HAPPY NEW YEAR!

So of course I wait until midnight 1/1/2012 to finally add a post to this thing, LOL!:) I am home alone, like the little kid in the movies, except no aftershave on my cheeks, thank goodness! It has been months since I wrote and I am truly sorry, because it seemed like so much of life happened and I even took pictures, but I didn’t write about it.

We celebrated our anniversary in Williamsburg, VA.

I “graduated” from EfM.

We celebrated Thanksgiving.  We celebrated Advent and Christmas.  And boy was Christmas a very musical Christmas for this fuguestate knitter:)!

 

I rang and I sang and I played flute and tympani – yes TYMPANI!!  - for the Rutter Gloria, Joy to the World and the Hallelujah Chorus. As we used to say in high school: “What a pisser!” (In New York, that was a good thing, unlike in Boston.)

The weight loss surgery has helped enormously.  I haven’t lost weight at warp speed, but lost it I have:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m certainly not 32 years old any more, as I was in this picture, but I’m a lot healthier than I was a year ago, and for that I’m very thankful! That and the fact that all of the children in the picture now can change their own pants (and hopefully don’t have to!).

Work has continued to be challenging and of course worthwhile!

Our family has grown this year with the addition of a new human being. He is a pistol:)

I continue to be blessed with friends, family, colleagues whom I respect, a career I love and hobbies that keep me interested:)

And I am ever on guard for a random attack:

In the past three months, I have started many a knitting project and even finished a few.

And lest I have too much free time on my hands (NOT), my DD Betsy gifted me with this lovely ‘ting” this Christmas:

 Oh yes, she did!

 And most of all, this guy still puts up with me.

In other words, can’t complain:)!

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

And God be with you ’til we meet again!

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  Well, dear …

 

 Well, dear 2.5, please forgive me. It’s been two months since my last confession and in that time I have sinned mightily:) I’ve completed about 9 or 10 projects and added about… 9 or 10 projects:).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Also during this time, John and I went to Williamsburg for the weekend in honor of our 35th wedding anniversary.

 

 

And to the Jamestown settlement.

 

 Two weeks ago, I went on my first knitting retreat with the Columbia Sip ‘N Knit,

and had a BLAST:)!!!

BTW, our own Lynn Zwerling and Sheila Rovelstad and their Knitting Behind Bars project got a great mention in the Bawlmer Sunpapers this week:)! And it got a mention on Facebook for the Vogue Knitting site! Yes! You should hear Lynn and Sheila talk about their “guys,” most of whom are young enough to be their (and my) own kids. It makes a difference, though.  Only knitters would understand how it can.:)

Work has been it’s usual nutty thing.  I alternate my time among there, court, visits, and paperwork.  When work is over (it never is, LOL!), at least three nights a week I’m ringing, singing, practicing for the Christmas music (I get to play tympani and flute this year, thankfully not at the same time), or if I’m a really good doobie, I get to go to the knitting group on Wednesday nights or Saturday mornings. By the time I’m home, I’m either knitting or sleeping.  Not much time lately to blog.

So, I am grateful to have this relatively quiet Friday (although I do have to leave for one client visit in 30 minutes or so – oh well).

Yesterday, we in the USA celebrated our Thanksgiving.  It was wonderful – that is until I fell asleep after too many carbs! Today I am boycotting Black Friday.  No, I’m not above it all – I just don’t really do much Christmas shopping.  John and I give the kids money. The only shopping we really do is for each other (if we exchange gifts – it depends) – or for the grandangels at our Christmas Eve lunch date at a little store in Old Ellicott City called Mumbles and Squeaks.  Any gifts for my folks (the only living Great Grands) is done online and shipped to them directly. There are just too many brothers, sisters, nieces and nephews, great nieces and nephews for us to exchange gifts with them.  The big push for us is getting the Christmas cards out to family, friends and colleagues. Our kids exchange gifts by means of a lottery (yeah, really high-tech: John and I pick names out of a hat and they don’t keep it a secret, which works for them). 

