Showing posts with label 7 Quick Takes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 7 Quick Takes. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Ease, or in which I confess the strange state of my head

Consider this a throwback to 7 Quick Takes.  But first a bonus take: I directed my first Slavonic liturgy for the feast this past Thursday.  Whew!  It was an out of the frying pan into the fire sort of situation and I had zero time to prepare (which meant I had to pitch everything by ear), but also didn’t have time to psych myself out.  It went…ok.  I think.  It is hard to direct, do festal liturgics in your head, and read music/think in a different language.

1) Ease in clothing

As the seasons change, I usually evaluate my clothing bins as I’m switching things over.  Given the rather wide range of temps we have here, I end up having sort of micro-seasonal wardrobes.  There’s the false fall wardrobe that is useful from September to October, the not-quite-full winter wardrobe of November and December, and then the full thing by January.  I should just have it all out all season, but I really don’t have enough room.  I have one full size drawer for tops and pants, and one tiny closet that can hold a max of 14 hangers with a tiny shelf for sweaters and pajamas.  Plus a tiny 14 hanger closet on the landing that I share with Boo.  It holds stuff that is hard to store in vacuum bags or pieces that I wear very occasionally but like to have easily accessible, like my two blazers or black funeral dresses and long black monastery skirts.  I get about 7 hangers in that one.  There isn’t much room to switch only twice a year.  And there’s the thing that a overly full closet stresses me out.

Anyway.  I’ve been thinking a lot about what I’m wearing right now, what I reach for on repeat, and the word I keep coming back to is: Ease.  I’m never uncomfortable in my clothes, but there are some styles that are easier than others.  While I love the style of my wool pencil skirts, and how sharp they look, they are fairly useless for real winter weather because I get so cold inside the house.  I’m already wearing one or two wool base layers and wool socks, and occasionally put wool tights over that whole mess.  I end up feeling like the Michelin man by the time I’ve got myself tolerably warm top to bottom, so I’m mostly wearing a couple wool maxi skirts in rotation or occasional cords.  It looks fine, but I dunno.  I was totally feeling the clothes-to-wear-while-living-in-a-Central-Asian-yurt vibe of last month, but somehow it feels tired now.  But maybe that is just the fast talking (see #3).

I think I’ve just got to admit defeat and say that the pencil skirts are really only useful for those micro seasons on either side of winter.  Or occasions when I need to look very put together, which, frankly, at this stage of life, isn’t often.  

2) Keeping vs. throwing

My first instinct is to get rid of the pencil skirts, even though I especially love the yellow one and a black wool pencil skirt is almost always a good idea to have in your wardrobe.  The mauve one fits really well and is one of those strange neutrals, so I’m reluctant to consign it.  I don’t like to store stuff I’m not wearing, and my mother will be the first to tell you that I’m a thrower, not a keeper.  I’d like to think I’m a thoughtful thrower, not a chaotic one, but still, she’s not wrong.  

I even wonder why I feel such a strong moral judgement within myself about buying things.  We live well within our means, give a lot of it away, buy a lot second-hand, but on some level, I think that any purchasing is avarice?  It’s completely irrational and ridiculous, I know.  Comes from the unfortunate association with being overweight most of my life.  I always feel like I take up too much space and want to apologize for existing.  My head is a weird snarly place.  

At the same time, I think there is value in being surrounded by books and things that are grounding to a space.  I tend to like cosy instead of utilitarian spaces, much as I like the unclutteredness of them.  Bauhaus has very clean lines and open spaces, but I wouldn’t want to live in it.  Utilitarian can feel soulless and dead.  Can I live here, please?  (There was some famous writer who thousands of books in his personal library, taking up every horizontal space and stacked several deep. I would live there).

I keep having an argument with myself about my throwing tendencies.  On the one hand, our family of six lives in approximately 1600 square feet (literal cheek by jowl with our urban neighbors), and much of it vertical space, with no garage and a 400 square foot unfinished basement with low ceilings.  There are a total of four closets in the house, the two tiny ones I mentioned before, and 2 other regular size ones, but one is in a room that isn’t big enough to be a bedroom.  So almost everything is stored in drawers, under beds, in bins, etc and I utilize the vertical space as much as possible.  I like to think I’m pretty efficient with our space, all things considered.  

We are also in a strange transition with our kids, where they are kind of outgrowing their toys, but aren’t quite ready to part with them.  (I’m also mindful that grandchildren are not very far off, relatively speaking).  I rarely force the issue unless we are really squeezed, but half of one full-size closet is given over to toy and lego storage.  Some of the things I store are sentimental for me.  I have my mom’s Barbie doll from 1960, including the case and all the clothing.  My sisters and I played with that Barbie as much as ours and I’m attached to having it.  Ditto a few baby clothes from the kids and a single preemie diaper from Ponchik. I have things from my beloved late grandmother that I love to use and see in my house, like her spoon collection, or many hand-crocheted or knitted doilies. These things make up the stories of our lives.  

Does it really matter if our closets and drawers are full (but not bursting) and we use or enjoy almost everything in our house at one point or another?  I think no.  It is okay to take up space in the world.  To leave something of yourself behind for others to use and enjoy.  The material aspects of our being bind us to the past and future and yet ground us in the present.  This has been a new space in my head: to hold the idea that keeping is a positive good and not a cluttering mess to be managed.  

