Calm After the Storm

I woke up thinking about Christmas, and all the chores that need to be done. I haven't posted many gift guides this year, because I haven't been shopping. In fact, I haven't done much other than fold up a quick typed up list of chores, and then shove it in my purse. One of the things that I need to do today is write a holiday note and get the cards printed up at Shutterfly. 

These holiday cards are always theraputic for myself. I spend an afternoon tying up 365 days of life into a one page letter. Yes, the letter presents a sanitized version of the year, but it is close enough to reality to amuse me. 

2011 was certainly the year of the storm. We had two real storms, Hurricane Irene and the freak Halloween snow storm, that shut down this area. But the real storm happened last winter, when a combination of bad things swirled together to create a tornado that nearly shut us down. It became obvioius that we could no longer live in our old town. It would have been nice if a tornado had actually lifted our house and dropped it into another town, like in the Wizard of Oz. It wasn't that easy. 

Last night, I talked to my friend, Robin, who lives out in Seattle. We haven't talked in a year, so we did the oral version of the year-end letter. While we spent the year, preparing to move, selling, moving, and unpacking, she traveled to Europe, she backpacked in the NW, and worked at her parents' blueberry farm in New Hampshire. I was envious. Other than four days in Cape Cod, we've been pretty much glued to the area. 

The painters left. A few new pieces of furniture will arrive next Wednesday. I feel like the boys are in good hands at their schools; I can relax. The crisis is over. Next step, buy a plane ticket. We don't really care where. We just want to get on a plane and go somewhere. Not here. I fell asleep surfing plane ticket prices on Kayak on my iPad. 

I need to run to Target in an hour and get Jonah an XBox. He has been front loaded that there will be no Call of Duty in our house. It looks like there are at least two great, non-violent games that he can play on the machine. I can't deal with video games full of shooting and drama, because I have had enough drama. I'm out of crisis mode for the first time in a year and it's such a relief.