Every other year the girls have a birthday party. Here in East Cobb I am always shocked and amazed by the amount of money parents spend on birthday parties. Especially for parties for pre-schoolers. I was guilty of having huge parties for my girls when they were small and two years ago it dawned on me that I could never keep up with the expectation I was setting. That is when we decided to have a party every other year, and keep it small.
But before telling you about Sarah's party, I must admit I am not a good shopper. I do not like to shop. I do not like shopping malls. And for Father's Day I actually went to a major department store located at a mall. When we pulled up to the mall Sarah looked out the window and asked: "Is this a Mall? The sign says this is Town Center Mall. Are we at a Mall? Are we mom? Really? Are we?" The girls were so excited to be at an actual shopping mall.
After finding dad a few Father's Day gifts, the girls and I took a tour of the mall. There are many who enjoy the sights and sounds of a shopping mall. Not me. I am overwhelmed by merchandise and background noise and am distracted by the kiosks in the center. All of which is designed to entice you to consume. I am just not interested in this level of consumption. And around the corner and at the end of the main corridor is where Sarah discovered the Build A Bear Workshop. And for her birthday, she asked to go to the Build a Bear Workshop. She invited three friends.
We were the first to arrive and thankfully we arrived before a large party was scheduled. We had the entire store (and employees) to ourselves. The girls picked out their pals, had them stuffed, fluffed and brushed, registered for birth certificates, selected an outfit and we were out the door.
On the 12-hour drive to Ohio a few weeks ago, we gave Sarah an early birthday present -- a CD recording of a story called Stink and the Incredible Super-Galactic Jawbreaker. In the story, the main character, Stink visits a candy store and buys a jawbreaker which is not all it is promoted to be. His sister, Judy Moody asks him to buy her one piece of penny candy and then goes on to describe the multitude of candies she would like to have. Sarah asked if there was such a thing as a candy store like the one in the story! So after Build A Bear, we went to the Sweet Factory where each girl picked out a couple of pieces of candy.
Then off to the pool for some pizza and swimming and fun.
And the cake? Our favorite Hello Kitty! Easy enough to make, the girls helped. Take a 9 x 13 pan, and bake a cake. Cut the corners off and save for the ears. Shape the remaining piece into an oval, put the triangles on for ears, frost and decorate. I used a Peanut M&M for the nose and cherry shoelace licorice for the whiskers. It was hard to cut into her adorable face.
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2 comments:
And the further east you move, the worse it gets!
My kids love Build a Bear, too.
I am with you as far a shopping is concerned. I like book stores & bead shops, & I used to like fabric shpos, but try to stay out of them these days. That's about it for me & shopping.
We had a build a bear booth at out State Fair, & the nieces loved it. It looks like your girls had a lot of fun.
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