I used a couple of the ideas from the blog post, but then came up with some of our own as well. Here's our list of what we did;
1. Play a card game.
2. Put on a Glee CD and have a dance party!
3. Pick out a piece of candy.
4. Have a sword fight with Daddy.
5. Pick up main level...THEN...buy Fruit Ninja for Kinnect!
6. Have a thumb war.
7. Have a Popsicle AFTER you finish dinner.
8. Read a book in front of the fireplace.
9. Get in your coziest jammies.
10. Share some of your favorite memories from 2011.
11. Share some goals for 2012.
12. Toast with Kid Wine, then run outside with your noisemakers and yell "Happy New Year!"
I had the kids pick up their bedroom the morning of New Year's Eve and, while they were doing that, I blew up the balloons and hung them.
Most of the activities were a hit! Surprisingly, the 6 year old (not going to lie, I did type 5 at first, so not used to him being 6 yet!) was not happy with #8 but, after a couple of minutes of pouting on his own, decided to join us.
Surprisingly again, they were all excited about #9. May have been because just before that they noticed it was FINALLY snowing and, with their dad, all went out for an impromptu snowball fight and came back in wet and freezing. Cozy pj's probably sounded pretty darn good right about then.
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| ~Happy New Year 2012~ |
The 9 year old said that he think this should do this every year and make it a tradition and the 6 year old has decided he wants me to do the same thing on his birthday next year too. It was a great, fun, easy, cheap activity to do and everyone enjoyed it. It will become an annual tradition at our house.

































That was the key, getting that first inch filled, letting it cool and harden, and then unrolling and filling and rolling as I went. I was happy I figured out a solution, but it still wasn't smooth sailing. For one, that glue it hot!! Even through a layer or two of paper, it can burn you. Trust me, I know. (and one or two small bad words may have escaped every time I touched that scalding paper) Two, anyone who's worked with hot glue knows of those hot glue strings you get. Mid-way through the first wand, I felt like I was covered in hundreds of spider webs-blech (of course, I wouldn't possibly think of uttering any more no-no's while trying to shake millions of little glue strands off of my hands, arms, clothes...). It also got a bit tedious filling, waiting for it to cool a bit, filling, waiting, filling, waiting, filling, waiting, and so on and and on. After I got that first one filled, the others went more quickly. That could also be because I had my husband helping to hold at that point so I'd fill, he'd hold while it cooled while I started filling a second one, we'd trade and we pretty much had a good system going on. He was also very helpful in suggesting I "stop burning myself" each time a damn or sh*t escaped my mouth.









