Monday, July 12, 2010

teenage-man boy and mini- fork night

  
This last week it has been Tom's birthday. The last year of his teenage years gets underway and has left me thoughtful  about this time of both children leaving their childhoods firmly behind and assuming greater adult roles but at the same time there remains in all of us ( and at times especially me according to the kids) that desire to be and  want to act as a child...

...  So it was much hilarity that Rosie and I searched for silly pictures to adorn the wrapping on Tom's very sensible  grown- up gifts.  Duvet cover set, socks and undies and a lava lamp. How adult  are those presents?   He even expressed a genuine liking for them all - so polite. Well that's what you get I say when you don't offer any sensible suggestions of your own. Still birthdays have other redeeming features like going out for breakfast with your family and then because you are 19 and full of  sufficient self- belief you throw yourself another great party which  your friends later say was the best night out they had for a while. ( something your mother cannot even contemplate doing even in her wildest imaginings)
                                         
                           As I make this post I am having trouble matching up the photos and words so you will have to look down to see where the photos fit.  You may remember several weeks ago my wonderful find of a set of cocktail forks from the recycling shop at the tip for just $1? To make good on that find we decided we'd have a mini- fork party night on  Sunday. 

Here is what you do to throw an excellent most outrageously fun mini- fork party. 
1. Get yourself a set of mini- forks. 
2. Plan a mini - menu. ( cheerios, roast veges cut into tiny chinks, tiny salad tomatoes, and chunks of tiny cheese.)  Desert - a mini fondue - mini marshmallows and chunks of fruit in chocolate fondue made in  mini -fondue maker
3. Set the table with best cloth, nice candles you best mini china.
4. Eat only with mini forks.
5. Tell mini jokes between courses ( short jokes - one liners or knock- knock jokes)
6. Play one party game ( pin the tail on the donkey)
7. Play mini table soccer.
8. Clean up only a mini bit and leave the rest till another day.
Then when you're fully done your grown up part tells you to remember that moment, that time, that day because as the young adults go more than they come those times are fewer and further  between. All the more reason for your childish self to shamelessly cheat at pin the tail on the donkey, and to be the sorest loser at mini soccer. 

Here's to a week of moments to treasure.

Cheers Marg
                                         


4 comments:

  1. Great post Marg. and as usual some very profound insights on life offered to us. Thank you.

    Cheers

    Donald

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  2. Happy Birthday Tom! Hope this year brings you work that you find enjoyable and meaningful and of course, decent renumeration.
    The mini party sounds like lots of fun. What a great idea!

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  3. I so wanna come to a miniparty. I will brush up on my knock knock jokes so that I can be the minilife of the miniparty.
    We have been away from computers and phones for a whole week and it felt good. I will have to pull myself together and...ahem...catch up on birthday present shopping (sorry Tom).

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  4. I'd love to come to a miniparty too. I could bring the mini chocolate fish and the mini magnums. I would arrive in the mini car of course. We'll all hang out for tiny invitations in the mail.

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