women of a certain age are like sunflowers; they know how to turn their faces to the sun.
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Singing for my Father

"To a father growing old nothing is dearer than a daughter."

-Euripides

Today is Father's Day and I am recycling a post that speaks to my love of family and the sanctity of memories. My love of Leland is undeniably tied up in my love for my family -my brothers and sisters, my step mother, my grandparents, my children, and all who have summered at the lake.

But more than anything, it is my love for my father that draws me northward. He loves Leland with the same fierce passion I do and he is so much a part of it and me that I do not know how I will bear his absence when that sad day comes.

When I was young, my family sang everywhere, my Dad's booming bass carrying us all with him as we musically explored blue moons and harvest moons, sang the praises of sweet Adeline and Amazing Grace, and kept an eagle eye out for what was comin' round the mountain.

We sang in the car on the way home. We sang at picnics and cookouts. And, most poignantly, we sang (and continue to sing) together at the Sunday night community sings in Leland Michigan. I so look forward to attending those every Sunday night I am home in Michigan. It is something my Dad and I share in a very special way and I treasure every minute I can twine my alto around the bass line of his harmonies.

A few years back I wrote an essay about the Sing. I would like to repeat it here today in tribute to fathers everywhere who daily pass on their wisdom and love to countless generations, but most especially in honor of my Dad, who had so much to do with who I have grown to be. I love you Dad! This one's for you.


PROFOUND PRAYER

This is a love letter. It is sentimental; it is passionate; it is true. It admits no flaws (or overlooks them), it is infatuated with the beloved in all its beauty and grace, and seeks only to sit a while, reveal its wonders, and revel in its presence.

There is a place I know where time stands still, where the north wind breathes softly across the lake, and the summer never ends. It is a magical place, an enchanted peninsula, a small spit of land surrounded by water and riddled with freshwater lakes so pure and innocent that you can see clear to the bottom of their soul.

Lake Michigan whispers in the foggy dawn and sparkles in the sun at midday, when the children run shrieking with the shock of cold water on their legs. The span of beach goes on for miles, broken only by chalky bluffs and towering dunes. The white sand sifts between your toes and cradles your arches – warm and soft as the inside of a cat’s ear, as the downy head of a newborn babe, as a kind word on an angry day.

It is a place of gently rolling hills, stretching their way to the horizon or the lake - whichever comes first. It is a land of cherry orchards, ablaze with budding May promise, heavy in summer with the fruitfulness born of hard labor. Some years the land is harsh and farmers’ children go hungry to bed, praying to God for the cool days and abundant rain that make Daddy smile. But always the land is there; the land is eternal; the land is everything.

This is a place where God is found in every crooked twig and every rocky shore, every call of the great horned owl and every pulse of the land. This is a place where deer graze, and stars blaze, and children still run to catch fireflies in mayonnaise jars while their elders sit on the porch sipping something tall and cool, catching up on all the family gossip.

It is a place where parents sing their children to sleep beneath sighing pines, with the same songs their grandparents sang to them so many lifetimes ago. It is place that many visit, but few call home. It is a place where the greatest treasures to be found are not gold or silver, nor even bluestone or seagull feather. The greatest treasures of this realm lie deep within the human heart – love, peace, joy, family, and remembrance.

This is as close as I shall come to Eden during my lifetime. This is the place my parents and their parents before them bequeathed to me. This is where my grandparents rest and where my father makes his home. This is the place my children grew up. This is the place where I will grow old. This is the land my heart calls home.

It is 7:45 on a warm July evening. I sit in the old wooden clubhouse at the top of the hill. The golf course spreads out before me in the waning sunlight, golden in what my children call the “magic” hours. Every evening about 6:00, the wind drops, the lake calms, and the entire world takes on a warm glow, as if God had touched the world, put a finger to his lips and whispered “Hush.” These are the best times for water skiing (no waves), beach picnics (no wind), and long walks with your husband (no stress).

The room fills as the clock hands inch closer to 8:00. The “summer” people and the year round residents have come together for one of the most cherished traditions of the summer – the Sunday Night Sing. Grandmothers and older gentlemen get the seats nearest the open doors, along with those who have babies in tow. The elderly seek the fresh air that blows through the French doors; the new parents value the quick exit they provide in case of newborn meltdown.

