Saturday, February 14, 2015

All that Glitters...

With the Pacific Ocean on the west and the San Gabriel mountains on the east, the natural setting where Los Angeles stands is actually quite stunning.   With its natural beauty and near perfect weather year-round,  it's easy to see why LA has become a magnet for the rich and famous.    

In our drives through Los Angeles, we saw both the glamorous parts of the city, where homes prices are generally in the 7-digit price range, and other parts (not all that far away) where homeless people seemed to abound on the dirty streets.  I frankly wasn't very impressed with either.   The famous "stars" of Hollywood are cracked, dirty and sitting in a part of town where you definitely would not want to be after dark.   

After  two visits there in the last couple of years, I've come to the  conclusion that the best way to keep the glittery image of Los Angeles intact in your head is to see it from afar.    And standing atop a hill overlooking the city of Los Angeles, Griffith Observatory provides the perfect way to do that!   

You can ooh and ahh over the  fact that you can see the Pacific Ocean in the distance.  

You can say that you've seen the infamous Hollywood sign. 

And admire the beauty of the mountains bathed in the golden sunlight. 

Then you can watch the last little remnants of the sun slip down the horizon and paint the skies with shades of a glimmering orange...  

and even a touch of pink….

A few minutes later,  the arrival of the dusk is announced with the striking addition of a deep blue to the sky  that would make my Denver Bronco fan husband smile with a knowledge that God must surely approve of his allegiances.  

The kids were excited for the sunset sky show to be over so they could go explore the observatory. 


We went inside and watched a very cool tesla coil demonstration that had the kids enraptured with its indoor crackling lightning bolts.  

They couldn't resist posing with the statue of Albert Einstein.  

 In a moment of camera fatigue, I completely forgot to take any pictures of the planet exhibit, which was actually very fun, educational, and interactive for the kids.  

As we left, we once more admired the glittering lights of the city from afar.  

And then drove back down to the dingy streets to look for a place to eat dinner.  

 It was a fantastic day, and those stunning views are ones I'll never forget, but when we got back to my sister's house that night, I couldn't help but feel a strong appreciation the peaceful platitudes of family and home.   I truly have no need for glamour and glitz in my life and seeing a bit of it from afar was more than enough to realize that I need look no further than our not quite big enough house to see that it contains a depth of love and comfort that I could never find anywhere else if I looked for a million years. 

On this Valentine's Day, I declare my love not only for Glen, the love of my life for the last 21-years, but also for each of our children.  I love each of them and the natural glitter they add to my life every day!   The glitter that gets me out of bed every day and makes me happy to be a part of their lives.  I am  grateful for every moment of it! 

Happy Valentine's Day!

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Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Throwback Thursday: A Surprise in the Shower!

Back in the days before I started this blog, I would send emails to my parents with stories about the kids.    Here's a long-lost email I sent them in October 2003 when Adam had just turned one and Emma was almost three.   


I had a somewhat hectic morning and didn't have the chance to shower before Glen left for work and the older kids went off to school.  Rather than spending the day unshowered, though, I made a bold decision that I would try to distract the little ones for a few minutes and attempt to shower anyway.  I got Adam (barely 1) and Emma (3) occupied in the room adjacent to the bathroom with  doors shut and plenty of things they could do.  I was fully enjoying my three minute long shower, until I realized that while I could hear Emma happily playing, that I couldn’t hear Adam at all.   
As I turned around to peek out the shower curtain to see if I could see what he was doing, I jumped in surprise as I just about knocked him over.  He’d walked into the shower fully clothed and hadn’t made a single sound!  He looked as surprised as I did, since my turning around caused the stream of water to drench him completely.  
All in all he was quite pleased with himself that he’d found my “hiding place”! 

PS   Although I often miss having "little people" in the house anymore,  I am really happy to be at a place in life that I can take showers now without worrying about what the kids are getting into!


I couldn't find a good picture of them in the right age range,
so this one of Emma and Adam was when they  were more like 5 and 3.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

DisneyLand vs. Disney California Adventure Park

A trip to DisneyLand was #1 on my list of things I wanted to do while we were visiting my sister in California.    I went to a DisneyLand as a child, but even with my sister living a mere 20-minutes away, we've never taken our own kids.    Or DisneyWorld for that matter.    It has always  seemed just too out-of-the-way and too expensive to go.  

