Goals on a Saturday Morning

July 18th, 2009

There is no sane reason to be awake at 6am on Saturday morning, especially if you aren’t even employed… except maybe for the Freshman orientation that your son needs to attend in a couple hours.  Wow.  I’m going to say, yet again, how proud I am of him.  He didn’t qualify for a lot of financial aid, unfortunately, but the total of his scholarships covered everything but $3000.  That’s still a lot of money, but not  nearly as much as we were thinking considering his basic tuition for his first year at this particular school is almost $16,000 for off-campus living.  Thank goodness he’s living at home!  I’ve said it a million times, and I’m sure people are sick of  hearing it, but it both amazes me and scares the hell outta me that he’s at this point in life.  This is the step that he’ll take where it really can be a make it or break it step.  While I’m extremely confident of his priorities and maturity, I don’t want to get too comfortable because I know he’ll make mistakes along the way, and I want to be here to help pick him up and dust him off. 

The rest of my Saturday will be spent cleaning house and working on my business inventory/outline.  Oh, way back on the old blog I wrote a post asking people for ideas on a good name for the shop.  That request is still open.  If  you aren’t a fiber arts kind of person, it may be difficult to offer help, and it might seem silly, so just be patient with me.  It’s extremely important that the shop make a statement and represent everyone.  You’d be amazed how many shops out there only cater to one particular area such as knitting only.  Sewing, crochet, knitting… they each use completely different materials, (knit uses needles, crochet uses hooks) even vocabulary.  Everybody knows the terms “knit” and “purl” (even if you don’t know what they mean), but anyone not into this stuff might not know those are only knitting terms.  For instance, the phrase “pretty purls” kept popping up in my mind a few days ago, but unless I can come up with something that also represents the crochet side, I don’t want to use it.

I know that’s all boring, but this is pretty much the only place I have to hash this all out, the only input I get from anyone.  I don’t talk about it with anyone in my family because I hate how they act about it.  The last time I shared a big dream/goal with them, I was fourteen and my parents nagged me right out of it.  I know, I’m not fourteen anymore, but when I’m sitting across the room from my parents, I might as well be!

If I have this much trouble coming up with a name, I’m screwed on the rest of it, huh.
Words popping up so far:

pretty purls
but the skein
never knots
lovely loops
sew sweet
hook me
string theory
chains of purls
hooks and purls
ewe need to unwind
the chilly/naked sheep
ewe’ve come unraveled

Tuesday mornings are meant to be taken slowly

July 7th, 2009

I woke up early with a terrible headache this morning and even massive amounts of narcotics, caffeine, and a really hot shower have only manage to dampen it a bit.  However, I’m choosing to be positive.  At least it has eased enough for me to function and feel okay.  I have too much to do today to let a headache get to me.  I have to stay with my grandma tonight, so today has to be utilized, every minute of it.  Today has to have two days’ worth of activity squeezed into it because it’s the only way I can keep from feeling guilty about leaving the kids to fend for themselves like this every week.

Yesterday I spent the entire day teaching the social butterfly how to sew.  Naturally she’d choose a dress for her first project.  Not a scarf or something simple… a dress.  This might be a good time to remind you that I’m still basically a novice with the sewing machine myself.  Who knows what it’ll end up looking like, but we’re having fun.  Having fun spending time together, but by the time she got her material and pattern pressed and cut, she was exhausted.  I think she’s developing a respect for these kinds of projects.  I can remember times last year during the school term when she would pop up at bedtime and ask me to whip her out a hat or scarf to match a particular blouse she wanted to wear the next day.  And she would pout when I’d laugh hysterically at her.  (Although there was one night when I did it because it was my idea to finish a look for her.)

I also decided to lop off about six inches of IzzyB’s hair yesterday.  It was so stringy and hot and almost impossible to care for right now.  She’s such an energetic, don’t slow me down-type of kid.  It’s just easier this way, and besides, her hair is still down past her shoulders.  She didn’t want me to do it, but I told her weeks ago that she either started to do a better job of helping me care for it, or it was coming off… obviously you know how well she helped me.  She’s seven years old!  More than old enough to take some responsibility for her appearance.  It all worked out well.  Afterward she really liked the cut, and when we talked about it, she agreed to take better care of it as it begins to grow back out.

On a completely different note, I cannot express how glad I am that the memorial for Michael Jackson is today.  I have reached my limit on the life and times of the King of Pop.  I don’t mean this in a negative way.  In the ’80s, I was probably his biggest fan.  I absolutely adored his music.  I saw him in concert in Germany during his Dangerous tour on his birthday, and it was a spectacular show.  I can’t even describe it.  But seriously… let’s let him go now… rest in peace.  Give me my morning tv back, dammit.  For a few days, anyway, before his autopsy results are released and it all starts over again.

