A few weeks ago the sunny girl and I took a day trip (a l-o-n-g day trip) to New York City. We took along her best friend, Teeny Tiny Taylor, and the three of us had a great day. We saw a fabulous Broadway musical that none of us knew anything about -- The Mystery of Edwin Drood (in which Chita Rivera is still gettin' it done!). Now it's one of our new favorite shows!
We ate lunch at an empanada stand -- spicy chicken for me, and gooey cheese for the two vegetarians -- plus a shockingly tasty cranberry apple empanada for dessert.
The hipsters rode the Ferris Wheel at Toys R Us, and were drawn like moths to the mesmerizing flame of the Disney Store. We went to the Discovery museum, where we saw a very cool exhibit of sets, props, and costumes from all eight Harry Potter movies And: Robert Pattinson? Short. Rupert Grint? Not quite as short, but still. Daniel Radcliffe? Short, short, short. Emma Watson? About the size of a miniature pixie.
And of course we hit Macy's. We strolled around the block outside the store first, looking at the pretty, pretty window displays. Then we went inside and traveled all the way up to the ninth floor. Our mission was to ride the wooden escalators, and to find the Christmas shop!
As we made our way up and up and up, we discovered this letter writing station and made a stop, because Macy's is doing a cool thing: Every time you mail a letter to Santa inside a Macy's store, the company will donate one dollar to the Make-A-Wish Foundation.
The urchins were all over that!
But listen to this tragic tale: Teeny Tiny Taylor has never seen Miracle on 34th Street, so she didn't understand the special relationship Macy's has had for so long with Santa and with making sure his letters get to him. How could this have happened in America?! I can only tell you -- the sunny girl assigned the movie as homework!
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Our Advent calendar reveals this fun book behind today's door. Inside are actual letters that can be opened and read, as the Jolly Postman tells about all the different storybook characters who have written letters to Santa. Kids will also enjoy the games and puzzles that are part of the story.
Oh what a fun day out. The jolly postman was one of my favourite books as a child, so a Christmas version sounds positively delightful!
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