3) Nativity Fast

Which brings me to the Nativity Fast.  I was in a car accident the Friday before Thanksgiving and totaled the car.  It was a fairly minor fender bender at low speed in stop and go traffic, and totally my fault, but Mazda 5 vs. Nissan Armada means the Mazda 5 loses every time.  The whole front end of our car just buckled whereas the Armada has only a fist-size dent in the bumper.  Thankfully no one was hurt and we’ve been able to replace the car with another Mazda 5 of the same vintage with lower mileage, but there’s the licensing and inspection and parking permits, and all that jazz to do now.  (The real insult to injury: we had the old car inspected the day before the accident).  

I’m very unsettled within myself.  Anyone else get that feeling like you are on the outs with the world and you are going to make a muck of someone’s day just because you are in it?  No?  Just me?  (Bueller?…)

It is true that my laptop has decided to stop connecting to icloud, and there has been no fix that will make it do so, which means everything I’ve stored in the cloud is only accessible on my phone.  Which is basically everything that was supposed to be on the hard drive.  This has been disconcerting in the extreme as all my writing and school-related documents and many other things I rely on every day are difficult to access.  I can’t even sign out to try to sign back in. (And before you send me tips, I’ve tried a lot: I’ve been on with three different Apple support people who were fairly useless.  I’ve rebuilt the iOS, tried making a new admin profile, even though all the profiles are already admin, tried having my account ‘forget’ my laptop, all to no effect.  I tried to get the icloud stuff off my phone onto an external hard drive but the phone wouldn’t connect to the drive so I couldn’t transfer the files.  I can’t even access icloud on any of the browsers on my laptop, and I’ve tried all four).  It is true that my laptop is very elderly in tech terms, but it still works for almost everything, so I’m disinclined to replace it.  

On the plus side, I’ve made some new progress on the novel, am reading lots of great stuff, have gotten some paid sewing alterations, and my neck and shoulder are still doing ok after the sturm und drang of the late summer.  Even after the car accident.  There is much to be grateful for.

We were at the monastery over Thanksgiving weekend, and I mentioned to one of the monks the situation with our car (we had rented a proper minivan for the long drive with the kids) and he just twinkled at me and said “The fast is full of temptations!”  It was a reminder to say the Jesus prayer when I feel like this and bring it all before God with trust and hope.  

Trust is a tricky thing, though.  If I think that trust means everything works as it should and life is smooth sailing, then when a tempest takes your ship, as it always does, it can feel like that trust is betrayed.  You end up shaking your fist at the sky and howling into the wind, when what you should be doing is lashing yourself to the wheel and giving over to the storm until it passes.  (Can you tell that Black Sails is still alive and well in my head?)  Rather, I should remember that trust means knowing that God works all things together for good.  And good is not necessarily what I think is good.

4) 1066 and all that

I’ve been reading a lot, as I said.  I discovered the Ruth Galloway series by Elly Griffiths.  A substacker I read recommended Griffiths’ latest book, The Frozen People, the first in a new detective series.  I enjoyed it enough that I decided to look into her first long-running series featuring an archeologist seconded to the Norfolk Police department.  I’m maybe five books into the twenty and enjoying them very much.  Consider it a kind of a middle-aged British Bones set in the fens.  

Starz’ Outlander prequel Blood of my Blood was an absolute treat from start to finish.  It was everything I hoped that Outlander could have stayed, and everything I loved about the first two seasons before they started messing with stuff for no good reason at all.  The disappointments of the later seasons of the show have even delayed my reading of Go Tell the Bees that I am Gone, the latest in the novels.  

I should state for the record that I still LOVE the books, as is well-documented here.  And I can hold the books separate from the show in my mind, but basically since season 4, I’ve been almost hate-watching it?  That’s not exactly right.  I do get sucked into the story, and I still think the show is well-written, high production value, great acting/casting, etc.  It’s more that because I know what happens in the books is not how it is playing out on screen makes for a kind of cognitive dissonance.  I know once I pick up the book I’ll be completely sucked in, though.

In any case, there are some great Easter eggs in Blood of my Blood, and, because I mostly didn’t know the story, I had no expectations about the show.  The casting is spectacular.  I’m eager for season 2.

I read a number of forgettable Cold War spy novels, plus a few non-fiction books about Cold War era espionage and am considering a novel on the topic.  (The Ipcress File is a fun watch).  I also read Harald Jahner’s excellent pair of books about Weimar Germany and the twenty or so years after WW2 ended, Vertigo and Aftermath, respectively.  I would call them paradigm shifting.  His writing style is novelistic and accessible, which my fuzzy perimenopausal brain appreciates.  Jahner’s books helped me understand a lot about European politics in the 20th century and also went a long way to fitting the pieces of the longer history puzzle together in my mind.

My other obsession remains England from 500 AD - 1066 AD.  After watching The Winter King, which is a King Arthur retelling in the time period in which the real Arthur is thought to have lived, I watched King and Conqueror, which is set in the first 10 months of 1066, ending with Hastings.  The latter show has some issues, namely messing with timelines, events, and some basic character mistakes; the actual events and personages are soap-opera worthy, so I’m unsure why they messed with it?  I did enjoy it, but I sort of had to turn off the historian part of my brain and let the show be the show and not actually what happened.  I am planning to read Ed West’s book on 1066 soon.


