Thursday, December 27, 2007

Christmas Letters


Recently there has been this departure from one of the oldest and most famed Christmas traditions -- the annual Christmas letter. I hear people complain that the most recent Christmas letters are boring and merely brag about everything the sender did that year. Or they complain that they are too long and they don’t have time to read them. Sadly, I agree with their complaints; there are many Christmas letters out there posing to be the real deal, but sadly they miss the aspects that have carried on this tradition for years. Every year, however, I anxiously check my mailbox for a couple of Christmas letters that will make me smile, laugh, or choke up. I commend those people for forgetting about themselves and writing a letter that is intended to be a gift to the recipient.

Several years ago I decided that I wanted to be one of those people that carried on the tradition of the storied Christmas letter. I set out to study the best of the best and developed what I think is a formula for composing a compelling letter. While I don’t mean to boast, I’ve been particularly proud of the responses we’ve garnered from our last several Christmas letters. If someone tells me that our letter made them laugh or that they shared it with everyone that came into their home, I know I’ve gotten the job done – I’ve spread the Christmas spirit with a mere eight and a half by eleven sheet of paper.

So, although it’s after Christmas, I’m posting a copy of our letter here with a few pointers on writing a great Christmas letter. I hope that our mailbox will be flooded next year with messages from our friends.

Top Ten Rules for Writing a Christmas Letter the Recipient Will Actually Read:

The opening paragraph is key.
It should be short (no more than three sentences) and set the stage for what the letter will reveal. The opening paragraph is the hook. Letters need not be filled with sidesplitting humor, but they should evoke a chuckle once or twice.

Write in your own words. Tell stories that are personally meaningful to you. Don’t use your thesaurus to fill the letter with words that make you appear smarter.

Don’t brag. Nobody cares about how much money you made, where you vacationed, or the degrees you’ve earned. They hopefully care about the challenges you faced, the lessons you learned, and the people you touched.

Start writing early. Start developing ideas for your Christmas letter in November. A lot has transpired during the past year and it can be hard to remember the most meaningful happenings.

Make it brief. If you can’t say it on one page front and back, you’re not saying it correctly. Adjusting the margins and typeface is okay as long as the type is no smaller than 11 pt and there is adequate white space – you don’t want your reader to feel overwhelmed.

Write with a thread. Great letters, like great stories, have one constant – a topic, story, or person that resurfaces throughout the letter. This thread will provide continuity and interest. You should always close your letter with this thread. Your letter should start out with a small bang, build in intensity until 3/4 of the way through, ease off towards the end, and end with a kicker.

Embellish, but don’t lie. A Christmas letter is about great stories. It’s okay if every fact and figure isn’t represented and if you use outrageous descriptors to make your point—there is a certain amount of expected and tolerated creative license to every Christmas letter; don’t cross the line.

Make it punchy. Don’t draw out a story longer than needed. Make sure your thoughts are concise and relevant. The recipient should be able to read any single paragraph and be filled with some Christmas joy.

Include everyone. Be sure to give adequate coverage for everyone in your family. Make mention of your neighbors, colleagues, friends, or church mates if possible. If the recipient sees that they are highlighted in your Christmas letter, they’ll be more likely to read it next year.

Add your contact info. One of the old marketing additives is to only pursue those things that are “measurable.” If you provide current contact info in your letter (your blog address, phone number, e-mail, etc.) people will update their address books and possibly write you back. Those who write back will get a picture with their Christmas letter next year while the scrooges will slowly disappear from your Christmas list.

The 2007 Paulsen Christmas Letter
(I wouldn't categorize this as our best work - but we've been pleased by the smiles it's brought to people's faces)


Dear Family and Friends, I’m penning this year’s Christmas letter on the bus (which Jane calls the “Blue School Bus”) because I no longer have a car and this is the only time I have to write. Read on to find out more.

With and without, the haves and the have-nots, we’ve been on both sides of the table this year as the following stories illustrate. But before I divulge this year’s happenings, I want to make my position very clear—we feel immeasurably blessed.

