Friday Thoughts

Wow….Friday already. Today is a work at the museum day. I am trying to get their library online…..for such a little place, it has an extensive library. I am on my final inventory. All of our books have been registered with the local public library so if you are looking something up in their catalog it will show you can come to our library during hours and research with us. We cover everything from art history to how-to books. We even have a small children’s section.

Oh, yay……….stomach acted up fiercely and I came home early. Which means I get to sit and knit quietly. Here are a few things I have recently completed.

Chamomile tea to settle my stomach
preemie caps
they are so tiny….
Just garter stitch, carry the colors up the rows..starting with five stitches, increasing one stitch every other row to about 60 or so, then decreasing every other row to five stitches., .knit two rows of each color

Plus all the socks and fingerless gloves this winter and spring………always something little to add to the library of tried things…..tiara headbands, mug rugs for my friends at work, wash cloths, etc. I found a recipe for a hot pad I crocheted as a teenager. It is so cool….you crochet it in the round until it closes up on itself and sew the edges together with the cotton yarn tail. I’ll be doing one of those with the Dishy and working on my sock this afternoon.

Thursday Thoughts……..does she never shut up ?

OMG…..look what Phyllis, my mail lady, brought today. Dishy, by Knit Picks and the latest Crochet magazine. Yes, I also crochet.

This cotton is for dishcloths. I remember knitting them when I was a kid, trying to practice knitting. The Yarnhoarder ( she is DELIGHTFUL….she is such a cutie and so funny……
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr8DBs1iYq8f0t134RxPcsw ) has a yearly year long challenge to join, knitting or crocheting them. They make wonderful gifts, along with a lovely, scented soap….usually three at a time. Great stocking stuffer, or gift for a co-worker. Again, free dishcloth recipes on Ravelry…..one of my favorites is “Grandmother’s Favorite Dish Cloth”.

And why is crochet treated like a red-headed step-child, when in fact, they are fraternal twins…….I have seen some fantastically talented crochet designers. I see knitters look down at crochet, when most knitters also crochet. It’s all about the yarney goodness, Folks, regardless of the mode of transportation. You would think knit/crochet was a Pepsi/Coke challenge. Maybe you think crochet is just granny squares (and it would be lovely if it was). You need to check out the following podcasts:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLhguvECJDPlgDG9YZ_omBQ

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ehuKE2aIWHoJGZqB5nHPA

https://www.youtube.com/user/artsycalei

There are a bazillion people who crochet to some extent on Youtube….look them up and enjoy.

must finish ripping out sock.

Oh, look……shiny

Thursday Thoughts……does it never end ?

A good start to a day. Picked the book up at a library sale. Will donate it to the library at the VA when I’m done. The book mark is from Holly, at work. It is a hand painted watercolor, from our shop, I think. Those who know me are never hard put for a gift…..gift certificates for yarn, books, crafts, bookmarks, and coffee. I don’t like to go to Starbucks, but I love their French roast that I get at Food Lion. There is a little mom and pop coffee shop around the corner from Waterworks Visual Art Center…..Koko Java’s…..best coffees in the world and friendly, lovely people….who could ask for a better start to your day ?

A segment of the Grocery Girls Knit podcast is “Sawk Twalk” ( you have to say it with a Brooklyn/NY accent). They are amazing sock knitters and caught me up in the disease, too.

I started out with toe up, 64 stitches (because they are easy to split up on Magic Loop), on #2 circular needles. They are a little loose. Socks should have a negative ease….probably the only thing you will ever knit that does. You want it to not feel like it is on your foot. I have since gone to a 1.5 needle, same stitch count, and it seems to be working. I’m not a consistent knitter….sometimes a little loose, but I’m working on it.

My second pair of socks….the yarn was yummie and I wrote to the indie dyer, but I cannot remember who and what……In the winter, I alternate these with the first pair I knit around the house instead of shoes.
Third pair of toe up….if you look closely, you will notice the stripes are just opposite of each other…..

