September 9th we celebrated the "Dunn bicentennial". My mom and Eli turned 65 and Billy turned 70. There was a small gathering in Connecticut to mark this most auspicious occasion. My mother gave a speech (naturally), but there were neither #2 pencils nor handouts! No quizzes, no banners, no color-coded packets! I shudder to think what the sesquicentennial will look like. Will we just text each other?
Halloween came and went with a hurricane you might have heard of. We had one hour without power but were otherwise fine. Our beloved Cape May got battered but the ocean did not breech the boardwalk. Other parts of the shore are still recovering. The halloween parade at LLA still went on, thank goodness. What a terrible disappointment it would have been to miss it. Here's a little video of Aaron's class- he is the black angry bird with the poorly fitting costume. I love the little girl who looks like she is just about to board the Titanic.
On the way back from New England, we stopped in Brooklyn to visit Margie, Billeh and Sule. Aaron wanted a picture in the pullout couch bed. It was a very exciting place to sleep.
Thanksgiving brought family plus 3 of Jonathan's Somalilander students who are studying in the US- Mohammed, CK, and Naima. Aaron naturally thought of them as playmates for him and had a wonderful time.
Now we are getting ready for gift season- Chanukah, Christmas and birthday. It gets a little gross from our perspective, but Aaron thinks it's fantastic. I explained the antiseptic version of Chanukah to him, which he seemed to accept. Then, he asked me about Christmas. Not satisfied with, "that's really daddy's department," he pressed me for information. I gave him the bare outline: There was a baby named Jesus who was born a long time ago. He said and did lots of wonderful things. He wanted people to be kind to the poor, to treat each other with respect and to work to bring about peace on Earth. Lots of people followed him. When he died, his followers thought he went into the sky and became a god. I was pretty proud of this. Aaron thought about it a minute, sat bolt upright in bed and asked, "So, why does Santa come?" I said I didn't know. He replied, "Wouldn't it be better if people just gave each other gifts?!?" My little skeptic. But I am NOT going to be the mother of the kid who ruined Santa for all the other kids at preschool. My answer to him, "There are some things even mommy can't explain."
Ready for any intruders in our kitchen.
(I wish a contractor would intrude and fix it up!)