The Sing is one of the only places I know where a voluntary dress code is still in current practice. I see young mothers decked out in Lily Pulitzer sundresses and strappy sandals, their blonde hair smooth and gleaming like a Clairol magazine ad. They chat with their friends about things like play dates, sandcastles, and tennis games. Men stop to visit, kibbutz, discuss how long they are staying this time before returning to the daily grind of the real world, and exchange golf scores, business tips, and fish stories.

Children walk quietly (at least while Mom and Dad are watching) to take their rightful spaces down front, where they can get in on all the action. Their hair is combed; their clothes are clean. The boys wear polo shirts and the girls wear patent leather Mary Janes. All wear innocence, and the suntanned glow of long summer days spent in the country, on the water. I have always maintained and here declare it officially: there are no kids anywhere on earth more attractive than the kids at the Sunday Night Sing.

Of course, every rule has an exception. The teen contingent shows little regard for the conventions of their elders. They wear tank tops and shorts, baggy sweatshirts and jeans. They line the scarred tables at the back of the hall, sitting with their backs against the wall, swinging their legs in rhythm, sharing secrets, smiling, flirting, out from under the watchful eye of their parents for an hour. As long as they are quiet, no one will turn around to check up on them. They perch on the tables like birds on a wire, waiting for the singing to start and their blessed hour of comparative privacy to commence.

It is eight o’clock. The piano plays and the strains of our national anthem float across the hall. As one, all stand; many place their hands over their heart, a few older gentlemen salute, and we begin to sing. The patriotic fervor that to so many in this cynical age seems laughable is everywhere in evidence here. These are good people, fortunate people, people who are glad to live in this country. And they are not ashamed of old ways. After all, the community sings have endured for almost 100 years.

We sing old songs - the ones our parents sang before us. We sing show tunes like Edelweiss and Oklahoma by Rodgers and Hammerstein, folk songs like Puff the Magic Dragon, and This Land is Your Land. For the children’s sake, we do Bingo, and The Three Little Fishies, and She’ll Be Comin’ Round the Mountain (with all the appropriate hand gestures). Everyone groans when someone requests Green Grow the Rushes (all twelve verses – sigh!) but all seem to enjoy Capitol Ship with its nonsensical lyrics and Waltzing Matilda with its liberal use of Australian slang.

Looking out the windows, I see a few lone boys – solitary escapees from their mother’s scrutiny - let go, no doubt, due to their incessant squirming and nonstop chatter. They chase each other back and forth across the putting green and play with the golf ball washers as my brother and I did once upon a long ago time.

So little has changed since we were children. No one stands up when we sing Dixie anymore – all the rebels have gone to meet their maker – and the songbooks have been rebound, thanks to someone’s generous gift. But the voices still rise in the still summer air, undisturbed by the sound of air-conditioning. The children still laugh and play; the parents still sing with gusto, helping the younger crowd to learn the words; the grandparents still knit and visit, and look out in peace upon the place and the people they love. The generations have turned, but the memories and traditions remain.

As we approach the end of the hour, the mood mellows and deepens as we sing lullabies - Sweet and Low and All Through the Night, which has a special hold on my heart; it is what I sang my children to sleep with when they were very young. We follow up with the old songs of grace and faith – Jacob’s Ladder, All Night, All Day, and The Little Brown Church in the Vale.

When I sing the words, “No spot is so dear to my childhood as the little brown church in the vale,” I remember my mother, dead these last eight years, sitting contentedly beside me, long before the cruel reality of divorce and alcoholism took her youth; and my grandmother, her voice strong and clear, belying her age and girth, singing the low descant, “Oh come, come, come, . . “

It’s that kind of a place. The kind of place where I meet my ancestors and my childhood at every turn of the path, and imagine the future - when my children will bring their families to the lake - every time I wish upon a star. In these days of transient populations and MTV induced attention spans, there is something holy about a place where you have put down roots - a place where your children play with the offspring of your childhood friends - a place where I am still known by my maiden name, where I am still the carefree girl with skinned knees and sneakers full of sand. A place where I am most me.

As we launch into The Leelanau Song, written expressly for the Sunday Night Sing so many years ago and still sung every week without fail, I remember the summer my grandmother wouldn’t let me go home until I had memorized all the words to three verses and a chorus. I remember her teaching me to swim on sunny days and how to knit and play a mean hand of gin rummy on rainy ones. I remember her smile, and her lap, and her love.