Anyway, the two shows formed bookends to the books and series I’ve read and watched in past years about the period: Vikings (through season three; it went off the rails by four), The Last Kingdom, which picks up roughly where Vikings leaves off, and Vikings: Valhalla, which takes place about 40 years after The Last Kingdom.  (Season one of Valhalla is just ok; I gave up one episode into season 2.  Michael Hirst’s touch was sorely missing).  The new Robin Hood on MGM+ picks up about 100 years after Hastings; it depicts it as a clash of Saxon vs. Norman invaders, which is interesting and timely after King and Conqueror.  There are some things I don’t love about the show, but I’ll stick with it for now.  (As an aside, I have the old BBC Robin Hood on while I’m sewing and it is a delightfully campy romp.  The costuming is hilariously bad, and the characters broadly drawn, but it is so light and enjoyable to rewatch.  Plus: Richard Armitage).  

I’m sorry The Winter King was canceled after one season; they were really hitting their stride and I was curious to see where it would go.  There were some issues with the storytellings, obviously, but it had high production value and the character development was great. (Fair warning, the bad guys are REALLY bad).  I’m planning to read Bernard Cornwell’s Warlord triology on which The Winter King is based.  And I want to revisit The Mists of Avalon, which I read many years ago and loved.  I’m still plugging away at the Corwell’s Saxon Chronicles, on which The Last Kingdom is based.  I think what I liked best about almost all the shows mentioned is that they take the religion of the characters seriously, and also deal with the conflicts between Christianity and paganism in the time fairly.  

5) Mythology

I also highly recommend The Return, which is the story of Odysseus’ return to Ithaca at the end of his journeys.  Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche knock it out of the park, and Binoche especially is magnificent.  The last ten minutes of the film are Oscar-worthy and took my breath away.  Binoche says very little, but her face conveys everything.

Speaking of The Odyssey, one of the annual assessment prompts in 7th grade Humane Letters is: “The Odyssey is the only true story.”  (Humane Letters in Upper School is no joke, ya'll).  I have this poster that one of the Humane Letters teachers designed that says: “The hero must go down into Hades in order to get home.” Which I think covers it all.  

6) Fairy Tales

On my driving to and from school for various kid activities and pick ups, I’ve been catching up on Storytime For Grownups’ Summer Session.  This past summer she delved into fairy tales, and I’m completely captivated.  There is an interview early on in the summer with Boze Herringdon and he said something to the effect that fairy tales undergird all our stories to some degree, and, since they go back thousands of years in one form or another, without those tales, we cannot know who we are as a culture.  He noted that a lot of writing and screen-based storytelling in the past 10 years has gotten away from that and it is almost uniformly rubbish as a result.  It’s like trying to build a house over a canyon.  You cannot do it.  We’ve collectively forgotten our stories.  It has given me a lot to think about as I edit my manuscript and continue to shape the story.  I’m still trying to decide what “type” the story is: Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, or a Bluebeard story.  Or something else all together.  There’s a symbolic underlayer there that is important, even if it isn’t visible.

7) Friends in Singapore?

I’ve noticed a large uptick in my stats the past few months, mostly from Singapore.  While I would be delighted to welcome new readers, I strongly suspect a data firm is training an AI on Google’s blogger content.  Several other bloggers have noted similar statistical findings, so I think I can be safe in saying that.  In which case: boo, go away! Please…?


Friday, February 16, 2018

7 Quick Takes: All the Random Things


I haven't done these for a while, but I have some odds and ends to blog about, so here goes!

~1~

Valentine's Day always coincides with the eve of one of our Twelve Great Feasts: the Presentation of the Lord in the Temple (also called Candlemas in the Western church).  So it has always been a rub.  


My husband isn't really one for romantic gestures or gifts in general, so the whole breakfast in bed thing didn't happen, but we did have a nice dinner as a family on the 13th.  He made risotto (an old favorite of ours) and it was delicious.  The kids didn't really like it (more for us!) but it was fine.  I'm not much of a one for alcohol, but we had a bottle of Prosecco, and that was nice.  I got some mini chocolate cheesecakes for dessert from Whole Foods and they were wonderful.

~2~


The best part of having risotto is making al-salto afterward with the leftovers.  It is basically a big buttery cheesy rice pancake.  (My apologies to my Catholic readers who started Lent on Wednesday; we're still in Cheesefare week, so bring on the dairy until Monday!)



~3~

I finished another cowl:


I didn't have quite two full skeins, so it is a little skimpy on the circumference, but it gets the job done.  Black Swish, size 9 needles, 45 stitches wide, gartered until I ran out of yarn and then seamed up the middle.  Easy-peasy.  I wet-blocked it in the washer and stretched it out on my drying rack to make it slightly bigger.  I made a red one just like it to go with my Christmas flannel dress.  (For the record, I didn't make it for Christmas, just for the winter, but ended up wearing it on the day).

~4~



Orthodox Lent starts on Monday.  'Nuff said.

