to a crawl as we slid on the curving country roads.

It was a long twenty minutes to finish the drive.  My mother called as we pulled into the driveway.  My father had arrived home just a little bit before me (he’d been Lucy-sitting while I worked), and the driveway hadn’t had any snow on it. As I pulled in, and slid sideways a little, it was a slick sheet of ice and snow.  As we tumbled inside the house and stamped snow from our feet (well, Lucy was ‘detained’ and politely allowed her Nonna to wipe off her paws), my mother said matter-of-factly, “Well, you’re not driving home tonight!”

We did have a great night.  Lucy was very well behaved (despite not sleeping through the night), the Haggis and Mashed Neeps were delicious, and breakfast of fried eggs, sausage and English muffins with Marmalade was scrumptious.  It’s always nice to go home and be spoiled a little bit.

The pup and I hit the road shortly after breakfast and were home before 1p, at which point I collapsed on the sofa and we had a nice little afternoon nap.  I awoke with a deep craving for Bourbon Balls (a decadent dessert introduced to me by Minda).  So I made some. It’s really the only logical thing to do when all the ingredients are in the cupboard. Now it’s time for the penultimate installment Downton Abbey (it’s extended!), some Bourbon Balls, and some cuddling with the pupster.

In case you’d like some Bourbon Balls, too ~ here’s how!

What you Need: 

1 box Nilla Wafers (10.75oz)

1 lb shelled Walnuts or Pecans (Minda does half and half and it’s sublime)

1/2 c. Honey

1/2 c. Bourbon

1/4 c. White Rum

1/4 c. Brandy

Powdered Sugar

What to Do: 

1. Combine Nilla Wafers and nuts in a food processor.

2.  When fully chopped, add honey and alcohol.  Mix together.

3.  Roll into balls and sprinkle with powdered sugar.

4.  Refrigerate.  Enjoy at your leisure.

**If you have time, refrigerate the batter after mixing, and about an hour later, roll into balls.  It will make the process much easier, and less messy.

 

 

 

rabbit rabbit rabbit

I studied abroad in the fall of 2001.  I was in Italy when the planes hit the twin towers. It was a surreal experience, magnified exponentially when I returned to the US and realized that while Italy had moved on, the USA had not.  I still remember watching Katie Couric on the Today show in January, speaking with survivors, and relatives of survivors … as though 9/11 had happened the day before.  I don’t mean to trivialize ~ I just know that it was a strange thing, experiencing something so earth-shattering thousands of miles away, amongst strangers.

But that is a story for another day.

My whole intention of being in Rome for the fall semester was to convince my parents to let me stay for the spring, thus spending an entire year in Italy.  Life before Italy hadn’t been full of sunshine and roses, and I needed something to remind me who I was – somehow, at about age 18, I’d lost my way, and I was still grappling to find it.  I worked hard to get to Italy ~ it was my only goal for a majority of the year leading up to it.  Even when things felt black and dismal, I hung onto the thought that I would be spending six months in Italia.  And that thought was glorious.

Imagine my surprise when the world’s largest known terrorist attack occurred weeks into my soujourn.  But again … for another day.

Fast forward to December.  Somewhere along the line, when Rome had gotten cold, and riding my Honda motorini to and from school had become an exercise in creative layering, I stood at the bright orange pay phone, and listened to my mother’s voice tell me that my father’s company had given him early retirement.  I cried, but it was silently, and with my back to the room.  They were still coming to visit, she assured me, but things were changing.  My hope of staying in Rome was snuffed out like a flickering candle.  My father, who sported a moustache for as long as I could remember (in fact, my whole life, and the full extent of his courtship and marriage to my mother), shaved it one morning on impulse in Rome.  Life catches you off guard that way.

We celebrated my 22nd birthday in Rome,  eating dinner with my cousin who lives there, at a tiny restaurant run by a man named Augusto.  I believe I ate rabbit, and my cousin Sarah gave me a brown courduroy Benetton purse.  Creepy memory, remember?

When we came home, we rode in a limo from the airport… reminiscent of the recently departed days of my dad’s job.  My brother and some friends were waiting at the house.  My shiny red Honda named Helen was there as well.  I felt a little like a deflated balloon ~ in Italy I’d remembered myself for a minute, and back in Wyomissing, I felt lost again.  I spent two weeks, give or take, on the phone with my friends from Rome, planning trips to New Orleans and Maryland … trying very hard to hold onto things that were slipping from my grasp.

And then January arrived.  Cold, gray ~ completely unlike this current January.  And it was time to return to Penn State.  Time to return to school.  My brother ~ possibly the most charismatic person I have ever met ~ had arranged a room for me, through a girl he’d met in Italian class.  It was a house, he told me, just a five minute walk from campus.  I would have my own room.  It would be great.