She and my grandfather first came to this place in the ‘30’s. I have come every summer of my life save one - in college, when I was unable to get any time off from my summer job. They found the land, and built the house, and brought my father and my Aunt Kathy here so many summers ago. My grandmother planted the gardens, full of hollyhocks, phlox, and old-fashioned lilacs; ripe red raspberries and little green apples, sour and hard. My grandfather blazed trails through the woods that my father still maintains for new generations of aspiring young woodsmen to follow. Did they know what they were starting? Do they know how much I love this land? And how much a part of it all – how much a part of me - they still are?

We close the Sing with Now the Day is Over. My father leans into me, puts his arm around my shoulders, and as my voice rises in harmony with his, the past blends seamlessly into the future. I cherish the deep feeling of peace that comes over my heart and over the land, as the sun slips silently behind North Manitou Island and into Lake Michigan.

My father and I share the same wish – when we sleep at last beneath this land of pines and dunes and brilliant blue skies, we want to be sung to our rest with this song. It is a song about endings and beginnings, death and resurrection, founders and settlers gone to ground and new generations carrying on. It sings of renewal and rebirth and restoration. It sings of hope and mercy, love and life. It is a song of God’s grace, a fitting end to a day spent in a place of such beauty and blessing – a fitting end to a life spent in service of the good, the beautiful, the rare. It is profound prayer.


Now the day is over. Night is drawing nigh.
Shadows of the Evening steal across the sky.

Jesus give the weary rest and sweet repose.
With thy tenderest blessings, may my eyelids close.

When the morning wakens, then may I arise
Pure and fresh and sinless in Thy holy eyes.

Susan Pandorf 2003

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Christmas in the Country

At Christmas time I believe the things that children do.

I believe with English children that holly placed in windows will protect our homes from evil.

I believe with Swiss children that the touch of edelweiss will charm a person with love.

I believe with Italian children that La Befana is not an ugly doll but a good fairy who will gladden the heart of all.

I believe with Greek children that coins concealed in freshly baked loaves of bread will bring good luck to anyone who finds them.

I believe with German children that the sight of a Christmas tree will lessen hostility among adults.

I believe with French children that lentils soaked and planted in a bowl will rekindle life in people who have lost hope.

I believe with Dutch children that the horse Sleipner will fly through the sky and fill the earth with joy.

I believe with Swedish children that Jultomte will come and deliver gifts to the poor as well as to the rich.

I believe with Finnish children that parties held on St.Stephen's Day will erase sorrow.

I believe with Danish children that the music of a band playing from a church tower will strengthen humankind.

I believe with Bulgarian children that sparks from a Christmas log will create warmth in human souls.

I believe with American children that the sending of Christmas cards will build friendships.

I believe with all children that there will be peace on earth.

Daniel Roselle

I was on line this morning when I came across this wonderful Credo. It has absolutely nothing to do with Christmas in the country, but I just loved it so much, it made its way onto the top of this post anyway!

Thank you for your many generous offers to help me spread the scarf/cowl pattern I shared yesterday. I'll be writing up the pattern asap and will email it out to all of you who have agreed to test knit.

*****************

Every year on the 27th we pack up our winter coats and our galoshes, our presents & our packages, some warm socks and a good book to snuggle up by the fire with...

And turn both our car and our hearts northward, towards Leland, Michigan.

Those of you who have been reading for a while, know that my grandparents built a home on the lake there during the war. You know my father & step-mother, my sister and her family make their homes in this quiet pastoral corner of the state. You know DH & I are eagerly awaiting January 8th when we close the deal on our own little corner of paradise - 9 wooded acres on a ridge overlooking the lake. You know how much I love it there.

And now, those who are new to this blog know it also.

I was raised a city girl, but was lucky enough each summer to spend glorious weeks at a time, enjoying what the country has to offer. The peace and quiet, the simple evenings spent playing cards, the quiet afternoons reading or knitting on the porch, the Sunday night community sings.

I am blessed beyond belief to have this place in my family, in my heart. And every summer I make my way to the little cemetery on the point where my grandparents are buried and say a simple "thank you."

This last summer, I took Conner for the first time. He is 5th generation and I hope he will come to love it as much as I do. As much as his father does.

So when I needed a name for my latest free cowl design, my heart reached out to the windy snowy reaches of the land where we will eventually came to ground and make our home. I pictured putting on this warm and comfy neckwarmer under my jeans jacket and heading out for a winter hike through the snow.

What else could I name it but Christmas in the Country?

CHRISTMAS IN THE COUNTRY COWL

size: 6 in. tall by 22 in. around
materials:
dk weight yarn MC: 85 yds. CC1: 75 yds. CC2: 33 yds. model done in Berroco Ultra Alpaca Light: MC: steel cut oats CC1: redwood mix CC2: fern Size 5 (US) 24 in. circular needles
gauge: 5 ½ st. = 1 in.