~5~

I'm revisiting the mid-to-late 1990s with my movie watching lately.  I couldn't say why I suddenly went back to a bunch of films that were important to me at that time, but there it is.  (For anyone interested in titles, they are, in no particular order: Firelight, Dangerous Beauty, City of Angels, Dejavu, Passion of Mind).  I just found out that City of Angels is based on a German art house film, and I'd like to see it to compare.  (And yes, I know the theology in that movie is seriously messed up, but I still like the story).  I also have in mind to rewatch Message in a Bottle and Moulin Rouge at some point as well.

~6~

I picked up The Shires' album Brave after seeing them perform on an old episode of Graham Norton.  I think it will be a good album.  I've been listening to Home Free on amazon music (I have all their albums).  They are just.so.good.

~7~

My kids are off school from today through Tuesday for President's Day week (what the freaking what??) so I don't think I'll be getting much done in the next five days.  I have to say, after almost six solid weeks of illness, plus the 2 week winter break that proceeded it, I'm having a hard time getting back into the swing of things.  

And just for the record, between January 1-February 15, our family has three major Church feasts, one birthday, three namesdays, one baby memorial day, one secular holiday, and, this year, the Lenten Triodion.  It has kind of felt like a feasting free-for-all, and I'm having a hard time staying track with my diet.

Scratch that.  I was actually doing just fine until last week. That was when Ponchik had her adenoids out, and I was still pretty sick, Birdie got a secondary ear infection and both girls were up all night the night before the surgery.  I've kind of been off the rails since then (I gained almost five pounds in the past week--argh!)

I realized (again!) how much sleep affects my ability to make good decisions in the kitchen.  I'm still getting over the illness, and have to pace myself so I don't get too tired, so that is a factor as well.  (Hence all the movie watching in the past few weeks--I am not writing very much, but I am getting a lot of knitting done!)  I suppose it is good that Lent starts on Monday; I'm hoping it will help me find my discipline again.

That's all for me!  Go see Kelly for more Takers of Quick.

Friday, February 27, 2015

7QT: Around the House


Wow, it has been a long time since I did these!  So long, in fact, that I think I've not done one since Kelly started hosting them over at This Ain't The Lyceum.  (She is hilarious, by the way; I highly recommend reading her blog--her photos are epic)  

--1--

I could write about how Lent is going, but I think the less said about personal struggles in this direction, the better.  What I will say is that my particular discipline this year has been good for the noise in my head and the unrest in my spirit.

--2--

Some Lenten listening: I've always love Attend, O Heaven by the St. Seraphim Orthodox Choir.  It is one of the very few recordings in English of nearly all Lenten music (there are one or two tracks of Paschal tunes at the end, but they are easily skipped over).  I find that so many English-language collections of seasonal Orthodox music are either geared for Holy week (Thy Passion by the Boston Byzantine Choir comes to mind) or have so much Paschal music included that it is hard to find enough to listen to that is truly Lenten.  


I also have some Western sacred music recordings that I like during this season--the Tavener is technically Orthodox, being his take on the Lamentations service of Holy Week.  It is a beautiful rendition, but uniquely Tavener.  


I really like Grechaninov's Seven Days of Passion but again, better suited for Holy Week listening.  I also have several CDs of Slavonic music for the season that are nice, but sometimes it is nice to hear the hymns in English.  The little CD at the bottom of the photo ("Chants of Great Lent") is another very nice Slavonic recording of Russian nuns singing various hymns of the Lenten season.  I found this recording from the Kiev Caves while looking for a link for another recording and it is quite nice as well.


On Pandora, the Russian Orthodox Chant station is pretty decent, as is the Thomas Tallis station.  I like them for general listening, but they are especially nice at this time of year.

--4--

Via
Speaking of Russia, I find myself missing the Motherland a lot lately.  I guess because Putin is in the news all the time lately, I'm reminded of certain aspects my life there, and all the things I miss.  There are things I don't miss, and many things I regret not doing while I was there--mostly relationships that I didn't foster as well as I could have, and I didn't learn as much language as I should have.  I do still catch myself thinking in Russian occasionally, and am eager to take up language study again. Unfortunately, my fatigue levels make memorization difficult right now.  

--5--



On a completely different note, shortly before Lent started, I bought an oilcloth for our kitchen/dining table.  I've been looking for one for ages, and Mat. Anna put me on to the ones from Vermont Country Store. I picked the red gingham and am pretty pleased with it.  I do not love the off-gassing that it has been doing since I put it on the table, but I think that will dissipate with time. It really perks up my blue kitchen!  I've been slowly introducing red accents to the blue this past year and I like the contrast.

--6--


I also got around to framing the baby photo series of the kids.

When each child was about 3 months old, we had studio photographs taken at Sears or Penney's, and after Piglet, we tried to replicate a photo of each of them on their stomachs wearing a diaper cover.  

I saved the wallets and put them in a frame all together, and I'm quite pleased with the result.  Each photo reminds of different things about that stage--I can see how unhealthy and developmentally delayed Birdie was in her photo (she is struggling to hold her head up and steady and she is kind of peaky).

I hung it up on a wall at the top of the first floor stairwell that has been bare since the previous picture fell off and broke apart several years ago.