First cuff down, for my daughter,

These were not difficult….I don’t know why I always felt panic when the thought of top down socks came up. I followed (and still refer to) the three part video series from Craft House Magic for top down socks. She goes step by step and you can go back to whichever part you need to over and over. After that, they just become easier and easier and I try knew things…..like a garter stitch heel, contrasting cuffs, heels and toes, etc. There are literally TONS of sock recipes on Ravelry for free.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iH7clgmyBX0

Socks I knit for Holly at work…..Nomadic self striping yarn.in the Hermione coloway.
Socks I knit for Lizz at work…no clue about the yarn….stash busters
I knit these for my boss, Anne Scott…….Gynx yarn…..Sketchbook colorway…..unfortunately, she no longer dyes or sells yarns……you are sooooo lucky if you have any in your stash

Now I have to go rip out the heel on my last “obligation” socks……not that I am obligated to make them, but they are for people other than myself and I want to finish and give them and I want them to be perfect…..and I dropped a freaking stitch when I started the heel and did not notice it until last night. This is not good for a person who can experience road rage sitting on her couch, so I put them gently away until after coffee this morning.

My doctor told me to drink one cup a day….he didn’t specify the size of that cup. I do drink a thermos of coffee a day. Being ADD, what stimulates most people does not have that effect/affect ( I always get those two confused). Most people who take Benydryl get drowsy……..for me it is like taking Speed. I talk faster, work faster…if I take it after 4:30 PM, I am up until 4:30 AM…..usually with a very clean house. So they switched me to Zyrtec for allergies and I don’t seem to have that reaction.

I have taken Adderall for a good portion of the past eight years. It helped me focus when I needed to. I didn’t take it when I didn’t have to concentrate or do something that I had to pay microscopic attention to, because I am not good at taking pills……I have lupus and fibromyalgia. They were always trying to shove something into my system. I had my thyroid out when I was 15 (in a Catholic hospital for two and a half months and drove those poor Sisters of Charity stark raving). So I HAVE to take thyroid…..everything else is ‘eh, maybe today, maybe not’. Anyway, my regular physician took a position as an ER doctor in a hospital and my new doctor wants me, after finding out about my PTSD, to see their psychiatrist before prescribing Adderall again. Not withstanding that her fellow physician has been prescribing it since 2015. I guess they are afraid I will do something drastic ? I do not want to see the shrink…….to re-explain everything over and over to new people is like ripping a scab off a wound and leaving it exposed. Hey, I’m retired, I don’t need to focus as much as I used to and I’ll use the controls I always did before medication. It’s like they think I’ll sell it to supplement my social security and VA pension………

Better get ripping………

oh, look…….shiny

Thursday Thoughts……a little later still

I suppose I should address the elephant in the room. Panic/anxiety deep enough to freeze your body and mind. Hypervigilance is exhausting……always sitting in a back corner, even if the waiting room is empty, because you don’t want anyone or anything behind you. Having wait staff change your table because you cannot see the entrance to the room. Always noting all exits in a room, where everyone is in the room, who comes and goes out of the room. How you can interact with a few people at a time, but a room full…..even people you know…..is exhausting.

You only need two of these at the same time to be diagnosed with PTSD…..what happens when you have more than two ….or all of them ….going on at the same time ?

Two or more of the following:

  • inability to remember an important aspect of the traumatic events (not due to head injury, alcohol, or drugs)
  • persistent and exaggerated negative beliefs or expectations about oneself, others, or the world (e.g., “I am bad,” “No one can be trusted,” “The world is completely dangerous”). 
  • persistent, distorted blame of self or others about the cause or consequences of the traumatic events
  • persistent fear, horror, anger, guilt, or shame
  • markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities
  • feelings of detachment or estrangement from others
  • persistent inability to experience positive emotions

Two or more of the following marked changes in arousal and reactivity:

Also, clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning not attributed to the direct physiological effects of medication, drugs, or alcohol or another medical condition, such as traumatic brain injury.

