
It's pitch black outside, and I can still hear my children squealing as they ride their bikes around the circle with the neighbor children.
I should call them in and put them to bed, but tonight is the last night of Summer. (Sundays don't count.) Monday morning, Joanne, Lizzy, and Sarah head off to school; the rest of them start Wednesday.
Play on, sweet peeps! Play as late as you want tonight.
I hate to see Summer end, but I'm torn. The last two weeks, my little girls have lazed around complaining, "There's nothing to do," They avoid all forms of work and have tuned out the sound of my voice completely.
Just last week I was complaining that I've had enough of summer. Now that it's really ending . . . I'm sad.
I have loved the warm nights and hanging flower pots, hours and hours of play time, and the almost constant baking projects (the inescapable fate of a woman with 7 daughters). My kitchen never rests. Lately, we've had lemon bars and Margarita cupcakes,brownies, Texas sheet cakes (many), cookies of every variety (not always recognizable), and loaves and loaves bread (Sarah's newest venture).
Somehow the cooking falls back to me when the sun sets earlier and
everyone's in school.
David just whistled out the window for everyone to come in. Lizzy yelled back, "But, Dad, we're playing Ghost in the Graveyard."
"Okay," he said.
I guess we're of one mind tonight.