I always believed we were one of those families people secretly roll their eyes at—the kind that looks like it stepped out of a holiday commercial where everyone has perfect hair, the lighting is always warm, and even the messes seem charming. Hayden still slips handwritten love notes into my coffee mug after twelve years of marriage, little folded scraps that say things like “You make ordinary days better” or “Don’t forget you’re amazing.
” Our daughter, Mya, is the center of it all, a child whose curiosity feels boundless, whose questions arrive without warning and crack open the world in ways I didn’t know I needed. She notices things most adults have trained themselves to ignore: how shadows stretch differently in winter, how music sounds warmer when you close your eyes, how kindness feels like something you can almost touch. December, for me, becomes a personal mission. I try to capture magic, bottle it, and pour it gently into her days. When she was five, I transformed our living room into a snow globe using cotton batting, silver garlands, and enough twinkle lights to make the electric meter spin.