OMG……..this person shouldn’t be allowed out……..should be locked in a tiny room with medication somewhere. Do not take the fun out of dysfunctional. Many people suffering from any or all of these symptoms HAVE to function daily.

I see a VA trauma therapist weekly….talk to him on a Skype like VA network (I’m the first in the nation to do this), because the VA requires the therapist to see the person’s face. I argued, when they were going to terminate me because I moved to an area where they did not have a therapist for my particular set of ills (yes, a reference to Liam Neeson….many people use inappropriate humor). I felt if my therapist, who had been seeing me for two years and talking to me on the phone for a year, could not tell if I was bullshitting him in the first three minutes of our conversation, after all his degrees and years of experience, then he needed to find a new job. Ah, but they did not see it that way. He fought for me all the way to the head of the department in DC, and they thought video communication was the best idea ever.

You see, people who do not have any of these problems, or gloss over their own experiences so they can be “normal”, tend to dismiss those of us who do. They believe you should ‘just get over it’. If your symptoms persist and/or get worse because you don’t address them ? My heart goes out to police, firemen (yes, I know they are both genders), medical staff who deal with the aftermath of violence and tragedy, children of abuse, people of any age caught in the violence of attack….in a school, movie house, mall, or church…..and the military.

I was really bummed when my therapist told me I will never be “cured”. I was ashamed to admit this is still going on at my age. But he does give me tools to work with that I combine with the tools I have been using all my life. Knitting is one of these tools. I have even talked to him about teaching veterans to knit. He thinks it would be a great idea….that they could knit caps for the homeless vets out there, or blankets for hospitalized vets….or chemo caps for veteran cancer patients. It would help with many issues and a product would be made to actually help another vet. I just don’t know who to talk to about it at the VA hospital in town. A friend asked me “Are you sure you want to be in a room full of PTSD guys with sharp pointy sticks ?” Yeah, I could do that….because I’m one of those guys.

I recently faced and passed a landmark. A friend, who happens to also be a therapist but doesn’t try any voodoo magic on me, asked me to go see a Chorale perform at a local college. I sat surrounded by people , and yes, my back to the entrance….and knitted half a sock whilst enjoying her company and the lovely music in the most delightful , sun drenched chapel on a lovely campus. She leaned over and asked how I was doing and dealing with the huge crowd that had come. I just showed her my sock.

Oh, look……….shiny

Thursday Thoughts…….a little later

Continuing to dismantle The Grocery Girls Knit Episode One podcast:

WIPs (Works in progress):

Both Jodi and Tracie had this shawl in their FO segment, but I am not done with it yet. Soon, I hope. The yarn is yummy, from Yoshi & Lucy…their Amelia DK super wash Merino 4-ply in the Phoenix colorway. It is so squishy and soft. This shawl is going to drape so lovely. It is the Agleam shawl by Lisa Mutch, of Northbound Knitting on Ravelry. It is a paid for pattern…$6…It is the header picture on my blog page.

They had both done the shawl in a different color. The dropped stitches and short rows scared the hell out of me, so I jumped at the chance to learn a new technique. It is coming along nicely.

The next shawl is Quicksilver, by Melanie Berg…..who is a fabulous designer. THIS shawl I am doing in lovely yarns….Moon Tower “Stark Purple”; Molly Klein’s Sweet Tea yarns “tainted Love”; and Lizzie-Anne’s “Granny Smith”…….this had such great knitting…..garter stitch and an easy lace section…….it is a paid for pattern and worth every cent. And now, I am going to have to learn how to block shawls.

I love how this is working up…..and how fast.

