The words “Snow Day” mean different things to different
people. To school children, they mean a day of sleeping in and (depending on your
age) either texting your friends or playing in the snow all day instead of
going to school. To working folks, they mean blowing off shoveling until the
temperature hits a positive number, working at home in your PJs all day, and as
many extended coffee breaks as you want. To teacher-type working folks, they
mean a day to catch up on housework and lesson plans but also a dreadful
anticipation of sitting in a classroom in 120-degree weather in late June. To a
stay-at-home-mom, they mean an opportunity to have wonderful seasonal fun with your
children instead of the usual routine of dragging them, kicking and screaming,
to the grocery store (because you did that yesterday, along with the rest of
the known universe, once the meteorologists started going mental about the incipient
snowpocalypse).
To a stay-at-home mom – at least, to this
stay-at-home mom - a snow day will theoretically involve bundling up and making
snow angels, having snowball fights, sledding on a local hill, maybe even
ice-skating, all followed by mugs of hot cocoa with melty marshmallows. A mom
of pre-schoolers and toddlers will envision making sno-cones out of clean,
fresh snow and fruit juice, and creating beautiful snow- and ice-based crafts
like paper snowflakes and glitter-covered polar bears and penguins and, if she
surfs Pinterest at all, painting with snow and food coloring.
In her mind, her day will be spent thusly:
In reality, however, her day will look more like this:
Fortunately, no matter how her snow day actually goes, she
can always end it like this:
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