Here is a shot of the back of the cowl, showing the stranding.

You will have a little jog at the beginning of each round, but just put it to the back of the cowl and no one will be the wiser.

DIRECTIONS

Notes: This cowl is knit in Fair isle style by stranding the three different colors across the back of your work. For an excellent tutorial in this method, go here.

With CC1, cast on 154 stitches. Join, taking care not to twist stitches. Place marker at beginning and work in round.

Rounds 1-4: With MC, K1, P1; rep to end of round. You may carry CC1 loosely up back of cowl or may choose to cut cast on yarn and begin anew on round 5.

Round 5: Begin Chart, working in stockinette stitch.. Work right to left in 14 stitch repeats, carrying unused colors loosely across back.

When you have completed all 36 rows of chart, repeat rounds 1 through 4. Join in CC1 and bind off loosely in rib. Weave ends in.

Pattern is also available as a free Ravelry download.

It is my heartfelt hope this holiday season that you will enjoy Christmas in the Country as much as I do...

From my house to yours, blessings & happy knitting always!

Just to spread the joy around, I will be giving away a free pattern (of your choice - Spruce excluded) to one commenter a day through Christmas, randomly chosen by Mrs. Claus (just me - don't get too excited).

I'll announce the previous day's winner in each post this month, If you are the winner, email me your preference at susanpandorf@comcast.net and I'll email your pattern right out to you.

Doesn't that sound like a lot of fun?

Yesterday's winner is: A 30-something femme createrix Email me, girl...

Now aren't you glad you left a comment?

Monday, November 2, 2009

Planning

"It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link in the chain of destiny can be handled at a time."

-Winston Churchill

"Perfect planning yields predictable results."

-Scott Pandorf

After the last five days, I am inclined to side with Winnie on this one.

If you had inquired of me last Wednesday as to my plans for the rest of the week, I would have told you I was going to spend the better part of the next few days finishing up Chrysanthemum and mailing out yarn packages.

Then the plan went out the window. Scott's Uncle Dick died and the funeral was set for Friday. A quick down and back to Cincinatti.

But then Scott's brother and his wife needed a place to stay in the vicinity, so they were coming Thursday. Time to get ouot the guest towels & sheets and make up the bed. time to go to the grocery for food. time to be a good hostess.

I would still have Thursday to get ready.

Then they drove all night and arrived at 6...AM... And there went Thursday.

Aunt Dottie needed some help getting ready for the funeral, so we went early in the morning on Friday.

She needed some counsel and company on Friday afternoon and evening, so we stayed late. And there went Friday.

Glen & Denice came back up to Indy to spend another night with us. There went Saturday morning. They waited on the mail because they had something forwarded. Then I was so wrung out, I took a nap. Then I put up a very few things for sale. And there went the rest of Saturday.

We were supposed to babysit Conner on Thursday and Friday while Nick was out of town and Katherine started her new job. This was a problem since we had houseguests and a funeral to go to. We rescheduled for...wait for it...you know what's coming...

Sunday and Monday.

But I could still work a bit yesterday...after church, during the Colts game. But then our bright boy came to visit shortly after kickoff and there went Sunday.

Could have worked last night, but the friends who had planned to have us to dinner and to play cards had to come over here instead, because we had Conner.

And there went Sunday night.

So the grand sum total of work done on Chrysanthemum over the past five days is...

Zero. Zilch. Nada. Nothing. A BIG FAT zero.

sigh...

I hope all my Garden Varietals out there will bear with me and exercise patience. I will polish her up and get her out to you by end of week.

I think...

Barring further developments...

As soon as Daddy comes to pick up the wee beastie.

And I recover.

While nothing got done on Chrysantemum (beading is impossible to do in a car, while talking with relatives, watching a baby, etc.) I did make progress on some easier, less intensive projects.

scarf, hat & mittens
infinity scarf
neck warmer

details later-someone wants lunch...

Friday, October 30, 2009

Death

"I don't believe in an after life, although I am bringing a change of underwear."

-Woody Allen

I am away from home today attending a funeral in Cincinnati. If you desire a pattern immediately, please order on Ravelry.

Family always comes first.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Grandma's Little Helper

Help, I need somebody,
Help, not just anybody,
Help, you know I need someone, help.

When I was younger, so much younger than today,
I never needed anybody's help in any way.
But now these days are gone, I'm not so self assured,
Now I find I've changed my mind and opened up the doors.