This year’s first “without” has little do with the bare necessities and more to do with the small luxuries in life. It also happens to include the smallest member of our rat pack, Yaks. Yaks is the typical boy: athletic and mischievous. The following reenactment occurs on a daily basis.

Mom walks into a room and asks, “Yaks, what are you doing?” At this moment Yaks has his back facing Mom concealing something in his paws. Just then he turns, glares at her with those brown eyes, grins subtly, and slowly raises his left eyebrow. This happens milliseconds before he pours an entire bottle of syrup on the carpet or empties a container of onion powder into the toaster (both of which happened this year). The results of Yak’s antics are normally reversible, although our toaster still cooks onion-flavored Eggos. Occasionally, however, Yak’s nefarious activities cause permanent damage. I distinctly remember three phone calls I received this year.
1) [Args] “Honey, Yaks has something he wants to tell you.”
[JB] “Awe, he misses his daddy.”
[Args] “No, he threw your cordless phone in the toilet.”
(Cordless phone: $200)

2) [Args] “Sweetie, do we have another mouse for the computer?”
[JB] “Why, is the cordless mouse out of batteries?”
[Args] “No, Yaks threw it in the toilet.”
(Wireless mouse: $60)

3) [Args] “You love your son, don’t you”
[JB] “Of course I do”
[Args] “Even more than your remote control”
[JB] “My LCD universal remote that I can use anywhere in our yard?”
[Args] “Yeah…(pause) Yaks threw it in the toilet.”
(Logitech Harmony 890 Remote: $350)
Alas, the pain of losing the aforementioned items has faded, and I have an abundance of memories that are, well, priceless. Since that time, Args and I have hypothesized as to why Yaks chose to destroy those particular items. All we can come up with is that they are the three competitors for attention: phone, computer, and television.

Boo is still fixated on Sesame Street and Elmo, but the obsession with these educational PBS programs is quickly shifting to a powerful commercial monster, Disney Princesses ®. Belle, from Beauty and the Beast is her favorite. Evidence of this transition takes place every morning when Jane promptly removes her Elmo pajamas and exchanges them for her favorite pink dress. It’s strange when she ventures outside on a weekday, as she resembles a pioneer girl.

One of Boo’s favorite Elmo episodes has also been instrumental in her princess metamorphoses. The episode, entitled “Hair,” teaches children everything they need to know about taking care of their hair, including how to get a haircut. You probably know where this is headed—another dreaded phone call from Args. This call was actually a picture message to my cell phone; “Look at what Boo did with the scissors!” was the text that accompanied a photo array of Boo’s perfectly chiseled mullet. In an attempt to make herself into a beauty, she had unleashed a beast.

As most of you know, we moved to ******* last year, a paradisiac community with wonderful neighbors. We purchased a relatively newer home in hopes of avoiding remodeling and repair costs. This strategy worked marvelously until our furnace and water heater broke. Despite the two big blows to our budget, we persevered. Things got slightly worse, however, when during our vacation in ********* this summer the air conditioner on our Honda blew up. We drove the 300-mile trip home with the windows down in 100-degree weather. I can still remember the kid’s bright-red faces and ratted hair as they sat parched in the back seat. If there was one benefit to the broken AC, it was the wind blowing between windows as it would drown out Boo’s voice as she sang out-of-tune Disney songs. She has an acute ear for disharmony as she can sing any song exactly one half step down from its intended key. It’s worse when she sings at full voice during church. The cost of repairing the AC was substantial so we postponed fixing it for several months by planning early morning grocery runs and carrying ice-cold sippy cups when daytime travel was required.

With the cost of repairs and haircuts racking up, we deemed it necessary to trim expenses and sell the Subaru. The adjustment was actually a positive change for our family. Using some of the proceeds from the sale, I purchased a road bike and began biking the 27-mile round trip commute to work. After several months I had lost close to 25 pounds (down to a svelte 160), cut my contribution to global warming, and saved a small fortune in auto expenses and gas. Be sure to look for me on the “The Biggest Loser” next season.

Living with one car hasn’t been without its challenges. One particular incident occurred when I attended Woodbadge training this summer. For those unfamiliar with Woodbadge, the course is a Boy Scout leadership training. Adults dress in full uniform (red and green socks included), learn and practice leadership skills, and live like boy scouts for six days and five nights. The course took place up ******* Canyon beginning at 6:00 am the first morning.