Anyway, that’s why I really don’t do the Black Friday thing.  I want Thanksgiving to be Thanksgiving and Christmas to be Christmas, but I don’t begrudge others their chance at a good bargain or the local stores a chance to get into the black financially. 

In other news, last May I finally finished my last EfM class and got the certificate.  University of the South at Sewanee, I thank you, though I feel I haven’t scratched the surface of the subject matter.  Come to think of it, anyone who thinks they have this subject matter down pat is delusional, LOL!:) Some of my fellow students were frankly surprised and one has told me I still owe him a class presentation for the one he did for me last year.  We had our little graduation soiree  a week ago Friday and were presented our certificates of completion.  It was wonderful to see everyone again, to catch up, to pray and to just enjoy each other’s company.  It was a wonderful experience – and yes a time commitment – and I heartily recommend it to anyone who is interested. Thank you to Charles O. for the picture at the right.

Currently, I have about 8,265 projects on the needles – no really, it’s only about 48, four of which are currently active.  They are:

Peabody – Nancy’s Christmas sweater:) (see lavender sweater above)

Spire – in green (see green blob on circs above)

Lambert Lace Sampler  – in leftover white organic cotton (see white lace thingie under the keyboard above)

Seaman’s style scarf with reversible cables – in some lovely iron blue merino:)(see blue cabled thingie above)

Have no fear, I’ll be adding one or two more within the week:)

Well, best be getting to that visit.  I’ve missed you all and hope to write more regularly.

Until then, God be with you ’til we meet again!

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Life, Flying By

At least that’s what it feels like lately.  This year I don’t have EfM, so my Wednesday evenings are dedicated to prepping for the Thursday docket with  reading and client visits, or, if I am a Very Good Girl and have my work done, I can do the Sip ‘n Knit thing.  I finally got enough things done so that this week I went not once but TWICE:) And the second time was a Yarn Swap this morning! I traded in a lot ‘o yarn and received back another ton to replace it:) – and some tools and old magazines and books! I now have a copy of yet another of Barbara G. Walker’s amazing books – this time of the knitting variety: Knitting from the Top.  (The other one of her books is The Crone: Woman of Age, Wisdom, and Power not a knitting book, but extremely interesting – think I will also get her Woman’s Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets.) I have enough yarn for a small sweater or vest, another colorwork vest, and about four or five shawls. This will definitely supplement my Christmas knitting! I hope that whoever got what I brought will be able to put that yarn to good use.

Well, what’s been going on these past two weeks?

Work has been very busy, and the usual early fall busy-ness has set upon us. I’ve joined the Women’s Bar Association and am looking forward to the Meet and Greet in about two weeks. Choir and Bells are back in full force as is Stephen Min. This October, John and I celebrate our 35th wedding anniversary and are going to go to Williamsburg for a long weekend.  I’ve always wanted to see Williamsburg and am looking forward to exploring whatever history I can find there.  During Veteran’s Day weekend, the Sip ‘n Knit group has a Knitting Retreat planned at Clagett Center out in Western Merlin – and I’m going!! Yippee:)!! Unfortunately, it falls on the very weekend of the Orchestra of St. John’s first concert of the season – and Nancy is playing an organ solo.  I will be able to make the concert, I think, but will be missing an opportunity to play tympani with them.  That’s a bummer, but I had made plans for the retreat before learning of the musical opportunity, and a deal’s a deal. Why is it that the great stuff all seems to happen at the same time?

Speaking of the OSJ, last Friday, the Howard County Arts Council presented them with their grant award.  A bunch of us went to the reception and then Nancy, Rennie and I went to dinner.  Had a great time. It’s so much fun to talk with them about those very things we are taught to avoid in polite company: religion and politics.  My only regret is that John had to work that night and couldn’t join us.

Yesterday evening, John and I joined our daughter S at her place in DC. It’s a decent neighborhood and she is working full tilt on that PhD program.  Her place was lovely, dinner delicious, and the conversation fun.  We actually got home at about 9 p.m.!  Then we spent the next few hours chatting with our daughter, B when she got home from work – so in spite of our early return to “Merlin,” we were up until 3.  Correction: John was up until 3.  I stayed up another hour and a half to steam block the Rivendell (see below)! You’d think I’d be sleepy now!