Help me if you can, I'm feeling down
And I do appreciate you being round.
Help me, get my feet back on the ground,
Won't you please, please help me?

-Beatles


Would you believe I am finally to the end of my stash? I still have plenty to sell, but all of it is out of the attic, the extra bedroom, the cabinets, the trash bags, and sorted in my studio by gauge, ready to photograph and ship out to all you loving foster knitters out there.

Of course, I had help.

I think he shows clear promise of future fiber genius, don't you? Look at that radical color mixing!


And he R-E-A-L-L-Y gets into his work...

All tied up at the moment...

BIG STASH SALE SATURDAY


and I helped!

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Workin' on It...


We have an unexpected house-guest today. I am working on the sale. Check back at 2:30...

Monday, September 7, 2009

Just One More

"I'm so glad we had this time together,
Just to have a laugh, and sing a song.
Seems we just get started and before we know it
Comes the time we have to say, 'So long."

- Carol Burnett theme by Joe Hamilton

When I was young, my mother would call me in for supper. I would beg...

"Just one more!"

As I grew older, my family would be ready to call it a day on the ski slopes. I would beg...

"Just one more!"

In college, my roommate would holler from the dormitory hall, "Come on; get a move on!" I would beg...

"Just one more!"

The other night, my husband asked me when I was coming to bed; was I going to knit all night? I begged...

"Just one more!"

I don't like endings, happy or not. I like beginnings.
  • The anticipation of a good read as I crack the spine on a new paperback.
  • The smell of the water as I approach the shore.
  • The delicious stretch in the morning as I wake for another day.
  • The way the air freshens and cools as I approach the lake house.
  • Greeting family and welcoming friends.
I also like middles.
  • The way I shut out the world because I can't turn the pages fast enough, as I become thoroughly enveloped in a fictional world.
  • The heat of the sun on my back as I doze off on the beach.
  • The feeling of accomplishment, as I complete a good morning's work and break for lunch.
  • The sigh my life becomes as I settle into the slower rhythms of life at the lake.
  • Savoring the pleasure of an evening with loved ones.
But endings, no matter how happy, leave me melancholy and pensive, as what was draws to a close and what is yet to be remains unrealized.

Except for when I finish a pattern. Them I am happy to call it a day, and move on to something else. Not because I did not enjoy the process, but because I am always looking forward to more ideas than I have time to complete.

If only I could sleep-knit...

I write this from the porch in the lake house. My DH left this afternoon, braving the post holiday traffic so he can be back in Indiana in time for a good night's sleep before returning to work tomorrow.

I, however, am enjoying a few more stolen hours, before packing up and hitting the road early tomorrow morning.

What urgent activity causes me to stay on? What task is yet to be fulfilled?

Absolutely nothing. All I can say is...

"Just one more."

One more night. One more white fish dinner. One more row. One more page. One more dream. One more day. One more kiss. One more hug. One more moment.

Before it slips away.

I feel time's passage more keenly these days. The years go so fast. Nothing lasts forever.

Not even the most intricate of lace shawls.

Has it really been six years that we have been planning our move up here full time? And yet we linger in Indy, trapped by a decaying house and an even more decrepit real estate market.

I am going to celebrate my 53rd birthday this month. My father, with whom I share this day, will turn 77 (I think- 53 year old brains don't work as well as they used to.) This is my 52nd summer at the lake, my father's somewhat more.

And yet the distant past seems so clear, when I close my eyes.
  • Coming round the final turn and knowing we were finally here.
  • My father's arms carrying me into the dark cottage.
  • Checking for spiders before daring to get into bed at night.
  • The sound of the Luna moth beating her wings against the screen.
  • Helping my grandmother hang out the wash.
  • My sister and I taking turns drying the dishes.
  • The scavenger hunts my grandfather laid in the surrounding woods.
And memories of a less distant past:

My children:
  • Toddling about the yard.
  • Playing in the sand
  • Sleeping on my husband's shoulder as he carries them into the dark cottage.
My father is growing older, as am I. We have talked of future arrangements and final wishes. It is best to be prepared, though he is yet vital and still beats the pants off younger family members in cards every evening.

I know that my own faculties are slipping with age; my father's are also. Time waits for no man. Or woman.

And yet I would tarry. I would remember the beginnings. I would revel in the middle.

I know that on his last day, as on mine, I will beg...

"Just one more, Lord. Just one more."