Transportation to Woodbadge presented a problem because we didn’t have a spare car for me to take for the duration of the training. Waking the kids up at 5:45 am wasn’t an option either according to Args. Trapped, I called on my amazing mother to help with transport. She agreed to pick me up that morning to take her 28-year-old son, dressed in full scout uniform, to scout camp. Fortunately, she had planned a hike up the canyon that same morning with my aunt who drove up with us.

We proceeded up the canyon, my mom, my aunt, and a grown boy scout in the back seat. Needless to say, I was slightly embarrassed by the circumstances but I figured it would be an unnoticeable drop-off. I was wrong. When we arrived, people were unloading in mass exodus and the head usher was my former singles ward bishop. He teased and taunted from the window as we sat in the car, “JB's getting dropped off at scout camp by his mommy?” -- “Don’t worry Mom, we’ll take good care of him.” -- “Be sure to give her a kiss goodbye.” The abuse climaxed when I tried to exit the vehicle only to discover that the child locks were activated. Lovingly, mom got out of the car and opened my door for me. I kissed her goodbye on the cheek.

Args has settled into our new ward nicely. By far, she has formed the strongest social network of anyone in our family participating in book club, playgroups, cookie exchanges, relief society (teaching), and nursery. Recently she’s been getting together with several other women at 5:45 am for aerobics. She does this three days a week with remarkable consistency. Args will also join “The Biggest Loser” next season but as my trainer – watch out Jillian.

One of Arg’s favorite hobbies (escapes) this year has been “blogging.” I recently discovered that some of the most dedicated bloggers are not techies, but stay-at-home moms who love to swap child-rearing stories, share cooking secrets, and fantasize about what they would do if they had three hours all to themselves. Argsdevotes a fair amount of time each day to the craft. There’s a good chance that if the kids are in bed or if I can’t find her around the house she’s on the computer blogging. Most of the time I’m quite supportive, but I must admit there are times when I just want to throw the computer in the toilet. But before I do, let me finish my Christmas letter.

Much Love,
JB, Args, Boo, & Yaks, Paulsen

A Meeting with Old Friends

From Right: Jesse, Annie (Jesse's Spouse), Emily (my cousin), Hanna-lee, Args (My Spouse), JB

Several weeks ago I ran into an old friend while attending a business lunch. I was there with a colleague and we were supposed to meet up with a woman neither of us had met. I’m sure you’ve experienced the same anxiety before – watching everyone come in the door and assessing whether or not they fit the occupation, tone of voice, and reputation of the person you are supposed to meet. Anyway, a woman walked in the door that seemed to fit my preconceived notions. I walked up to her, introduced myself, and then suddenly realized we had met before. We were teenage acquaintances that had met through my cousin Emily who lived in Ogden. I was probably 15 at the time and she and my cousin were 16 or 17 when we first met—I felt so cool hanging out with older women.


It had been years since we had seen each other and both of us had obviously matured considerably. We quickly reminisced of the days when we used to play late-night pranks, engage in games of truth and dare, and give back rubs. Oddly, backrubs seemed to be somewhat romantic at that age.

After parting, I returned to my office and mentioned the encounter to my cousin Emily who suggested it was time we have a reunion with the old clan when she was in town for the holidays. We made arrangements to meet at a local restaurant last night and enjoyed some great conversation. It was particularly fun to talk about everyone’s career plans, meet spouses, and swap stories about our children. We concluded the evening at our home in Bountiful. Forgoing the temptation to play another game of truth or dare, we followed Emily’s suggestion to share our biggest “miracle” that had occurred that year and the biggest miracle that had occurred during our lives. While the answers were all over the board, most all of touched on the great blessing our family, friends, and spouses, had been. The evening was a delightful reunion. I’m so grateful for the people I have met throughout my life and the impact they have had on me.

Christmas Day Review

Here is another great post from Amy regarding our Christmas. I thought I would post it verbatim. You can read it and others on her blog at allhale-amy@blogspot.com




I Heard the Yells on Christmas Day!