 But when we got our plane tickets at a mere 20% (or less) of regular price, new doors of possibility opened for us.  And even better, Southern California residents can purchase DL tickets at a reduced rate, which meant that we got two-day passes for just a tad bit more than a one-day pass.   Perfect for Disney newbies like us!   

We explored DisneyLand on a Wednesday and the twin sister park, Disney California Adventure Park the next day.    It turns out that late January right during a measles outbreak is the absolutely perfect time to hit the Disney parks.   We had what we've since discovered is  the extremely unusual experience of having almost zero lines in either park.    In DisneyLand, the longest we ever waited was 10-minutes for any ride.  In California Adventure Park we waited for about 25-minutes for a couple of  the most popular rides,  but for the vast majority of rides in both parks we didn't have to wait at all.  
Didn't know there were two parks?   Here's a little summary about the differences:  

DisneyLand:   
traditional Disney rides, the ones you remember from your childhood
extremely family friendly
an 8-10-year-old could easily ride every ride in the park 
can bring bags/backpacks with you on every ride
mostly families with children in attendance
no alcoholic beverages
extremely friendly workers

our DL favorites:   
Space Mountain
Autopia
Dole whips (delicious dairy free pineapple treats!) 
Buzz LIghtyear Astro Blasters
Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage
Pirate's Lair on Tom Sawyer's Island
Peter Pan's Flight
Star Tours

Disney California Adventure Park:
bigger, scarier rides
still tame, but definitely a little less family oriented
many high school groups and college aged students in crowds
people drinking alcohol everywhere
more theme-y (entire "towns" of rides built around a theme of a Disney movie)
workers kind, but less doting on the kids
fun and creative and interactive rides

our DCAP favorites:   
Radiator Springs Racers
Toy Story Midway Mania
Mickey's Fun Wheel (except for Ellie and Adam)
Aladdin Show
Frozen singalong 
Mater's Junkyard Jamboree
My kids were enraptured by the palm trees everywhere in California!


My kids were quite excited about the bakery tour and afterward really wanted to try to make sourdough bread sometime.  


Frozen singalong….how cool is that?   (haha--pun totally not intended)

This ride was  like a giant air hockey table and the tires would actually hover right above the ground.


We loved the view with the Mickey Mouse ferris wheel in the background. 

Ellie (aka Princess Anna) was one tired little princess by the end of the second day!

The biggest, scariest ride of the whole day! 

Cami posed there and then bragged on social media that she got accepted to her first college choice. 

A little reminder of home in the middle of California Adventure Park




Winding down for the night! 

This Toy Story Midway Adventure was one of our favorites (and was one of the longest lines we waited in the whole time we were there)! 


Adam's inquiry for the day:  If one pair of glasses makes it 3D, does that mean wearing  two pairs makes it 6D?  


A ride I remember from when I was a child, because my younger brother Nate was so petrified he tried to crawl under the front of it

Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage was COOL! 
The underwater effects were very fun and engaging! 





Getting Dramatic!


WE didn't bother with visiting many characters, because they often did have lines, and we didn't care all that much about them.  We did occasionally stop if they were just standing there.  

The very front car of the monorail





Ellie braves throwing her hands in the air! 




Ellie was doted on all day at DisneyLand with her Princess Anna costume on.   One worker even asked for her autograph, a fact which tickled her greatly.   In California Adventure Park, no one said a word.   

The famously delicious Dole whips!   
It was the only food we bought in DisneyLand.


AFter two whole days, we were VERY tired, especially Ellie! 
It really was a great time!   


The only bummers we experienced  for the time we spent at Disney, was the fact that "It's a Small World" and the "Matterhorn" were closed.  Other than that, it was two absolutely fantastic days, which make me never want to go back again…unless it's free.     

 I figure it's better to always remember the fun times and the short lines than to ever go back and have our rosy memories squashed by hordes of people.  


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