On the knitting front, I have all but finished one project and completely finished two others.

Sonny’s Dr. Who scarf just needs the ends woven in and the tassles. All but done.

I finally finished Romi’s Brandywine Shawl.  After blocking it to within an inch of its life, it actually turned out quite nicely.

Also finished a shorter version of Susan Pandorf’s Rivendell Smoke Ring.  It ended up being a rather pretty cowl.  My daughter, B, likes to use those in the cold months of winter – the color of this beautiful Madeline Tosh Merino (colorway: nutmeg) is perfect for her.

 

We have two of our grandangels spending the night with us so their mom and dad can have some fun with friends.  It was a rough day with them today.  I honestly think they both just really needed more of our attention than we could give them. When I finally decided to sit with them and give them a fairly small amount of time and effort, it made a huge difference.  Funny how we forget that sometimes.

Well, they are now safely snug in bed.  “Pop” is partaking of an exhausted sleep and I am typing this as the house is quiet. One daughter is driving the other home to DC and I am waiting up for her safe return.  So I will knit:)  It’s a tough job, but somebody’s gotta do it.

Luckily, I will have a little bit of time to sleep tomorrow morning, since we sing the later service:)

Well, dear 2.5, God be with you ’til we meet again:)

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My Knitting is a Hydra

No sooner do I finish one project, at least two spring up to take its place:)

I have lost count. But here are a few things I’ve recently started and aim to finish.  Someday:)

The Dr. Who Scarf for my dear SIL who has been waiting patiently for two years for me to do it. I’ve now about doubled the progress shown in this picture.  It’s actually been a lot of fun.

Lace Shawl #21 from Vogue Knitting Fall 2011

This has been a lot of fun, too, now that I think I’ve gotten the hang of the lace pattern (It’s amazing what not drinking anymore  – well, nothing alcoholic anyway – can do for your lace knitting!) I’ve wanted to use the light grey yarn in stash for a while and this seemed the perfect opportunity.

I’ve also made some progress (believe it or not) on the Aranmor for Danny (yes, in Red Heart acrylic “aran” color, so hit me).

And hey, S requested this hat which I started and finished in one night.  Who knew?

One of the things they warn you about when you go through weight loss surgery is cross addiction.  I thought I’d have to watch the red vino, but I really don’t miss it.  Crack isn’t my thing (thankfully!) I guess it’s this knitting thing. And there’s no cure.

Good:)!

I’ve also been working on a wrap for my daughter K (wife of the aforementioned SIL).  The thing is, I’ve been working on this wrap for her WEDDING three years ago.  It got far too hot that weekend, so it wasn’t a total loss, but it was a perfectly lovely pattern by Lucy Neatby and I didn’t see the point in stopping.  It was on hiatus for a time because I ran out of yarn (Cotton Fleece in white) and the LYS either didn’t carry it or didn’t have any more in white.  Well that changed recently and I’m back on the job.  Of course it does feel a little silly, since they now have two children, LOL!  The good news is, I believe this wrap will go with just about anything  – but it’s not machine washable.  Believe it or not, I actually made a bit ‘o progress on that, too!

 I really like this pattern – the Falling Leaves Scarf  – because it is quite variable and can be as large or small as you want it. I especially love that both sides of the fabric are quite nice.

This morning I woke up to babysit the grandgirls.  John got up around 3 to take the “second shift” so I could go to a small memorial service for the 9/11 victims and survivors. It was a lovely September day, a little hotter than usual. We were a small group, standing within the circles of the little labyrinth in front of the church.  It was a small outdoor service.  The children in the school and some adults had created a huge number of pennants to express their prayers for peace on the 10th anniversary of 9/11. One of the readings, about forgiveness was as follows:

Forgiveness does not mean condoning what has been done.  It means taking what happened seriously and not minimizing it; drawing out the sting in the memory that threates to poison our entire existence.  It involves trying to understand the perpetrators and so have empathy, to try to stand in their shoes and appreciate the sort of pressures and influences that might have conditioned them…By forgiveness we are saying here is a chance to make a new beginning.