Original artwork by Audrey Eclectic
Also new on my walls is an Audrey Electic print--I forget who first blogged about her work (Jamie, probably) but I fell in love with all her prints.  I saved a bunch of them to my favorites and knew I wanted to purchase one, but couldn't decide which one to get.  I finally decided on this Madonna earlier this month and it is hanging up in the office/guest room now above my craft desk--it is just perfect (and much better than the Egyptian funeral portraits that have been hanging there for the past seven years)

--7--

Piglet counting on fingers--he comes by that honestly!  Many members of my family (including Piglet's namesake and my grandfather) counted on fingers for math problems.  My math whiz husband can't understand it.


Ponchik is really attached to this doll that my mom gave her in the fall--it has the highly original name of "Doll" (to distinguish it from the Cabbage Patch doll that she calls "Baby") but yesterday morning, she informed me that his name was in fact, Jack.

That's it for me!  Go see the other Takers of Quick at Kelly's!

Friday, September 12, 2014

7QT: Zonked Squared

--1--


I think I might have to revise my earlier assessment of cooler weather=separates for me, as I've been searching out the dresses in my closet as the weather has turned.   


Some of it is that a lot of my separates are a bit snug around the middle right now, and some of it is there is just something easy about a dress.  It isn't cool enough yet for tights and boots, but I have a strong urge to Knit!All!The!Things! to make neat accessories and sweaters for the cooler weather.  


This dress is a perfect blank template for fun accessories, I think.


Dress: Land's End via ThredUp
Cuckoo Clock necklace: birthday gift (via etsy)
Earrings: etsy
Shoes: dankso via ebay

--2--


And, on my needles now:  I'm still working on the headband in fits and starts, and cast on a 1940s era pullover sweater in a twisted rib pattern.  The pattern was a little sketchy on details like gauge and finished size, but there were a bunch of people who've knit it up, so I used their notes to pick my needles and add a few stitches to the pattern for extra width.  The yarn is a true peacock teal color and will be gorgeous, I think!  I'm using some yarn I had in my stash.

--3--


My sister will be pleased to hear that her yarn arrived.  She commissioned me to knit her a Katniss cowl at the beginning of the summer, and I said I'd probably get to it in September, as I wanted to finish the mushroom sweater first.  I'm going to do a gauge swatch this afternoon and get going on it soon.  I think it will knit up quickly given how bulky the yarn is.

--4--


I finally got some sewing done this week!  I tackled my modified Emery, using Florence fabric from Denyse Schmidt, which I love.  I know it looks orange on the photos, but it is really more in the coral family, which suits my complexion so well. The design is so reminiscent of 1930s fabric designs, and my mods to the Emery have kind of given the dress a mid-1940s vibe, which is exactly what I was going for.  I'll talk about construction when it is finished, but suffice to say, I learned a few things the hard way (*ahem* self-lined bodices), and this is the first time I added patch pockets without feeling like I wanted to stab myself in the eyes.  I still have a bunch to do.  The bodice is just pinned to the skirt, and I need to finish the sleeve edges and hem the skirt, plus it needs a zipper (I discovered mid-construction that the zipper I planned to use wasn't long enough), but I think it will come together quickly once the new zipper arrives.  I'm also planning to add some small vintage black buttons to the bodice.  I had wanted to finish the rest today (except for the zipper), but I'm too zonked to sew.

--5--

Birdie has been running a pretty high fever since Tuesday night and has been up every hour all night long every night since (and since her fever is spiking right after lunch, nap time has been much been a diaster)  We're keeping her home from preschool until the fever passes, obviously.  She did finally sleep in today, and seems a bit cooler and more peppy, but we'll see what the rest of the day brings.  She still has fever eyes, though.  I'm hoping it breaks over the weekend so she can go back to school on Monday.

--6--


The other reason I'm zonked is Ponchik, who normally gets up 2-3 times per night, including a 30-60 minute stretch around 2:30 and then wakes up for the day between 4:30 and 5:30 a.m.  Between her and Birdie, I feel almost deliriously tired.

--7--

Piglet is also home today because of an inservice day for his teachers (I know!  It is only the second week!)  He is still messing with a pretty bad ear infection (almost two weeks now) and while he seems pretty chipper, I think it is wearing on him, so I guess it is just as well.

And speaking of chipper, Boo is back!  The last few days, Boo has been seriously delightful.  After more than three extremely challenging years with him that made me feel like a failure as a parent almost every minute of every day, it is a welcome break.  We're hoping it means that he's finally turned the corner on the toddler years, but time will tell.  In the meantime, we're enjoying having our giggly (if slightly manic), agreeable little boy back.  

Linking up with Jen at Conversion Diary with all the other Quick Takers!

Saturday, August 23, 2014

7QT: Things I Did Today Instead of Blogging

It has been a LONG week.  My husband just returned from a week away, and after solo parenting four children under the age of reason for six days, I'm tired, yo.  (And yes, I know six days does not a week make, but it felt like a whole week)

--1--

5:57 a.m.

Woke up when Boo woke up and turned on the hallway lights to go to the bathroom.  Slid quietly out the opposite side of the bed so that Ponchik wouldn't notice me getting up from her crib and start yelling.  Took a fast shower and got dressed 2.5 minutes before everyone was up and fighting.  

--2--

6:48 a.m.

Got four children dressed and fed.  Started a load of laundry.  Found out that the high school student who was to help out in the afternoon was sick.  Took the bus to get the boys to camp while a babysitter stayed with the girls.  Stopped for coffee and day-old rolls on the way back home.

