Clarissa Explains It All and
Sabrina the Teenage Witch. More recently, you’ve probably seen Hart in movies like
A Very Nutty Christmas or
Dear Christmas but when she’s not working on the next big holiday hit she’s a busy mom and who appreciates the importance of an easy 20-minute meal.
We were lucky enough to catch up with Melissa Joan Hart recently and we chatted all about recipes, new year’s resolutions and of course, our favorite ’90s TV shows.
SheKnows: I think we can all agree that 2021 is off to a wild start. How are you coping? Do you and your kids have any kind of self-care routines that keep you grounded during these turbulent times?
For the first time, Gretchen Rubin won’t be able to spend the holidays with her parents. It’s a refrain heard around the globe as people forgo traveling, and it comes with deep sadness. But Ms. Rubin, a happiness expert, says that stripping down the season to its basics opens a certain space to prioritize and preserve the “essence of the holidays.”
That might include cutting down a fragrant Christmas tree or creating platters of cookies. For Ms. Rubin, it means filling her home in New York City with paperwhite narcissus flowers. They evoke for her the iconic smell of the season – one that filled her childhood home in Kansas City, Missouri. “[The pandemic] is helping us realize how precious our traditions are and how much we do value them,” she says.
For the first time, Gretchen Rubin won’t be able to spend the holidays with her parents. It’s a refrain heard around the globe as people forgo traveling, and it comes with deep sadness. But Ms. Rubin, a happiness expert, says that stripping down the season to its basics opens a certain space to prioritize and preserve the “essence of the holidays.”
That might include cutting down a fragrant Christmas tree or creating platters of cookies. For Ms. Rubin, it means filling her home in New York City with paperwhite narcissus flowers. They evoke for her the iconic smell of the season – one that filled her childhood home in Kansas City, Missouri. “[The pandemic] is helping us realize how precious our traditions are and how much we do value them,” she says.