Speaking of forgiveness in the wake of such an extraordinary act of inhuman cruelty is a difficult task.  But then I saw who wrote those words and was instantly silent: Desmond Tutu.

As a fellow worshiper said to me, “Seeing his name took me back a bit.” It was nice to meet some people at church I don’t ordinarily see – and to see someone I hadn’t seen since I joined this church. It was a quiet, unassuming little service and all the more moving for it.

Well, I’d better get to bed; it’s getting late and I’ve got to be up in 5 hours. Yikes….

God be with you ’til we meet again+

I Love New York

There used to be an ad campaign with this title. It always seemed so silly to me.

Until 9/11.

I was born in the New York metropolitan area.  My parents were both native New Yawkas, having grown up within just a few miles of each other.  My maternal relatives were from Brooklyn; my paternal grands were originally from Pittsburgh, then moved to Chicago, then finally settled in New York, my grandfather finding work as a musician that provided a salary, the majority of which was saved in the bank and that fed a family of four through the Depression, when work was scarce for about five years.

Going into “The City” was always a special time.  New York City is so big that it contains five NY Counties – known as “Boroughs.” Manhattan Island – or New York County – is the one we always thought of as “The City.” The Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building and other skyscrapers as they were called, brought a measure of awe to my young mind, even inspiring a level of fear.

As I said, it was usually a special occasion that brought us to “The City” – visiting Dad at work (and he had some really cool work as a top 40 DJ on WABC); or maybe catching dinner and a show at Radio City with grandma during that special weekend with her the summer between second and third grade. As time went on, trips to the City included sports events in Madison Square Garden, Yankee Stadium, Shea Stadium, or concerts.  Or just a walk on Fifth Avenue around Christmas, enjoying the amazing window displays of stores like FAO Schwartz, Bloomingdales, and of course, Tiffany’s.

I remember having lunch one day at Tavern on the Green with our dad, and my brothers Dan and maybe Dave.  We had just gone with Dad to visit his workplace and for some unusual reason, he had taken us with him – most likely to give our Mom a break – the twins were probably only about a year old at the time. We had a great time and the lunch was delicious. I remember meeting a man who seemed very nice.  He was interviewing a baseball player who used to play for the Brooklyn Dodgers.  The interviewer was a man named Howard Cosell.:) As we rode home, we drove past Flushing Meadows, where a sign told us it would be the future site of the World’s Fair in 1964.  1964 seemed so far off right then.

There were other trips – to the Circus where our grandfather played in the orchestra and arranged for three elephants to have our names chalked on their backs – a few months after our mother’s all-too-short life had ended in a car accident. There was dinner once at the Top of the Sixes; even the Copa Cabana once. Our father and stepmother once rented a bus to take us all to see the movie about George Harrison’s fund-raising concert for Bangla Desh, a generation before Feed the World or Farm Aid.  In the front row of the section where we all sat were Yoko Ono and John Lennon.

That kind of thing just happened in New York.   I’ve seen actors, actresses, musicians, newscasters, politicians and many others on the streets of New York and it never seemed unusual.   You never felt like you were out in the open when you are surrounded by all those tall protective giants disguised as buildings. Unfortunately, John Lennon found out that this isn’t necessarily true.

There were a lot of trips to the City with friends from school – at a time when a ride on the Long Island Railroad could cost as little as five bucks.  There were dates and dinners and fun.

New York represented the strength of the men in my life.  My Dad always seemed invincible.  He would laugh at thunderstorms, make fun of horror movies, drove like a bat out of hell.  Whenever I was scared in the skyscrapers and their inhuman heights, he would just laugh. Laugh. He was fearless – or at least he was to me. My grandfather worked at a lot of places in the City, playing his flute and sax for many venues.  John’s father worked there – so did John, not far from Grand Central one time and in the Essex House on Central Park South another.  This New York was the future, the result of the ingenuity of a generation that fought the Second World War and won it, that engineered their way out of a debilitating Depression and believed the future was theirs and that there was nothing science and Progress couldn’t fix.