In my queue from Episode One, are several more projects I’m itching to get to. I am making my last pair of Obligation Socks for a friend. I have knitted three pair for the women I work with at the Waterworks Visual Art Center. I am a volunteer…they work there for a living. Tracie knitted a pair of Antler Mittens from Tin Can Knits….I’m going to do them as fingerless gloves for next year. It will be my first cable knitting. I know….how can a person lives as long as I have and knitted as much as I have and avoided cables all that time…..avoid being the operative word in that sentence. Jodi is going to knit the Clinquant shawl by Lisa Mutch of Northbound Knitting. I bought and downloaded it. Like I said….in my knitting queue.

Jodi is also Mrs Brown’s Bags on Etsy. I have several of her bags. I LOVED her early bags. The fabric she picked was adorable and whimsical and I wish I had found her when she was doing those bags that she shows on the podcasts. As it is, I am lucky to have a few of them now. She partners up with some indie dyers and they have yarn and a bag together. I have to whisper this, because they are very popular and because I would never, ever want to hurt Jodi’s feelings, but I do not like her bags with knitted fabric printed on them. I know they are very popular, but I love the personality of her earlier works.

I know it is strange for someone who sews and makes bags to buy them, but it is like when someone else makes dinner. It tastes so much better.

It does not faze me to have a ton of wips……I want to cast on everything and I get everything done…..at some point…..so far……

Such a FAN GIRL………

Oh, look…..shiny

Thursday Thoughts

I am a retired art teacher and second retirement as a costumer of Cirque du Soleil/La Nouba in Orlando, Fl. The show closed 12/17 after 18 years. I am a four year veteran of the US Navy. I have adult ADD….I have many books and projects going at the same time. I always finish everything….eventually. I have a new addiction….yarning podcasts. They have encouraged me to enlarge my scope of knitting and crochet projects outside my comfort zone.

I am originally from Upstate NY (Oneonta/Binghamton) and moved to Florida after the Blizzard of ‘96, knowing I would never shovel snow again. I went to college at the age of 50 and became an art teacher. When I left teaching I became a costumer for Cirque du Soleil/La Nouba. When I retired from there, I moved to North Carolina, to be near my children and play with fiber and paint.

I can only encourage you to visit The Grocery Girls Knit podcast on Youtube. They are amazing ladies. They never fail to make me smile, if not downright laugh out loud.

Working through Episode One:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOAczQO-EB8&t=1101s

My FO’s (Finished Objects): Conversationalist Hat, a free pattern from The Plucky Knitter in Ravelry. (Sidebar: you can get lost in Ravelry….a must join). Jodi knitted the hat for herself. I used her number of stitches, 96, on a 16″ US size 8 (5 mm) circular needle. I used acrylic yarn, because, lets face it……it’s easier for most people to care for, which sounds nasty, but most people do not know how to take care of good yarns. I like to audition most patterns with acrylics. It’s what I used for homeless knitting and most people because the items can be thrown in the washer and dryer for their convenience. I sent my hats to a friend who is recovering from cancer and lived in deepest, darkest Ohio winter this year.

Conversationalist Hat by The Plucky Knitter on Ravelry. A great way to stash bust
This is my ‘scientific’ way to make my pom poms…..lovely video on exactly how to do it by The Nervous Knitter……
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ilFeg7dPIU

It was a hat FO kind of week. The second hat Jodi made was for her daughter. A Violet Waffles Hat, by Halldora on Ravelry. I used size 5 (for the ribbing) and 7 for the hat proper because I used worsted weight yarn instead of DK weight. I gave the hat away before I could photo the finished item.

Tracie did a shawl from Sweet Georgia yarns…..the Sail Shawl, by Liisa Nieminen. It is a paid for pattern on Ravelry….about $6.55 in US coin. I used, again, acrylic….in a lovely blue, white, dark blue, and dark chocolate brown. The one side on mine came out a little wonky, so it is MINE, and I love it. This winter has been the wettest North Carolina has had. It was damp and dreary most days, and I wore the shawl in my house and was wrapped in a comfort blankey.

That’s it for my FO’s………oh, look, shiny

Wednesday Thoughts cont’d

I learned to knit when I was six. My mother was a master knitter and sewer. I wanted to learn to knit because she was always tinkering with something. She was left-handed and I sat and watched her. I knitted backwards for years. I still purl backwards.