What he failed to mention was that said house was an unofficial sorority house.  (Sidenote: I was not then, nor have I ever been, in a sorority, despite my father’s attempts to persuade me ~ he may have had a point, but by my senior year, that ship had sailed without me).  My parents dropped me off, surrounded in boxes, and proceeded to Dave’s fraternity house to settle him in.  I stood in the middle of my new room and felt empty.  I looked around at all the boxes filled with my things, and I felt nothing.  And I also realized that there was nothing to do about it, except get settled in.  With a heavy heart, I began arranging my room.

It was during this time that I met Jess.  Or, as I like to call her, Minda.  She came bouncing up the stairs and poked her head in my room.  She had reddish blond hair (although she’ll say blond) and it was pulled up in a high pony tail that swished when she moved.  She was much too happy and much too smiley for my present state of mind.  She talked really fast.  Something about a bed, and the old inhabitant of the room, and her boyfriend … it was whirlwind.  And then she paused, and cocked her head to the side.

“Are you a dancer?”  She pointed at my feet.  “Because you’re standing in fifth position.”

I think I smiled then, and nodded.  I probably stammered something about my major, and that dance wasn’t particularly my forte, but I loved it.  She smiled back and shrugged.  I don’t remember what she said ~ she probably does.

Anyway, she was having some dinner and watching an episode of “Buffy.”  Did I want to join her?

Jess and I have been friends ~ minus a small bump ~ for over ten years.  When I think about it ~ a girl who moved her whole life and never stayed anywhere or knew anyone for much longer than two years ~ it’s something of a miracle.

Now my friend is a wife, a mother, a teacher ~ she crafts and sends cards for all the right occasions.  She married that boyfriend from over ten years ago, and every Wednesday, the four of us (well, technically, the seven of us, counting their four month old daughter and the two pooches) get together for dinner.  We call it WeHangsDay.

Tonight, as I ushered Lucy into the Mini and drove over, my heart was full of love for my friend.  It hasn’t always been easy (we lived together for two years after college, and upon leaving that abode didn’t speak for over a year).  We may not have always been fair enough or understanding enough of each other.  But, in the end, after taking a deep breath and being honest about a lot of things, the truth of the matter came down to this: Minda and I became friends on our own.  We drank White Merlot and had Buffy marathons.  We cooked pasta dinners and taped The O.C. for each other.  We, and eventually our significant others, watched nearly every episode of Lost together.  When the man and I go, we sit near each other in church.  We love each other’s families, we take care of each other (although she’s just way more together than I am most of the time!) and to me, she is my family, my sister.

And every first of the month, she says ‘Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit’ before anything else, for good luck.  So today and tonight, I say it in honor of her.  Women are tough on each other, but every once in awhile, you find a friend who walks through fire with you.

To Minda, to Toosdays, and to all the good stuff in-between.

 

in the fridge & fatigue-inspired ramblings

I haven’t been a total slacker this week.

The man left for his interminably long business trip on Monday morning at the crack of dawn (bleary-eyed me drove him to the airport at 4.30a, and of course, it was one of the only snowy and gross days we’ve have this winter, which made it even more fun!).

I made spinach and butternut squash lasagna over the weekend to accompany our first venison feast  …. Stop.  Rewind a minute. Let me re-phrase slightly.

I attempted spinach & butternut squash lasagna.  It came out pretty well except for the completely un(der?)cooked squash that has to picked out because it’s rock hard.

So, in reality, it’s more like a spinach and mushroom lasagna.  And I have two helpings today, but there’s still more than half a pan in the fridge.

Plus the venison.

And the fixings for the Venison Cobb Salad that I made for WeHangsDay (it was yummy … tomaters, blue cheese, bacon, hard-boiled egg, guacamole, venison, baby spinach leaves ….mmmm).

And the yogurt I bought (because yogurt is one of the eight foods you should try to eat daily …. another piece of email blast wisdom).

And in the cupboard are the cans of Chickarina Soup (I ab.so.lute.ly love it).

So much food, and I have barely touched it.

Plus, I got ingredients to try to make a Pizza Sandwich in the press (three-cheese bread, pepperoni, sweet Italian sausage, pasta sauce from Paul Newman ~ because really, how can you say no to Paul Newman? ~ fresh mozzarella …).  I feel like I need to start eating just because I don’t want all the food to go to waste.

I even have a container of hard-boiled eggs, because when I made them for the salad, I thought, well, I’ve been so hungry lately, it might be nice to have one as a mid-morning snack.

But since the man left, I haven’t really been all that hungry.

Lucy and I have gotten up every day, we’ve had breakfast (read: Lucy has breakfast while I try to make the bed, get dressed, use the bathroom and be ready to go for a walk before she’s done hoovering up her food) and we’ve jogged/walked for at least 30-45 minutes.

Then the day gets hectic.  It’s all about getting home, and getting ready for work, and getting Lucy ready for while I’m at work (Please God, try to inspire me to fill the Kong with Peanut Butter at night before bed, so that it’s ready as a distraction when I slip out the door), and making sure that I’ve read all the emails and forwarded all the reports, and  … gosh, I start to feel tired just thinking about it.