The last thing they would have expected was that some fanatically angry man, whose mind was still in the fifth century, would use those very same symbols of strength to break our hearts. Thank all that’s really holy, he didn’t break our spirit!

This weekend, the media outlets are remembering what happened ten years ago on Sunday.  I’m not going to put any pictures here – there will be plenty to see and remember as the weekend progresses. There will be services to remember the dead and to pray for the living.  And for peace.

I won’t pray for peace at any price, though.  I can’t do that.

The thing is this.  New York is my home town and it still hurts to see and remember (in even greater detail now) the cruelty visited upon innocent people because of “religion.” Because some lunatics decided to play with the lives of people whom they didn’t know, people who never did a thing to harm them. Innocent people. My heart still hurts when I think of it.

But there’s something that still rises up out of the ashes.  The stories of all the people who risked their lives, many paying that ultimate price, trying to help others. The response of the world community to our suffering. The people who even now do everything they can to divorce the lunatic from his religion, faulting him, but not other adherents, for their beliefs – for how many Muslims died on 9/11 also? The stories of love, those last conversations that technology gave so many, a terrible gift no one would turn away.

John and I have lived in Merlin (about four hours away) since1980. Although there were tragedies not far from us that arose from 9/11, it was not there in your face like it was for our New York relatives.  We went for a visit at the end of November, shortly after Thanksgiving, for two disparate reasons: Our kids had given us tickets to see The Producers for our 25th wedding anniversary and a dear priest friend of the family had died and was lying in state in the Cathedral in Rockville Centre. One nephew, then a New York City policeman, now a firefighter (they relaxed the residency rules after they lost so many), was working at Ground Zero. Two and a half months later, the fires were still burning – and they were still looking for remains. A number of our relatives had lost friends and neighbors.  Months later, another nephew named his son after one of those friends. Our hearts broke for them.

There’s a part of the ride up to Manhattan through New Jersey, before you get to the George Washington Bridge.  As you travel north, look to your right and you will see downtown Manhattan.  On that trip, we had been talking and listening to CDs.  When we passed what used to be the World Trade Center, we were silent.

We arranged to visit with my Dad Saturday afternoon.  We had lunch at Tavern on the Green  – it had recently reopened.  Lunch was wonderful. Central park was wonderful, but as my Dad walked outside and looked around, he got a little catch in his voice as he said, “It’s just not the same, is it?”

No, it isn’t.  It’s better. Because it’s home and always will be.

God be with you ’til we meet again.

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Gently Ending

Summer seems to be ending on a gentle note after the havoc of earthquakes and hurricanes.  Labor Day weekend always used to signal the end of summer, harvest and the beginning of the academic year.  This summer flew by – as each one does year after year, taking less time (or so it seems) in the process. I’ve done quite a bit of driving, as I usually do, visiting clients.  Yesterday I decided (and thankfully the GPS agreed) not to use the Washington Beltway to get to Gaithersburg.  It was a very pleasant ride, filled with the greens that signal the end of summer – greens with just a hint of gold on the horizon. It’s still hot outside, but there’s a difference. Autumn is coming very soon.

Before I continue, I just want to express my gratitude for all the workers who came before us, who gave their energy, their resources (however limited) and for some, their reputation, freedom, and lives, so that the average worker has a chance at a decent way of life.  If not for them, I don’t know how many of us would even be in existence today, let alone having roofs over our heads and food in the pantry. So, thank you and Happy Labor Day for all of you who continue the fight (and you know who you are, Dad and Maureen!:)).

Prior to the weekend, in spite of the loss of electricity, I was able to get a bunch of work done.  There’s tons to do yet, but that’s the way it is. Saturday morning, we had the grandgirls over.  It was a lazy, lovely day and a continuation of the wonderful time I had Friday evening, knitting and watching Elizabeth Zimmermann and Meg (and Chris) Swansen’s “Knitting Around” – a wonderful video collaboration.

