Christmas Morning At The Mabel-s - Mother And: S...
Leo chose a rectangular box from me. It was a beginner’s leatherworking kit. He looked up at me, confused. “You said you wanted to make things with your hands,” I said. “Like Mabel used to.”
He nodded seriously, then wiped icing on the dog. The rest was a blur of wrapping paper, thank-yous, and one minor incident involving a remote-control dinosaur and the actual Christmas tree (the dinosaur won; the tree is now slightly tilted). Christmas Morning at The Mabel-s - Mother and S...
“It’s a paperweight for your desk,” he explained. “So you don’t float away when you write.” Leo chose a rectangular box from me
He didn’t say thank you. He just leaned his head against my arm. That was better. “You said you wanted to make things with
My son, [Leo], appeared in the doorway of the living room, clutching his stuffed bear by one ear. His hair was a disaster. His eyes were still half-closed. But then he saw the stockings hung by the (fake, but very lush) fireplace, and his face did that thing it does every year—a slow sunrise of realization.
“Mom. He came.”
We laughed. We sipped hot cocoa from the mug that says “World’s Okayest Mom” (a gift from my sister). Another Mabel tradition: after stockings, we each open one gift before breakfast. Not the big one. Not the loud one. Just one.