Having most of our family living close, we don't often get out of town visitors to spend the night at our little house. So we loved the happy noisy mornings...and the really late evenings (which lasted into the mornings) we spent story-telling, philosophizing, and laughing.
My mother's sister, Nancy (who is equally? fun, quirky, creative as her sister) also had three boys and a girl. So as we shared cousin stories we rediscovered how very similar our childhoods...and adult-hoods have been. But our families have always lived hours apart, usually in different states or countries. The one (or two) time(s) a year we did see our Kirkland cousins was full of offbeat, ingenious, uproarious merriment and usually produced some sort of fantastic video creation.
But we all grew up, went to college, and spread out...too far to see each other and too 'busy' to keep in touch. So getting the opportunity to get to know our cousins again (and all our spouses and children)...as adults was *really* fun.
And our children LOVED playing together...
Big Cousin Nora leading her band.
Maya and Everly....they shared the same due date, but Everly decided to come out a month earlier than Maya. They met once before, when they were babies...but this visit was the start of an intense new friendship.
Though the Maya-Everly hugs were plentiful over the long weekend, I never got a great picture of one with the camera.
Maya still asks if we should save a bagel or a snack for Everly...just in case.Thanksgiving Dinner with Corbins.
Thanksgiving Dinner with Rudds.
Wild (and somewhat unsupervised) Cousin Fun
And Sophia enjoyed being passed around to all her cousins, great aunts, and grandparents.
Someday, she'll know about her Great Aunt Jo's pie-baking talent.
Someday, she'll know about her Great Aunt Jo's pie-baking talent.
It was one of those intensely-fun-but-not-quite-restful extended weekends that left us feeling happy, encouraged, exhausted, and very very Thankful.
And now...we're all excitedly anticipating the wonderful chaos of Christmas.
And now...we're all excitedly anticipating the wonderful chaos of Christmas.