I spent the greater part of that night and much of yesterday evening (once I was done with that visit in Montgomery County) working on the Westknits’ Mystery KAL Shawl.  I decided to work a little of my own whimsy with it.  Instead of intarsia or the two options presented in the last clue, I did a garter stitch, mosaic or slipped stitch pattern and finished with a picot bind-off. I finally got to use the blocking “puzzle pieces” from KnitPicks and their blocking pins.  I probably could have gotten a second set to make things easier, but the one set I got worked just fine.  It was great to block this shawl the way it needed to be blocked.  What difference from merely using an iron to press!

 I unpinned it when I got back from church this morning and was pleased with the result:

Try not to pay too much attention to the messy desk:)!

This morning was lovely – It’s so wonderful to get back into singing with the choir and generally misbehaving in the choir loft.  St. J’s has a great congregation and it’s fun to be back in touch with everyone after a long and somewhat eventful summer!

Also, had a wonderful phone call from Vicki in New Haven about a serious, yet hilarious subject I’m not talking about here:)!

Well, off to the grocery store – about 2/3 of our gang are coming to dinner and I am making my famous meatloaf:) (well, not exactly famous, but the gang likes it). Better get going – the house is its usual mess! Yikes!

Until next post, God (however you understand Her) be with you ’til we meet again.

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Knitting in the Wee Hours

The house is quiet except for the hum of a gas-powered generator running in the back yard, keeping the refrigerator, freezer, hot water heater and a nearby lamp running. I am up working on this


and am now at the point before the last six rows of garter stitch before the final clue. The end is in sight, but it will have to wait for tomorrow evening. I’m bushed!
We are still without electricity because a tree went down in the storm early Sunday morning, taking out 3 electric poles with it about a quarter mile from where my neighbors and we live. John, Dan and Betsy walked into Old Ellicott (the road is still closed to cars) and Dan took these pics which he posted on Facebook.


I’m not holding my breath for BG&E to get here any time soon. At least it isn’t scorching hot- or freezing cold! Actually right now it actually is cold- who knew August would be so strange?
If any of you dear 2.5 use a generator for this reason, PLEASE don’t bring them into your home or attached garage. A family did that here with devastating consequences.
Well , gotta get up in a few hours!
God be with you ’til we meet again+

Quiet Aftermath

Well the electricity went off early this morning, so I’m listening to NPR on the battery-charged radio, typing this on my phone, sitting in my little knitting corner and knitting- because outside of doing the dishes and


rearranging the den to allow the lovely breeze in, there’s not much else I can do. Except for the electrical situation (and our neighbor’s water shortage- they use a well), it’s hard to believe that yesterday we were prepping for a hurricane!
So of course I started a new project- one in my list – Hawthorne. After the initial 311-stitch cast-on, it’s pretty clear sailing.


This evening, we have reservations to a local Residence Inn which will hopefully have electricity, so those of us working tomorrow will be able to get ready.
In the meantime, I get to hang out with these guys:


In the immortal words of Ina Garten: How bad can that be?
God be with you ’til we meet again- and thanks for your prayers and well wishes!

Hunker Hunker Hunker

Well, we have batteries, a lot of food in the freezer (which doesn’t help much, does it?) and plenty of cold cheese and cereal and canned goods.  We need to bring the garden furniture indoors so it won’t be a flying missile to the neighbors or ourselves. The winds for this area are not supposed to be so high that we need to tape the windows.  We are about three hours from Ocean City, in the center of Merlin. If Irene comes up the Chesapeake and is just a bit west of where she’s predicted to go, of course we’re screwed.  Needless to say, as long as we have power, the TV is on to MSNBC, we’re charging cellphones and Kindles and iPads and as the title of this post says, hunkering down. Hopefully we are prepared enough.  Ocean City was evacuated yesterday, which it darn well should have been – a thin strip of a peninsula dangling precariously between Assowoman Bay (yes, that is the name of the bay- good ole Merlin) and the Atlantic Ocean. The Weather Gurus are predicting 100 mph winds in O.C.; 50-70 mph winds on the Eastern Shore/DelMarVa peninsula (that bit of Maryland on a land mass shared by Delaware, Maryland and Virginia – hence “Del-Mar-Va”); and 30-50 mph winds where we are in central Merlin. One of the big worries with hurricanes is that they tend to spawn tornadoes.  And here is an example of what happened when a little baby twister hit our house-on-the-top-of-a-hill 13 months ago (lucky we were):