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Comme Ci, Comme Ça

I always say, "Comme ci, comme ca,"
And go my way - Comme ci, comme ca.
Since you are gone, nothing excites me.
Since you are gone, no one delights me.
And I go on - Comme ci, comme ca,
Midnight till dawn - Comme ci, comme ca.

But should we meet, that would excite me.
And should you smile, that would delight me.
I'd live again to love again,
But until then...
"Comme ci, comme ca."

-Tito Puente

We got back from the great state of Michigan on Monday night, but I have had little time to gather my thoughts or my knitting since my return.

The past week was definitely a family vacation. We spent most of our time with Baby Boy/Family Man and his family, before their departure from the cabin on Friday, then we hung out for a couple more hard earned days of rest and recovery, before heading south again.

We ate whitefish and burgers while the baby chowed down on grilled cheese, grapes, and Cheerios. We wondered when it was going to get warm enough to swim in the c-o-l-d lake, while we took walks with the Cadillac of strollers, and threw the Frisbee around the yard. We stacked cups with Conner, and drank from wine glasses with the grown ups. We played cards with the parents and peek-a-boo with the baby.

And I discovered I can make a killer turkey call that always gets a chortle out of the wee one.

On Monday, my grandson Conner celebrated his first birthday and last night, Eldest Son completed the final requirement for his degree in music from Indiana University - his senior recital. A good time was had by all involved in both events and we are so proud of Eldest Son. The control and proficiency, to say nothing of the artistry, on display last night was absolutely thrilling.

We had a rather helter skelter evening - we actually missed the first piece in the program because we got zapped by record breaking rainfall (4 inches in two hours) which flooded streets, knocked out traffic lights, and snarled rush hour travel for hours on the south side of Indianapolis.

Once we cleared the city, DH drove to Bloomington as if being chased down by the fiends of hell, while my dad, who made the trip down from Michigan to attend, kept a lookout for roving bands of polizei. I would like to say it was an exciting ride, but I was too busy alternately cowering in the back seat and wringing my hands over the fact that we were late, late, late for a VERY important date...sigh...

We had a great week, even when some not so great things happened.

Comme ci, comme ca - like this, like that...

Today my father has returned home, my grandson and son have been suitably feted, and I can finally catch my breath, savor the silence of my empty house, and get a little work done! Family is a wonderful thing - actually the MOST wonderful thing - but it can be hard to get a row in edgewise...

Since I was, technically, OFF last week, I spent what little knitting time I squeezed in, playing.

Some things worked...


This is Nashua Geologie in the color Shale. The yarn is a lovely worsted weight brushed mohair wool blend, with superior color saturation.


I really like the pattern (which will be easier to see when blocked) with the color changes in the yarn. I struggled with the urge to use Noro Yuzen, Silk Garden, or Kureyon, but decided the color of this one is just too hard to resist.

And some things didn't work so well.


This is an attempt at graduated colors, but the colors just aren't working for me.

The yarn is Blue Heron Silk Noil. You will probably see this yarn in Saturday's Stash Sale.


Some things got finished - YES! I can actually WEAR this one...Look for the Byzantine pattern later this week. Need to block her out before her beauty shots. That's Noro Silk Garden Light #2014, btw...

And some things got frogged after multiple fits & starts:

Dream in Color Baby in Cloud Jungle. Too regimented - needs to be softer, more free form. Larger needles. Less edge. More float...like the clouds she is named for.

A little of this...a little of that...comme ci...comme ca...

Hey! Two out of four ain't bad... How's your batting average this summer?

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Effort

"It is easier to go down a hill than up, but the view is from the top."

-Arnold Bennett


There is a commercial running these days that says,

"Having a baby changes everything."

Boy does it ever...



We babysat the grandson the last two weekends and, let me tell you, it ain't easy to run a yarn sale and watch a ten month old at the same time.

I don't know how all of you with "younguns" do it!

And still find time to knit, no less!

The house is quiet now (except for the click of needles) and my work is getting done, but I do miss that cheerful little face...

big time!

Some things are just worth the effort, y'know?

Have been busy trying to get Mendhi to market. I know a lot of you are waiting...


I finally reached the center back of the piece. I wanted a solid section to offset and join the two lengths of sinuous curves. I think this vaguely Moorish looking twisted stitch does the trick.

One more repeat of the center pattern and I will put the live stitches on a holder and begin work on the second length. No center on the second piece. Will graft to the live stitches.

Then it is out to you...

Some things are just worth the effort, y'know?

