Guest post by Julie Ruble
My hand closed around the door handle, and I pushed the door open breathlessly. While listening for the sound I knew would ring out any millisecond, I kept my eyes trained on my sister Sarah’s face over my shoulder. There it was – in my dad’s low register first – “SURPRISE!”
Sarah broke into a grin as she pieced together the evidence in front of her: her family and friends standing in my mom’s small kitchen, a table spread with a feast fit for the English countryside, and me dancing like an elf off to the side, gleeful that I’d actually managed to keep her surprise birthday party a secret until that moment.
Birthday parties are nothing new. Millions of cake layers have been baked, painstakingly stacked, slathered with frosting, and prodded with striped candles. Millions of presents have been picked out, paid for, wrapped up, torn open. Millions of paper party hats have been strapped on the heads of friends, family members, and the occasional unfortunate family dog.
In fact, maybe so many birthdays have come and gone that we’ve fallen into a party rut. We celebrate because we’re supposed to, and look forward to the end of the party when we can finally clean up the kitchen. Entertaining can become a stressful, negative experience in the blink of an eye – or, say, the time it takes for the whipped cream to break and the cake to burn. But it doesn’t have to be that way. It’s surprisingly easy to have a breezy, joy-filled few hours of celebrating a beloved guest of honor. It has to do with a frame of mind, first and foremost, about the purpose of a celebration. Beyond that, there are a few tricks to creating a meaningful but simple event.
This year, determined to plan a party without succumbing to stress or cynicism, I threw Sarah the aforementioned surprise party based on her favorite book, The Secret Garden. I created a sweet, simple celebration that Sarah loved, and that I loved, too.
My hand closed around the door handle, and I pushed the door open breathlessly. While listening for the sound I knew would ring out any millisecond, I kept my eyes trained on my sister Sarah’s face over my shoulder. There it was – in my dad’s low register first – “SURPRISE!”
Sarah broke into a grin as she pieced together the evidence in front of her: her family and friends standing in my mom’s small kitchen, a table spread with a feast fit for the English countryside, and me dancing like an elf off to the side, gleeful that I’d actually managed to keep her surprise birthday party a secret until that moment.
Birthday parties are nothing new. Millions of cake layers have been baked, painstakingly stacked, slathered with frosting, and prodded with striped candles. Millions of presents have been picked out, paid for, wrapped up, torn open. Millions of paper party hats have been strapped on the heads of friends, family members, and the occasional unfortunate family dog.
In fact, maybe so many birthdays have come and gone that we’ve fallen into a party rut. We celebrate because we’re supposed to, and look forward to the end of the party when we can finally clean up the kitchen. Entertaining can become a stressful, negative experience in the blink of an eye – or, say, the time it takes for the whipped cream to break and the cake to burn. But it doesn’t have to be that way. It’s surprisingly easy to have a breezy, joy-filled few hours of celebrating a beloved guest of honor. It has to do with a frame of mind, first and foremost, about the purpose of a celebration. Beyond that, there are a few tricks to creating a meaningful but simple event.
This year, determined to plan a party without succumbing to stress or cynicism, I threw Sarah the aforementioned surprise party based on her favorite book, The Secret Garden. I created a sweet, simple celebration that Sarah loved, and that I loved, too.

Here are the keys I found along the way
Thoughtful Theme.
Sarah has loved The Secret Garden since she was a girl. Though she’s mentioned her feelings about the book to me before, I’m sure she didn’t expect me to take note of them – much less remember them. When she walked into her surprise celebration, she saw more than just the table, set up like a garden tea party with quilts and a picnic basket, little robins nestled in the leaves of potted plants, jars of roses tucked all around, and mountains of food – she saw that I loved her enough to remember something special to her. Isn’t this really the essence of celebrating special occasions? The moment where the guest of honor pauses and feels loved? Why do we make it about a cake, or clumsy crepe paper, or even about ourselves as we revel in our own busy-ness? Often making someone feel loved is as simple as showing them you hear them, and care about the things they care about. When planning a simple, sweet celebration, pick a thoughtful theme. Think back to a book, a film, a location, or a moment you know is special to your guest of honor. Imagine small, meaningful ways to represent them in your celebration. I didn’t construct a garden wall and lure in wildlife for my Secret Garden party – but I did buy a small necklace with an old key as the charm, and fasten it around Sarah’s neck as she walked in. Offer a modest reminder that you know, you love, you care.