When I began typing this post, it was about 11:00 a.m. EDT.  A dear friend who had been in the hospital called and needed a ride home, so of course I left to do that and when I got home, I was a wee bit sidetracked. Now at 9:00 p.m., the winds have picked up, the rain has been constant.  As I type this I can hear the wind rising outside and reports from Ocean City on WJZ News in Bawlmer, which of course means we still have electricity.  In the middle of all this, we watched an HBO documentary, “Gloria Steinem, In Her Own Words.” Amazing how things have changed – and how they remain the same. She is one of my heroes.  It was rather gratifying that it was one of my daughters who chose the program.  I have a particularly nice memory of Gloria Steinem.  In the summer/early fall of 1976, I was in NYC with my (then) stepmother, planning my wedding and anticipating a move to Virginia.  We were at the NY Public Library and Bella Abzug was campaigning.  With her was Gloria Steinem – and Gloria asked me if they could count on my vote for Bella – had to tell her I was moving to VA and probably wouldn’t be voting in the NY elections. Boo.  Only in New York. Sigh….

Well, back to action central here (right…). It looks as if Irene will not be heading up

the Chesapeake Bay, which is a very good thing, so we will just stay here and wait her out.  Even my dear St. John’s decided to call off the services for tomorrow morning – and I realized too late that I had missed the 5 pm service – DOH! Whatever the weather, I am prepared:

As if I didn’t have enough outstanding projects, I decided to ADD some more to my pile.  That’s because I also decided to have FUN with my knitting and not wait until I’m done with the ones I’m bored with.  I may have to finish this another time since the lights just flickered.  We shall see.

The projects I’m working on currently are:

Dan’s Aranmor in the Red Heart Yarn (sorry Alice!), Susan Pandorf’s Mehndi wrap in Jojoland Tonic; the Westknits Mystery KAL shawl, Eadon by Susanna IC in KnitPicks Wool of the Andes (currant colorway) (pictured in previous posts – haven’t made additional progress in any of those in the past two crazy weeks). I’m also going to be starting the Hawthorne shawl (also by Susanna IC) in a dark green multi Jojoland Tonic.

Irish Coffee and the Dark and Stormy, both by Thea Colman of Baby Cocktails, the Dark and Stormy in Cascade 220 Heathers and the Irish Coffee in Lion Brand’s Amazing (Wildflowers colorway). I also want to start Cassis – also by Thea Colman of Baby Cocktails – Deco by Kate Davies, Leaving by Anne Hanson of Knitspot fame; Eala Bhan (and this time Ms. Starmore, I promise to use REAL wool); at least one or two pairs of Cat Bordhi’s Sweet Tomato Heel Socks and EZ’s Norwegian Lusekofte pullover.  I call this last one my “Norwegian Sweater of Hope,” as I am knitting this and all the other sweaters in this list ten inches less than my current circumference. Believe it or not, I have yarn and needles (once they are done with a project, LOL) set aside for them.  In the past month or so, I have frogged a few projects here and there, mainly because it became clear that my size would be changing.  I don’t think a ten-inch reduction is that far off base, so I am acting on faith.

LIFE in General

This week has been NUTS at work.