My husband was more upset over the death of Billy Mays, I think.  I’m pretty sure he has purchased everything Mays ever hocked.  He has always known most of that stuff is completely useless, but Mays’ drawing power was just too much!  You may not realize it yet, but  you will miss the words, “Billy Mays here…”!

So the sun is out, I feel better, and it’s time to get up and get busy!  Have a wonderful day.

Hate Me if You Want to, But Love Me if You Can…

March 30th, 2009

Ahhh… the weekend is over and it’s Manic Monday all over again.  I can’t complain, though, because I did exactly what I wanted to do this weekend.  I got sort of caught up around here and spent time with everybody.  IzzyB and I did get started on our flipflop making, and I promise (Roma) pictures at some point today!  Of course she might not get to wear them for a month.  It’s freezing outside.  ugh

The weekend retreat went well for the social butterfly.  She said she actually enjoyed it.  I asked her if they did anything scary or pushy, speak in tongues, throw themselves writhing onto the ground, etc.  She said they didn’t do anything like that at all, so I think we’re safe. 

You know, I’m glad it’s hard for you guys to remember I’m supposedly a Republican and a Christian.  That let’s me know I’m one of the few who are doing it right!  Yes, Roma, I have a tattoo.  I have a little quater moon and star on my left ankle.  By the way, that whole shit about tattoo artists refusing to give you a tattoo if you’re drunk… whatever!  Even though I was plastered when I got it done, I don’t regret it.  I did it for me.  Oh, and I had a tongue ring for years and years. 

You would have truly thought the world was burning to the ground when my parents realized the kind of person I’d turned out to be.  My mother enjoys telling people that I didn’t do the rebelling thing until I was twenty-five.  What she’s finally understanding after all these years is that I was never lashing out at all.  I was being me.  You see, that’s the thing about my religious and spiritual convictions; you can’t believe in a higher power of perfection in any form and then believe that being made mistakes.  If I believe in God and I believe that he made you and me, then I’m forced to believe, if we’re being true to ourselves, we’re exactly who we’re supposed to be. 

You can make it just as complicated as you want, but what it comes right down to is who you are and your ability to allow those around you to be exactly who they are, as well.  I know that sounds far easier than it is especially when you see someone going down the wrong path in life.  But the thing is, if you look, truly look, you’ll see if that person is lost and just wandering or if they’re truly convicted to that direction.  Those meandering along might possibly be willing to sit down and listen to logic, have open minds, might see the light.  However, those with deep convictions and agendas, you might as well spit in the wind.  It’s frustrating, but that’s just how it is. 

My mother is sixty-three years old.  She doesn’t believe in dinosaurs or that we ever landed on the moon.  When she starts her ranting, the audacity that a reasonably intelligent woman can be that misled just blows my mind.  Like I said, she’s a smart woman… mostly!  But all the evidence and reasoning and logic in the world won’t change her mind.  You know what I do about it?  I make sure she never starts her wild stuff when my kids are around.  Over the years I’ve learned I can’t change her mind, so I just protect my kids.

Before you judge someone, look at who they are and where they’ve been.  My mother, for instance, was raised out in the middle of nowhere on a farm.  Poor as they could be, no bathroom, no electricity for a long time, with almost no link to the outside world.  She went to school with her sisters at small country schools that taught next to nothing beyond the basics, reading, writing, math.  She tells stories of sitting around for hours at a time doing nothing but singing along with the old radio they had in the living room once they got electricity.  She and her five sisters could have been famous if they’d been born somewhere else in some other time because I have never  heard anyone with the beautiful harmonies they have.  It’s amazing.  She laughs when she talks about learning to sing along with that radio never knowing that the musicians they were listening to were mostly black.  She’d never even seen a black person!  So when the sisters would sing out in public, church or somewhere, they would usually offend someone and certainly not get asked to sing at that particular place again!  She remembers when they used their flour sacks and potato sacks to make dresses to wear.  The flour sacks were the best because they were prettier with floral patterns and such.

So what I’m saying is, yes, the world has changed so much and we know so much more than we did at the time of my mother’s youth, but most of it, she was just never introduced to.  By the time she did make her way out into the world, she was a young woman with kids leaving an abusive marriage, and it was just easier for her to convince herself that the world was just as she saw it.  She’d always been taught it was small and simple, and it was safer for her to continue on with that until it was just too late to convince her of anything else.

Wow, this post did not go where I was aiming.  That’s to be expected.  I’ve always had terrible aim.  Oh well, everyone is used to my ramblings by now!  Time to wake the tribe!  I’m gonna go hug them and quiz them over dinosaurs and lunar landings.  I’ve made myself nervous.