--3--

9:02 a.m.

Toasted my rolls and had then for a late breakfast, along with my coffee while I caught up on feedly, and then decided to have another crack at fixing the Miette wrap skirt.  Hauled out sewing machine and iron.  Worked for an hour and a half, put everything away again, and then headed off to an appointment.

--4--

12:29 p.m.

Came back from appointment, put first load of laundry in the dryer, started another load, put Birdie down for a nap, bid the babysitter farewell, nursed Ponchik down for a nap.  Tried to blog, but couldn't face the computer, and didn't want to read, so pulled out sewing machine and iron again and spent two frustrating hours finishing the Miette.

--5--

3:04 p.m.

Birdie wanted to watch Mr Rogers' Neighborhood, so I set her up with that while I started work on a blouse, only to discover a grave cutting error.  Wanted to cry.  Set it aside, sewed something else for 15 minutes, then put everything away again and got Ponchik up from her nap.  Sat in the chair with both girls for a while, then tried to referee while Birdie antagonized Ponchik ad nauseum.  

--6--

4:33 p.m.

Put dinner on to heat up so that it would be ready when we got back from picking up the boys.  After dinner was heated, the stove vent started making a terrible grinding noise, so I turned it off (and was grateful dinner was done, because we can't use our stove without the vent because of the bleeping hard-wired smoke detectors), called the repair place and was grateful to learn they can try to fix it on Monday.  

--7--

4:58 p.m.

Put Ponchik on my back in the Ergo, and Birdie and I ran for the bus (I actually picked her up and ran a block to catch it) and then we stopped at Trader Joe's before picking up the boys from camp to get milk.  Walked back to the bus with the boys and then had dinner at home.  Got everyone cleaned up, sent the boys to get ready for bed, cleaned up the dishes, took the girls upstairs, got them ready for bed.  Said prayers with Birdie, read her two stories and put her to bed.  Said prayers with the boys, read them each two stories, and put them to bed.  Nursed Ponchik to sleep.  Collapsed in my chair for a few minutes, then sorted my fabric bin.  Came up with a plan to fix my mangled blouse.  Transferred the clean laundry from the basement to the second floor in preparation for folding.  

9:38 p.m.

And now I'm going to collapse in my chair and watch something light.  And perhaps knit a bit.  Or perhaps not.

  


Friday, August 15, 2014

7QT: Ode to a Steam Iron, Outlander Talk, and Ripley's Believe It Or Not!

Today I am all over the place--we've had a rough week with the girls health-wise, we realized that Boo in particular is struggling a lot with the camp schedule, and Piglet is anxious about starting his new school in the fall.  So it has been a barrel of laughs this week.  We're off to the pediatrician this morning to discuss what to do next for the girls, camp is over after next week, and Piglet starts school on September 3, so hopefully everything will even out soon.

With the lack of anything substantive to share, I present: silly quick takes.  Linking with Jen, like we do.

--1--


When my husband and I married, he had a functional, if clunky, iron.  It was a little prone to temperature fluctuations, and would occasionally leave mineral deposits on clothing, but it worked for every day ironing (of which there is very little in this house, frankly).  It also lives on the 3rd floor with a bolted-to-the-wall ironing board.  When Boo's godmother lived with us, in the summer and fall of 2011, she brought another iron and then left it when she rejoined her husband overseas.  I started using it for my sewing, and it was a fine iron--good heat, good steam, just a little prone to tipping over.  And tip it did.  Many times. Because I sew in my kitchen, and all the outlets are behind one side of the table, finding a set up for the iron and the sewing machine has proved tricky, because my preferred set up means constantly stepping over cords.  Sometime in May, one of the kids tripped on the cord and the iron went flying.  (No one was hurt, thankfully).  The plastic assembly that held the steam function completely fell off, and while the iron still held a good temperature, it no longer had a steam function, and the iron seemed to be running a little hotter than I like.  I bought an iron on sale from Joann shortly after that happened, but it was a dud and I had to send it back, so I've been sewing these last months with the gimpy iron.  Finally I decided it was time to bite the bullet and replace it.  The new one is great.  It has a great solid base so it doesn't tip as easily, it has good steam, good heat, a shut-off function, an extra long cord, and a teflon-coated ironing surface.  Brilliant.  My last two makes (sneak peek below) have been much easier to put together with a nice steamy iron.

--2--



Let's pause for a moment of silence for the awesomeness that is Episode One of Outlander.  I've watched it twice now, and it definitely improved on a second viewing (although the first time through was pretty great).  There are a few minor changes from the book (noticeable to me mostly because I just re-read the book and the little details are fresh in my mind), but I really liked the extra time spent establishing Frank and Claire's relationship and marriage.


Taking the time to show us Frank and Claire's relationship drives home the theme of the first half of the book, which is Claire's determination to escape back to the 20th century, and also her increasingly divided loyalties.  The casting is superb, and I'm appreciating the period details and wonderful soundtrack by Bear McCreary.  The music for the Samhaim dance of the Druids is sublime.