  Correction, the past two MONTHS and the one coming up have been, are, and will be, NUTS.  I really cannot write about why that is without saying more than is ethical, so let’s just leave it at that.  In terms of time, I’ve been in court or on the road visiting clients with two exceptions: this weekend and last Tuesday, i.e. the Earthquake.  I was in the ladies’ room in the Baltimore City Courthouse and yes, I was at the point of washing my hands (the other would have been hilarious, LOL!!) and was talking with another woman who was doing the same. Suddenly, the floor shook and a sound like a large truck roaring by hit our ears. We stepped outside of the bathroom to Sheriff’s deputies telling everyone to vacate the building.   We all walked outside, not really knowing what had happened.  No one could get through on their cellphones and law enforcement wasn’t sure it wasn’t a blast or something, so they would not let anyone back into the buildings until an hour later, when we were told to “get your stuff and go home.” The last three hours of the trial in which I was involved resumed the next day, which meant all my client visits for that day and the afternoon of the earthquake had to be rescheduled.  It took me 2 hours to get home because traffic was understandably heavier than usual.

Western Merlin felt it, as did D.C.(causing the bells to ring and fineal stones to break at the National Cathedral), Chicago, Georgia, and Toronto for that matter. There were aftershocks some 35 hours later, but I didn’t feel them.  Friends visiting Ocean City and the Eastern Shore didn’t feel it, either.

Friday, I got up early to visit a client 2.5 hours away in Garrett County, Merlin – practically to Ohio!

This is in Allegany County, Merlin, on Rte 68, headed west.  This doesn’t even begin to show some of the lovely views I had of the Appalachian Mountains, Blue Ridge Mountains and nearby farmland.  It was a beautiful, sunny day, but not too humid or hot.  Hard to believe it was still August. Saw my client and the client of one of my colleagues, then back on the road to visit a client East of Bawlmer.  Needless to say, I used a LOT of gas that day, but also caught up on some knitting podcasts, LOL:)!

When I finally headed for good ole Ellicott City, I realized I was on time to go to dinner that friends of mine had planned and to which I had been invited but had declined due to my work schedule. I called one of them to ask if it was still on.  Finding out it was, I headed to the restaurant.  For some reason I checked my cellphone (the ringer had been off) and found a voicemail and two text messages from the friend with whom I had just spoken. One of our bunch had had a low blood sugar incident and was in the ER, having banged up his head pretty badly, and in the process, stressed out his dear wife (another one of the “gang”) to the point of raising HER blood sugar. So our evening was spent in the ER. I told him I wasn’t going to let one democrat leave this earth while an election was pending (a bit of an ongoing joke between us).  He was finally released and some of us went to grab a quick bite .  Thus the week which started in a growl, ended up in the silence of a quiet meal.  Thank God for that – or as my wonderful stepmom Maureen would say, “Thank the Myth!”

The coming week at work will be very busy, but the evenings will begin the year’s music, a fact for which I am eternally grateful:)!

And so I come full circle, picking up a lovely friend from the hospital this morning and getting her home safely.  She is supposed to be a “care receiver” in the Stephen Ministry, but I kid her that I get more out of hanging out with her than any help I’m supposed to be rendering. She’s really funny and upbeat and in spite of the rough time she’s had the past four years, she is irrepressible and energetic.

On the home front, our daughter, B, who had the “sleeve” weight loss surgery on 7/27, went through a horrible episode of dehydration, which caused nausea, which made her more dehydrated, which caused a potassium deficiency, and so on.  She was hospitalized for two days and after they finally got i.v. bags and bags of water, vitamins and potassium into  her, she was a new woman.  I’m glad I didn’t know at the time that a potassium shortfall can cause cardiac arrest!! Lesson learned: don’t let your adult kid play hero and politely wait on a doctor’s appointment.  Get thine ass and theirs to the ER! My Dad always said that it’s the polite quiet patients who often end up dead. Sadly true.

Before I sign off, dear 2.5, those of you who live in the areas affected by Irene, please don’t be a daredevil and try to play out in this weather.  You are not only putting your own life in jeopardy, but those of the people who would be rescuing you. Please have your fun another day, when you can live to talk about it.

Until next time, God be with you ’til we meet again.

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