December 25, 2007

Merry Christmas! The kidlets both awoke early Christmas Day, after a rough night of nightmares, drink requests and mystery cries*. We took the traditional picture on the stairs in their cute Christmas jammies. JB and I were so excited to see the kids' reactions to their presents - that's the most fun.
We were quite proud that several of the kids' gifts were acquired from treasure hunting at DI. Yaks got a tool bench and Boo got a kitchen set, both for less than $10. I'll let each child tell you in his/her own words about their favorite gift.


Boo: "Dees are my princess dollies! Day have pretty dresses. Day stand in a circle and visit. Day're getting ready to go to the dance. Ben!? You can't touch my princess dollies! NO! Dees are mine!"

Ahhhh, so glad we've instilled in her the spirit of Christmas!












Yaks: "Dree-oh! Dree-oh! I fix it! I fix it. Dood job! Tang-coo, mamas. Tang-coo, dadas!"


Oh, this boy is such a munchkin.


I think JB's favorite gift was a pair of photo cufflinks (a tradition each Christmas) with the kids' pictures inside. JB got me a gift card for a date night to Benihana's. I'm looking forward to that, as JB has never had that type of dining experience. It will be fun!


My brother and sister-in-law drew our names for our family gift exchange. They mailed us a darling church binder for each child with the gospel A-B-C's in it, a coloring book, notepad, colored pencils, board book and stickers. It obviously took much time and thought. It's the perfect gift to help with our Sunday troubles. Thanks, family!

We didn't have anywhere to go for the rest of the day, so we took advantage of the freshly-fallen snow and went sledding on a nearby hill. Boo went down on the sled all by herself! Yaks was done after his first run, when we got plowed by a tuber and Yaks got snow spray all over his face. Fortunately, there were some nice dogs who were also visiting the hill. They were fun to chase around."I went down all by my say-olf! Yay!"

Yaks is going to stick to dry ground.

I came down with a mild case of the Christmas blues later in the day. You know, missing that carefree feeling of Christmas day as a child, long-standing traditions, endless talking with my siblings, and relying on my own parents to be in charge? I felt so guilty feeling this way. I had a really fun day with my own family and love to be with them. We had planned to drive up to visit the day after Christmas, but canceled, due to a threatening snowstorm, which was a real disappointment. We did have a visit from Nana, Papa, Isaac and Abby, though, and got to show them our gifts and received many others from them, which was so nice.

Following naps for all, which helped a great deal, we enjoyed a little family Christmas dinner, ate treats, played for hours with "our toys", and watched a little movie all together on the couch before collapsing, exhausted into bed.

Friday, December 21, 2007

We were pelted with snow last night. I was a good hour late for work like many other people who chose to blaze on, despite being tempted to get an early start to the holiday weekend. the snow covered trees on campus were breathtaking, especially when the morning light danced on them. This picture hardly does them justice, but I Thought I would share it anyway. I'm thrilled at the thought of playing in freshly fallen snow with the kids all weekend.

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Your favorite Christmas book

Args wrote such a great blog entry today on her personal blog (allhale-amy.blogspot.com) I thought I would paste it here. I love the little things with the kids that happen each day. Sometimes I wish I was around to experience them first hand - other times I empathize with Amy as it's not all fun and games.


"My parents gave each family a new Christmas book this year. I was thrilled with their choice --
The Sweet Smell of Christmas. It's a scratch and sniff book! We received this book as a family gift when we were little, and it was always a favorite to pull out and enjoy during December - it's been read so many times, I think all the scent has been scratched off! Here's the book jacket description: "Little Bear delights in the many wonderful smells of Christmas. From the hot apple pie his mother is baking to the pine branches of the Christmas tree to his candy canes and hot chocolate. Little Bear celebrates the season with six scratch-and-sniff scents.

It's a cute little story*, but but the fun is in getting to scratch and "experience" what the Little Bear smells in the events leading up the Christmas Day.

Boo just asked me to reach down her "favorite book" from the book shelf. Curious which one she was referring to, I picked her up to let her get it herself.
Jesus the Christ
by James E. Talmage. Oh, of course...every child's favorite book to "read" during the Christmas season! Haha."