--3--


While we're on the subject of man-crushes in Outlander, let me present: Graham McTavish.  As Dougal McKenzie, the war chieftan of the Clan McKenzie, Graham brings so much to the table.  I've always been intrigued by Dougal (even more so since reading MOBY), and Graham really inhabits the character for me (shiny bald pate not withstanding; in the books, Dougal is described as a redhead).  He has a lot of ulterior motives, and his actions often reflect things unseen, but he is loyal, if wily.  Plus, hello, tall.

--4--


And as long as we're talking actors, let's talk about Tobias Menzies, shall we?  I've seen him in several things now, and he never disappoints.  He played the Home Secretary in a later season of MI:5 (no spoilers!), and I liked his tortured Brutus in Rome.  I didn't love his character in Game of Thrones (although it appears to be the role for which he is best known, at least at the moment), but he did do a bang-up job making Edmure Tully a character you love to hate.  He had a minor role in season one of Foyle's War, and I just finishing watching his excellent performance in Forget Me Not.  Let's talk about that film for a sec, because it is really worth a watch.  It is an indie film, and has echoes of Remember Me and Before Sunrise in the telling, but the acting is wonderful, and the twists and turns unexpected and fresh.  Tobias brings a rich complexity to the character of Will, and while there are some hokey musical moments, for the most part, I really enjoyed it.

--5--


Now for an edition of Ripley's Believe It or Not!  My husband has been reading Patrick Leigh Furmor lately; he was an Englishman who wrote of his travels in the early part of the 20th century, and in his memoir of northern Greece, he notes that villagers would take the cut end of a cucumber (the part normally discarded) and stick it to the middle of their foreheads, providing an instant cooling sensation.  Pre-modern air conditioning!  I tried it, and it really works!  I don't know if it would work as well on room temperature cukes, as we keep ours in the fridge to keep them from spoiling, but every time I cut a cuke lately, I stick the end on my forehead and enjoy the instant chill.

--6--

My mom and I Face-timed earlier this week because I've been having issues with the bobbin tension on my machine and she thought it would be easier to talk it through with video than over e-mail or the phone.  We tried a few things, I learned a few new things about my machine (I now know how to pop the entire foot plate off and clean underneath, and boy did it need doing!) and it turned out to be that the tension on the bobbin itself was too loose.  All better now.  I need to find a reputable Bernina service place to have the machine looked at because it has been a long time since it was serviced, and it sat unused for almost a decade before I started sewing in earnest last fall/winter.

But here's a sneak peek of my latest makes:



Another button-down Portrait blouse!  I still have to work the buttonholes and add the buttons (they are a pale peach that coordinate with one of the smaller flower colors) and I made a goofus mistake on the facing, but it worked out in the end, I think.  I'll post more about construction when I show the finished blouse.  The skirt is the wrap Miette from Tilly and the Buttons, and I think this will be a great skirt.  I'm letting it hang for a few days before I hem it because it is cut almost on the bias, and I need to work the pass-through button holes to make the wrap part work properly.  I'll talk more about it when it is finished.

--7--



Mushroom sweater progress!  I'm nearly finished the sleeve (shaping the cap at the final decreases before binding off).  I usually find sleeves to be very tedious, with all the increases and decreases, but this one wasn't too bad.  I'm hoping the second sleeve goes quickly too.

Friday, June 27, 2014

7QT: Toddlers, Toddlers, Toddlers. And a bit of Jon Snow.


I would like to state for the record that it is just after 10:00 a.m., and I've been wondering how early is too early for bedtime for the last hour.  Birdie is, shall we say, Having a Day.  In between battles over potty training (which is going well overall, but today is a fight almost every time the timer goes off, and since it is set every 25 minutes, well,...you get the idea).  And she just can't seem to stop bugging Ponchik every chance she gets.  And ignoring all the toys in the house in favor of climbing on the furniture, hanging on the window gates, stripping all the pillows off the couch and bouncing on them, and climbing up the stairs on the outside of the bannister.  So, yeah.  When is naptime again?

--2--
Speaking of sleep.  Last night was one of the most horrid nights I've had in a while.  I couldn't fall asleep until well after midnight for whatever reason, both girls were waking in 20 minute increments from about 10:30 p.m. on, and Ponchik refused to sleep altogether from 1:00 a.m. unless she was tucked up in bed with me, her head on my bicep.  And she is an active night sleeper.  And I'm still seeing a chiropractor for persistent shoulder pain.  And everyone was up for the day at 5:30.  Again.  There isn't enough coffee in the world for me today.

--3--


I had thought maybe to finish that last project I have waiting on my summer sewing list, but I'm just too tired.  I know I'll make dumb mistakes, and the girls are just unhappy and fighting, so it won't be peaceful at all.  When I realized that sewing wasn't going to happen today, I thought maybe about trying to do some creative writing, or something, but again, no one is happy today, and I'm trying to resign myself to a day in which Nothing is Done.  I hate being this tired.

--4--

Also: it is 84 degrees in the house, and the humidity is very high, so it is not exactly comfortable in here.  I'd go somewhere air-conditioned, but then Ponchik will fall asleep on my back or in the car and this afternoon will be terrible, so we're stuck at the house for the morning at least.  And: I'm too tired to go anywhere anyway.  We walked to the post office and Rite Aid earlier this morning and that was my limit for the day.

