Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Lesson #2: You are never too old to play in the snow!

OK, honestly, this is not exactly the second lesson I wanted to share. I was planning to choose a lesson that would pull at your heartstrings, give you a profound new outlook on life, maybe even make you want to share it with your own children. Truthfully, I am not even sure that this is a lesson that my mother taught me! However, when I woke up to the winter wonderland outside of my window this morning, I couldn't resist sharing it with my readers. I really have to start another blog to deal with topics that aren't really related to this blog. But, until then, I guess I will just have to find a way to turn these stories I want to share into lessons my mother taught me - or at least, lessons she could have taught me.

Actually, this is a lesson that I have shared with my own children. From the time my children were babies, I have made it a point to share the snow with them. Here are some of the cool things we have done to share the snow:


  • Eaten snow topped with molasses. I know this is a bad idea but I thought the risk was worth the chance for them to say to their children that they had actually done this. Kind of like, "when I was a kid..... we had to eat snow with molasses because we ran out of food during the blizzard"!

  • Made a million snow men, women, and children. We are actually the "snow family" experts on our block and kids come from all around just to see how we do it. We really just learned through trial and error, but I have to admit, we are pretty awesome! Soon after we moved to Jordan, they had the worst blizzard in the past 50 years. We were ecstatic and suited up to tackle our first Jordanian snow. Downstairs, we started to work on one of our trademark snow men, including the carrot nose, button eyes, hat and scarf. A short while later, a neighbor approached my husband to inquire about our work. My husband came back all smiles announcing that now "everyone knew we from America"! I guess we did have some influence on everyone around us because every time it snows, you can look out the window and see happy little snow families for as far as your eye can see.

  • Saved a snow ball in the freezer for a hot summer day. Inevitably, sometime in mid-July, when I finally get around to cleaning out my freezer, I always find a Ziploc bag with a mysterious blob of frozen snow. Seems they remember to do this, even when I don't!
  • Ended a day of fun with an old fashioned mug of hot chocolate. Need I say more!



Note to my readers back home in Alabama........ Yes, it does snow in Amman, Jordan and no, I do not live in the desert. If you look at any map, you will see that share an almost identical latitudinal coordinate with you - Amman, Jordan (31° 57' 0") and Calera, Alabama (33° 6' 10"). Therefore, our weather is pretty much the same. At least the year round temperature is almost identical. We have one advantage over you which is that we have almost no humidity. On the other hand, Alabama gets to enjoy rain and thunderstorms year round - we have no rain from early May until late November.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi, this is the fourth time I've tried to send you a message! We had snow a week ago. We use to make snow ice cream with sugar and milk...it was good. Ya'll use to put snowballs in the freezer so you could take them out in July and crack someone in the head.
Keep it coming love it(really loved the pictures). Love Momma

UmmFarouq said...

I have tried many times to explain the latitudinal thing to folks, that we don't live in the middle of the desert, although we do have semi-desert weather in summertime. Which means, as you said, no humidity, a true plus if you ask me.

Loved the pics.