The first thing I knitted was a scarf for my dad. My dad was 6’8″ (my mom was 5’3″). I loved a very pale yellow yarn and decided that would be perfect. I started knitting in June and finished the scarf in time for Christmas. It was twenty stitches wide, stockinette (yes, it curled wickedly) and went from my dad’s knee, wrapped once completely around his neck, and went to his other knee. It wobbled in and out. At times my stitches were so tight I had to pry them off the needles, and at other places they had fallen off them. AND, he wore it for years, tucked under his overcoat, but he wore it, until his second wife threw it away when I was 12.

My mother continued to knit for all of us. I remember in high school two sweater coats she made for me. One was a garter stitch bright pink, white and magenta thing that just did not suit a red-head, but the other was a knobbly blue with lines of white and cranberry. It was like a safety net, a comfort blanket. When I wore it I felt her love and warmth all around me. I wish I had it still. She died when I was thirty. She would love the designers and indie dyers of today.

I watched all the latest Grocery Girls Knits podcasts and went back to the very first one and binged on them. Then I decided to do this blog and start doing the patterns and projects they were doing for a year, at least. They are so talented. Of course, they are two prolific knitters, and I am only one lonely newbie. They are very supportive of the knitting/yarning community. They encouraged me to move out of my comfort zone. I learned to knit shawls and socks…..SOCKS…..I am T-totally in love with sock knitting. It is a passion once infected with, you cannot shake cold turkey.

First socks….Patons Kroy fraternal socks……wear them all winter instead of shoes/slippers.

Today is a good day. Oh, look…..shiny………..

Wednesday Thoughts, part deux

I have had the idea for this blog for a long time. I am technically challenged. My son is in the IT business and says he would have to write me the ID ten T ticket (ID10T). Hopefully, this will be less challenging moving forward.

This will probably be the most serious that I get. I joined the Navy when I was eighteen. I have PTSD due to a service connected trauma….well, actually several traumas. I was sexually assaulted and hospitalized with a concussion and cracked ribs. The Navy chose not to investigate and had me sign a form that I would not pursue an investigation while I was still in the hospital. Later, just before I was due to be transferred to the west coast, a civilian held a gun on me and a friend after we had gone to dinner and my transfer was held up because of his trial. I was then transferred to Washington, DC, rather than the state of Washington, where one night on leaving my job in downtown DC, I was witness to a person being stabbed to death in the car in front of me after the killer had tried to enter my car, but I had kept my doors locked.

Knitting is my ‘service dog’. I also am ADD. I have always taken solace in the action of knitting. I was always a ‘meat and potatoes’ knitter, knitting hats and scarves for homeless, preemie caps, chemo caps, etc. Looking for new patterns, I went on YouTube. Over to the side were recommendations for podcasts. Curious, I clicked on my first podcast…..”Grocery Girls Knit”………..and I was hooked.

They are two Canadian sisters who are talented knitters. They are funny, a little naughty……..gotta love Jodi’s irreverence. She is like I am….no filter between brain and mouth. Her sister, Tracie, can kick it with the best of them, too. It was love at first sight. They have brought me out of my knitting comfort zone and continue to challenge me while supporting and enabling my knitting addiction. They are tremendously popular. If I were ever to meet them I would be a giggling hot mess….a real fan girl.

I retired in 2015, from Cirque du Soleil/La Nouba, in Orlando, and moved to North Carolina. There are no yarn shops within an hour’s ride from me. There ARE two big box stores and a Walmart for commercial yarns. There is no knitting community, no one to play with. Jodi and Tracie became my knit night group, expanding to include their favorite podcasters, designers and indie dyers and others I discovered. They are my Tribe.

This blog will be about my journey with them, stepping out of my comfort zone, discovering myself, knitting, crochet, books, podcasters, dyers and yarn, whatever shows up in the day, and coffee.