--5--

Right, so moving on.  This morning I put the red Koret skirt away.  It was a vintage pencil skirt I bought on ThredUp in the spring, and it was the perfect shade of poppy red to match my Tossed Flowers fabric, as well as being a nice shape and length.  The skirt fits okay in the waist and hips, but it is snug across the tops of my thighs.  So unless I want to wear a serious amount of shapewear and look like a pin up girl, I need to lose a little more weight before wearing it.  I was keeping it in the back of my closet in the somewhat vain hope that it might fit this summer, but as the summer wears on, and the belly bloat that arrived in early May seems to be persisting, I need to get realistic about things.  That includes putting stuff away that doesn't quite fit but I think might in the near future.  There is no reason to taunt myself with it, and if it is put away with the out of season stuff, I can more easily put it out of mind for now.  I also decided it was time to make peace with the stuff I made in the late spring and early summer that doesn't fit right or doesn't suit me and either donate it, or deconstruct it for another project.  I have plenty of clothes to wear that do fit and suit me well, and I just filled a major summer wardrobe gap with a RTW plain navy blue skirt from eshakti.com (which I hope fits!), so I'm feeling okay about the closet right now.

--6--


I just saw a trailer for Pompeii (which is available on DVD now on Netflix) and it went straight to the top of my Netflix queue.  Action, romance, Jon Snow, history, disaster, Jon Snow, special effects, did I mention Jon Snow?  (Okay, I know that isn't his real name, but I think of him as Jon Snow, and to judge by the comments on the FB page, so do a lot of other people!)  I've got Murder at the Homefront at home right now and am looking forward to that one!  I'm still debating about starting season 4 of Game of Thrones.  Part of me feels like I should let that one go, but I'm also curious to see what happens.

--7--

Well, this has taken me long enough to get us right to lunch time, so at least nap time is in sight!  Onward!

Friday, March 7, 2014

7QT: Clean Week Edition

--1--

I'm sort of noticing a Clean Week trend; the past few years, it has tried to kill me.  Last year there was the epic stomach flu that put me in the hospital with dehydration and a pretty severe gastroparesis flare.  This year, it was influenza and pneumonia together.  I spent last Saturday in the ER, as I mentioned earlier in the week, and have spent most of this week shuffling around in yoga pants and a sloppy old maternity cardigan, barely able to get off the couch, my head splitting in pain, struggling to breathe, ribs aching, and coughing like an old man.  Yesterday, finally, the pain in my head lifted, and I started to feel that this thing might not kill me after all.  I'm still not up to snuff, as they say, but I think I'm on the mend anyway.  Thank God for small mercies, as I'm on solo parenting duty for a few days.

--2--


More small mercies: on Wednesday, one of our occasional sitters e-mailed me to say she was unexpectedly free on Thursday, and would I like her to come over and help out?  A resounding yes!  I had her come from 3:30 to bedtime, and it was such a blessing to have another pair of hands during the witching hours, especially since Miss Birdie didn't nap and is sort of sick and kind of awful right now.  Of course, that could just be because she is two.  Let the toy stealing from the almost-mobile baby begin.  Oh, the drama. 

--3--

Even better?  My mom is finally coming!  For realz.  She's had to postpone her trip twice due to unavoidable circumstances, and it looked like she might have to postpone again because of new health crisis with my sister, but things settled down as much as they are going to right now, and she is coming!  (She is on the plane as I write this, so no backing out now!)  I'm so excited.  

--4--
I'm also looking forward to the costumes of Downton Abbey exhibit that is at Winterthur now--I bought our tickets several weeks ago, and we are going on Wednesday.  I was hoping to leave Birdie with a sitter, but it was not to be, so all us chickens will head out during the morning rush to feast on 1910s and 1920s costumes.  Everything I'm reading and seeing about the exhibit says it is fab.

--5--

There is nothing quite like realizing that your 3 year old is outgrowing all his 5T pants.  

--6--

I think I just need to own up to the fact that I am just a leetle bit of a clothes horse.  I sort of shudder to apply that label to myself, as I really do purge my closet regularly, and don't hang on to anything I'm not wearing regularly, or doesn't fit after a season, but I'm such a magpie when it comes to thrifted clothing. (ThredUp is both wonderful and dangerous in this way for me!)  I went on ThredUp this morning to search for pants for Boo (see #5), plus a new pair of church pants for Piglet, who managed to bust the knees of the last pair, that were, admittedly, getting a little short.  While I was there, I was sort of idly browsing for pants, as occasionally a high-waisted pair does turn up.  And lo, and behold, the Holy Grail: Pendleton jeans, in my size, high-rise, perfection--at least on the screen.  And listed for about the amount of the credit I had burning a hole in my pocket sitting in my account from my last bag clean out.  I also found a pair of high-waisted wheat-colored cords for less than $5 that I think I can alter to suit a look I want to try.  If not, it was still less than the price to buy fabric to make them.  I will say, my luck hasn't been great lately--I've only kept two pieces I got lately and returned the rest.  Although, what I did keep is fabulous.  The skirt especially has gotten a lot of wear with all this cold weather.

--7--

And because I'm out of ideas, you get a (Lenten) meme:

Via
Oh, wait, one more thing.  I just realized that the 4th anniversary of my gram's passing was yesterday.  I miss her a lot, and I'm so glad to have inherited some lovely things from her, including her sewing machine.

Wasn't she gorgeous?
Go see Jen for more Quick Takes!