Monday, April 25, 2011

All I want for Easter is my bottom left tooth.

Wanna know what tops a visit from the Easter Bunny?
. . . when he’s accompanied by the Tooth Fairy.


Hope everyone had a killer Easter Weekend.
Ours was a goodie.  I will be posting pictures soon.

Right now the toy room and I are playing a very intense game of pertinent, non-pertinent. 
Oh, how I love a toy room purge.

And a birthday month confession {#12}:  Spence and I went the rounds about what the going rate of a tooth is.  Even leaving one amount, then changing our minds and leaving a different.  And I may or may not have engaged in a late night Google Search to see what the Tooth Fairy is leaving other kids.  I didn’t want to be extreme, but I didn’t want to rip my kids off either.  And now I am extremely curious, what does the tooth fairy leave at your house?  Or what did she leave you when you were growing up?

*The Birthday Month Confessional is in honor of my 29th birthday. 
Twenty-nine confessions posted during the month of April.  Groovy.

8 comments:

  1. One Dollar per tooth. Though my kids try and tell me silver teeth are worth more. But really they should be paying me for those expensive silver capped teeth :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm with Sarah: a buck a tooth. I don't remember what I got as a kid, but I know it was a coin. More than likely a copper coin.

    ReplyDelete
  3. When I was growing up I don't remeber anywhere from $.25 to $1.00 but we leave $1 for our kids.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The Tooth Fairy left me an Eisenhower fifty cent piece. My kids get a gold dollar.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yep, a buck. Seems like the going rate! :) Although we have only had one real tooth experience with that.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I can't even remember what I used to get from the tooth fairy!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I guess the Tooth Fairy is cheap at our house. Usually, my kids get a dollar for their first lost tooth, and after that it's 50 cents a tooth.

    And let's be honest here, that's IF that darn Tooth Fairy even remembers to stop by...which she may or may have forgotten to do on a number of occasions ;)

    ReplyDelete
  8. I meant may or may NOT have forgotten. Silly me.

    ReplyDelete