Lindsey Towler showed a Santa ornament to the towheaded toddler sitting in her lap.
"Can you give Santa a kiss?" she asked her son, Drew Kjornes, as he gazed wide-eyed at their Christmas tree.
It's the first time Towler has bought her own Christmas tree, a fresh blue spruce from Home Depot. It'll also be the first time she'll be hosting the family Christmas Day gathering in her own home.
In August, Towler closed on a two-bedroom bungalow in northeast Minneapolis. She's a proud first-time homeowner, thanks to a City of Lakes Community Land Trust (CLCLT) grant, which helps low- to moderate-income people buy houses in Minneapolis.
The roomy kitchen and big yard are a plus, but for Towler, a single mother, the best part of owning a home is being able to give her son the stability she seldom had as a kid.
"I'm excited that my son can grow up in a neighborhood, make friends and stay at the same school," she said.
The road to homeownership didn't come easy. Last year, Towler and her son were renting a duplex near Minnehaha Falls. "I got a nice letter asking me to move out because people were complaining that the baby was too loud," she said.
Towler was able to live temporarily with relatives, but she vowed to someday buy a house of her own with space "where Drew can sing and run around and be a child," she said.