Thursday, December 20, 2007

What Boo's getting for Christmas

Our neighbor came over yesterday to drop off a christmas gift. While she was there she asked Boo, 'what is santa going to bring you for Christmas?' Boo's response was accurate although I'm sure it sounded strange to our neighbor, 'fruit snacks and popcorn.' These were the two items that santa brought to each of the grandchildren at our extended family Christmas party. Little does Boo know that santa has more in store for her than munchies.


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Picture of ben shoveling his gingerbread house.

Ben shoveling food. Cell phone shot - sorry for the poor quality.

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Gingerbread Houses at Nannas.

It was gingerbread house time at nannas. we were thrilled to have adrienne and mike's family home for the holidays. everything was going well until boo and yaks gingerbread house collapsed under the weight of all the candy (picture attached). after the collapse yaks figured the game was over and began to shovel candy into his mouth with both hands.


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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Christmas Photoshoot


PICT4268
Originally uploaded by joshuapaulsen
Args really wanted a formal Christmas photo taken this year for our Christmas Card, which if the planets align, will go out tomorrow in the mail. (look for your copy Saturday, Monday, or worst case scenario, after Christmas). The shoot didn't quite go as expected. We don't exactly have the right equipment and Jane and Ben were a little rambunctious. You can check out the edited gallery here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/22003077@N07/sets/72157603499229780

Yes, those are the best photos that we got. Thanks TIm for bring a champ.

I am a Son/Daughter of God

Last night the bishop assigned me to teach the fifth Sunday lesson to the young men and young women in January. I was pleased at his confidence in me to address this group and came home focused on discovering what the Lord would have the youth know at this time. What ensued was a two hour scripture study and contemplation on my own teenage years - the good times i had and the challenges I faced. At the conclusion of my stud i think i had determined what would be most beneficial to the youth at this time. I'm impressed that both the young womens theme and the young mens purpose state at the very beginning 'we are daughters of our heavenly father' or 'I am a son of God.' Too often as a teenager (primarily Junior High) i felt outcast, rejected, alone, or insecure. If only i had known then what i know now - that i am a son of God and that carried with it divine nature and powerful blessings. It's hard for ones actions
to be in contrary with church teachings if one really knows who he or she is.


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Monday, December 17, 2007

Cell Phone videos from the Quilter Family Christmas Party tonight



One cool dog.

Ben and Eric's dog Root (picture)

Ben loved playing with m uncle eric's dog 'root' while at the party.

Quilter Family Christmas Party (Post one of several)

We attended the quilter family Christmas party tonight. my uncle Eric has a very kid friendly house in park city. I'll be sending pics throughout the night. As you can see he has a trampoline in his house (with a basketball court above that you can't make out) and a rock-climbing wall. This is only a small portion of the rock climbing wall. Connecting the three floors of this room is a giant tube slide that goes from floor to floor (sometimes it's hidden in the walls). One other unique thing we saw roaming in his backyard was the most amazing heard of elk. There were close to a dozen elk, some with very impressive racks. I guess in a way, the trip tonight was sort of like visiting the north pole - tons of little elves running around (kids galore), a giant toy factory (play room), and santas reindeer grazing in the background.

The Good Samaritan in 7-Eleven

This college student was the person who bought the homeless man dinner. What a good kid.

So, I've never been much of a blogger. I guess that's because I've always found it too inconvenient to sit down at the computer and type my thoughts for the day. Args is a blogging champ and has been doing so almost all year (check out her blog at all-hale-amy@blogspot.com). recently though, i discovered that you could post to a blog from your cell phone - now this I'm all for. so here is my first blog post from my cell phone. excuse any spelling and grammar errors for obvious reasons. skipping to a different thought, i just encountered one of those moments when you realize how blessed you are. as i was walking down from work i saw a homeless man raiding a dumpster for unused slices of pizza from the pie. as i stood here typing this outside the seven eleven a college kid offered to buy him something inside the seven eleven (after turning down the plea for some spare change) i suppose i should have been quicker to pony up rather than write about the situation.