Mary Cuffy
“How the Grinch Stole Christmas” is a classic tale about learning the true meaning of giving, sharing, and family. The Grinch hates Christmas, and for 53 years he tries to end it by taking all the presents and food in Whoville. At the end of the story, he realises that Christmas can be celebrated without those things because the true meaning of the holiday does not come in ‘things with tags, packages, boxes or bags.”
“It does not come from a store, it means a little bit more.”
The Grinch experiences a profound, magical change. However, he does not do it alone.
The change that the Grinch undergoes gives people hope. Hope that the bad things and people in the world can be better. Hope that given the right circumstances, things can change.
That hope is important to believe in. Ultimately, I think this is the greatest reason that the
story has stood the test of time, and why it gives us all warm, fuzzy feelings.
Author Mary Cuffy gets her face painted like the Grinch.
Lets’ start by decorating some Whoville trees
To make the Christmas trees you will need:
· 30 cm green pipe cleaners
· mini pom poms
· a glue gun or white glue
· cotton or string to hang them
1. The first thing you need to do is curl your pipe cleaner into a snail shell shape.
2. Next, carefully pull up from the centre of the pipe cleaner to create your cone shape. It will look a bit like a coiled spring.
3. Once you have your cone shape, wrap/tuck the outer end of the pipe cleaner around the next curl to secure a circle base. This will allow the pipe cleaner Christmas tree to stand up firmly.
*Finally, glue your pom poms to the pipe cleaner. For speed, you can use a glue gun. But I prefer to use thick tacky white PVA glue. It takes longer to dry, but it leaves a neater finish.
After you have completed your creation, take a picture and email it to mary.cuffy@yahoo.com
Grinch