I actually packed a lunch yesterday (pop quiz hotshot ~ what was it?  … oh, just some Venison Cobb Salad that is still in the fridge at work in my new tupperware and won’t be good to eat on Monday) and forgot I was training my new assistant, so didn’t take a break at all because training eats up so much time … all of a sudden it was time to rush home and see what disasters awaited me from Lucy’s time in captivity.

And then that’s the thing … you get to the end of the day, and you’re exhausted, and then when you get home, it’s another 30-45 minutes of cleaning up, and then Lucy’s dinner time.  And then outside to go potty.  And …. then it’s time for my dinner.  And, to be honest, a heftly glass of vino.

Tomorrow my little brother and his lady are visiting, and I’m so looking forward to it.  Hopefully it’s fun for Lucy to meet more people.  And we’re planning a fire-pit, and mom & dad are coming, and hopefully my biff, Minda and her hubby and puppy and beautiful little munchkin Rosa.

The thing is … I mean, what I’m trying to say is … well, I’m tired.  But even though the man is miles away, and I’m doing it all on my own, I’m okay.

So my fridge is full, and my puppy isn’t potty-trained.

It could be worse.  😉

happy solstice, other mid-winter thoughts & a christmas movie countdown

December 21, 2011

This morning, as my alarm rang and I bemoaned the start of another day in the pitch black, I informed the man (in a monotonous tone) that today is the shortest day of the year.  In considering this, one can only look to the positive that slowly but surely, the sun will remain in the sky a little bit more each day until June 21st, when the cycle will begin it’s decline again to December.  Ah, the cycle of life.
December 23, 2011

As I hot-footed it around Center City earlier this morning on a mission to put together my boss’s Christmas (and Hanukkah) presents, I was a little depressed at the fact that I had to take my coat off because I was too hot.

In December.

Two days before Christmas.

Seriously, not to be crude, but WTF?

I struggled at Thanksgiving when the weather was spring-like; sunny, balmy breezes, chirping birds (well, that might be a small exaggeration).  But to have Christmas during a 60 degree warm stretch? Ugh.  If it were intentional, it would be different ~ say, Australia and Christmas on the beach.  But I live in Philadelphia, for pity’s sake.  It’s just wrong.

I really need some snow.  And it was looking so promising when we got a mini-blizzard at the end of October.  Now? Not so much.

So, to get in the holiday spirit, my top favorite holiday films.

Honorable Mentions:

Most Nostalgic Memories ~ Emmet Otter’s Jug Band Christmas (but I haven’t seen it in years) and Mickey’s Christmas Carol (the first video I remember my dad playing in our new VCR when I was about 5).

Best Christmas Chick Flick ~ While You Were Sleeping (I could watch this on repeat … I deeply love Sandra Bullock) and also worth mentioning: Four Christmases, The Family Stone and The Holiday

It wouldn’t be Christmas without watching ~ The Santa Claus, The Christmas Story

The Top Ten

1o. Fred Claus (Vince Vaughn makes this movie great, but the whole cast is pretty rockstar … Paul Giamatti, Rachel Weisz, Kathy Bates, Kevin Spacey … the list goes on, it’s crazy!)

9. Scrooged (It’s just so bad, it’s good!)

8. Home Alone (The original is still, in my opinion, the best).

7. Christmas in Connecticut: 1945 ~ (I am a sucker for old black & white Christmas movies, and this one is a doozy.  I wish I had it on DVD, but I try to find it on TV every year).

6. Love, Actually (So heartwarming, and so British … love it).

5. National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (If you don’t love this movie, something is wrong. Seriously.)

4. George C. Scott’s “A Christmas Carol.”  (It’s hands down my favorite version, and I only watch it on Christmas Eve … everything else is fair game for watching ad nauseum, but there’s something special about curling up on Christmas Eve and settling in to watch Charles Dickens’ masterpiece).

3. Holiday Inn ~ (Bing Crosby is Christmas incarnate to me.  I love this whole, sweet story of a little country Inn and a couple performers falling in and out of love …. it’s also the origin of Irving Berlin’s  Christmas standard, “White Christmas”).

2. It’s a Wonderful Life ~ (Truth be told, it’s a toss up for spots #1 and #2 … this movie makes me cry every time, but I also love Clarence’s message … “No Man is a Failure Who has Friends.”  This isn’t just a great Christmas movie, it’s an all-out great film).

1. White Christmas (I love pretty much everything about this movie … Bing Crosby singing, Vera Ellen dancing, Rosemary Clooney sulking and Danny Kaye clowning … I love the songs and the dance numbers, and the Christmas-y spirit of everything.  But mostly I love that I remember first watching this movie with Jennie J … and every year, when I watch it, she’s with me, and I’m little again, in my pajamas and snuggled up next to her listening to Bing and Rosemary sing their worries away).