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Home

"Homeward bound,
I wish I was,
Homeward bound,
Home where my thought's escaping,
Home where my music's playing,
Home where my love lies waiting
Silently for me.
Silently for me"

-Paul Simon

Actually, I am already home, and not bound to anything but the craft and people I love.

I find myself reflecting on what precisely it is that makes a place home.

I have been at the lake visiting family for the past several days and, for some reason, the life that I usually slip seamlessly into, like a well-worn glove...

Felt scratchy. And itchy. And just not quite comfortable.

Like it (or I) didn't fit.

And I wonder...

Why?

Usually, I feel a sense of calm steal over me when I am in Leland. It has this magical soothing effect on my psyche. My soul settles down and says...

Aaaaahhhhhhh...

But this time, I felt my ends flapping loose (fancy-shmancy writerly way to say "at loose ends") And I didn't seem to know quite how to gather them back in.

I think it is because I just had a welcome respite, with my cruise, and therefore was not in need of a break.

I think it is because I had trouble with my email (again!!!!) and felt a little cut off from y'all.

I think it is because I missed my DH, who I am closer to than ever before, now that the kids are grown and we have so much time to ourselves.

I think it is because home is not a place.

Home is a state of mind.

Home is the feeling that you are meant to be precisely where (and what) you are.

Home is where your horizons open up and your inhibitions close down.

Home is where everything seems possible and nothing seems unnatural.

Home is where you start from

And where you come to rest.

Sometimes home is Leland...

And sometimes home is Indy...

And all times, home is where I get to be with the ones I love.

Lucky me...

***

What did I do while I was gone?

A little of this...


A little of that...


And a whole lotta this other thing...


That's Mendhi up top - Rose (Garden Variety Collection) in the middle (which suffered a slight pullback and design tweaking last weekend) - and the next installment in the zen collection (whose name I am too lazy-assed to look up right now) on the bottom.

Added later:
Oh yeah - Mantra! That's what the beige one is called...

It's good to be home.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

The Bigger Picture

"A frog living at the bottom of the well thinks that the sky is as small as a cooking pot lid."

-Vietnamese Proverb


My husband has become frustrated with many of my pictures. What looks good, or at least passable in a thumbnail all too often looks blurry in a larger size.

See what I mean?

My natural inclination is to put the camera right up on whatever I want to focus on. I have struggled with using the close up setting on my camera. All too often, I waver and the picture turns out fuzzier than Fuzzy Wuzzy (who was a bear.)


He has since introduced me to the wonders of the crop function.

Which turns this picture of Rose...


Into this...


And this...


Into this.


See how well that works?

I have to fight my natural tendency to narrow my focus.

That is what I did on my vacation.

I stepped back from Sunflower Designs enough to see the bigger picture.

Much as I love my work, much as you may love yours, we all need to step away on occasion in order to gain perspective.

In my design process, I work from small motifs to large wholes and back again.

I begin with a big idea, then look for small bits & pieces to work into a harmonious overall pattern.

I step back and try to see with fresh eyes, and then I go back to the particulate and tweak the parts that don;t flow. I figure out how to make it better.

This creative tension between the large picture and the small details is what makes the design sing.

So too, in our lives. If we are always, like the Vietnamese frog, looking at the world from the deep well of our own perceptions and ideas...

The infinite sky looks small.

Sometimes, we need to take a break, climb out of our holes, and look around at the bigger picture, lest we lose our focus.


We can always crop the picture later.


I am off to visit my family in Leland Michigan for a long weekend and will have limited internet access . I will check messages and fill orders once a day from the local coffeehouse. I will NOT be having a stash sale this Saturday.

If you cannot wait on a pattern, I recommend you order on Ravelry.

I appreciate your patience and beg your understanding.

After all, family is a vital part of the bigger picture of life...

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Safe Passage

The secret of life is enjoying the passage of time
Any fool can do it
There ain't nothing to it
Nobody knows how we got to
The top of the hill
But since we're on our way down
We might as well enjoy the ride

-James Taylor


We had a wonderful time on our Caribbean holiday. I didn't knit a single stitch.

Swear to God!

I know. It's hard to believe, isn't it?

I also got a great big dose of how things look in the outside world. When I shared my profession with the muggles on board the cruise ship, not one person was overly impressed. No one asked questions. No one appeared interested in the slightest.

It's official. I am a medium sized fish in a small (but extremely convivial) pond.

Nice to be back in home waters...

I discovered that what I thought was Drake's Passage (hence the name of the post) is actually Drake's Channel.

Drake's Passage is a dreadfully hard to navigate traverse around the southern tip of South America. Drake's Channel is a delightful green and blue and turquoise mix of sun and sea and small islands dotting the horizon. See picture above.

Sir Francis really got around...

I kept the title because we still booked passage on a passenger ship, we still passed our time in delightful ways, we passed from our everyday world to the tropics and back again, and because it's my blog and I can call it whatever the heck I want to!

Seeing as how I am a medium sized fish and all...

Our trip started off on the wrong foot. Hell, it wasn't even attached to the right body!

All of the flights leaving Indianapolis between 6:00 and 8:00 AM were checking in their luggage from the same 12 kiosks and 4 baggage stations. This is a recipe for chaos.

After waiting patiently for a half an hour, we discovered they were never going to call our name. They were experiencing "technical difficulties."

As we lined up at the security checkpoint, having finally checked our bags into the system, we heard our names over the PA system, accompanied by the dread phrase, "closing the doors." I ran barefoot from security to the gate, yelling , "Hold the door!" at the attendant as she passed through and the glass door swung shut behind her with a final click.

Buggers!

Delta bailed us out and even got us to the church San Juan airport on time 20 minutes ahead of our original flight. Ha!

We trundled over to the Northwest luggage claim area and awaited our luggage's imminent arrival. Y'all can see where this is going, can't you?

No luggage. No foolin'...

Also, no Northwest agent. No presence in the San Juan airport at all.

Luckily, we have free roaming and plenty of bars. The phone kind, not the alcoholic drink kind, (although that was beginning to sound like an excellent alternative option!)

DH got on his cell phone and within minutes (well 45 of them anyway) they could tell us where our luggage was.

La Guardia airport.

New York City.

San Juan and New York - I get those two mixed up all the time...

We actually paid them $55 to lose our luggage. I want a refund.

What's worse, they only had two of three bags. One of them had apparently, in a fit of independence, ripped off all its identifying tags with their extremely useful bar codes and gone AWOL.

Yeesh!

Long story short (guess it's a little late for that actually) I, like the proverbial emperor, had no clothes.

Imagine my delight upon returning from dinner to our cabin to find the little miscreant safely aboard along with her more cooperative and exceedingly well traveled brethren.

Fifteen whole minutes before sailing.

Hello Gorgeous!

The trip could only go uphill from there. And I am pleased to report that it did indeed.

We swam, we sailed, we snorkeled, we lazed around on deck chairs, we took multiple naps. My idea of a perfect getaway.

Our trip homeward went much more smoothly, but unbeknownst to us, we had another passage waiting for us at home.

Our grand dame, our eldest cat, Jingle died sometime between Thursday night, when Scott's brother last checked on her, and Sunday night when we arrived home.

It doesn't appear she was in any pain. She was curled up next to the couch, like she had simply fallen asleep. We knew it was coming. She was almost nineteen years old, stone deaf, arthritic and nearly toothless.

I just wish we had been here for her, to hold and pet her as she passed. No one should die alone.

I got up on Monday, went to the bathroom and she wasn't asleep on the bath mat (her preferred spot to pass the long hours of the night.)

I took a shower and she wasn't there to lick the floor when I was done.

I ate my cereal and started to put the bowl down for her to finish up the milk, but she was gone.

We buried her in the back woods last night. I hope that heaven is full of all the milk she can drink, all the chipmunks she ever chased in her younger days, all the shower fetishes she can stand, and enough tummy rubs and ear scratches to keep her happy.

I cried a bit, Scott read a prayer, and I told her to look my mom up. Mom will take good care of Jingle. Heaven wouldn't be heaven without cats, y'know?

Safe passage Jingle...wherever you are bound. We will miss you.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

It All Adds Up

"Hamming's Motto: The purpose of computing is insight, not numbers."

- Hamming (duh!)

I spent much of the last two days adjusting to my new modifier: Diabetic.

I joined the Diabetic support group on Ravelry. I signed up for the Diabetic e-newsletter on Web MD. I bookmarked the Diabetes Center. I read your comments and private messages.

I thanked God for the miracle that is the Internet...

And I learned...

A lot.

So much makes sense now. All the little niggling symptoms that developed over the past year:
  • Dry mouth
  • Thirst
  • Tingling and buzzing sensations
  • Cold feelings on the back of my neck
  • Leg pain & restlessness
  • Dry skin on the soles of my feet
  • Cracks and fungal infections on my lips
  • Fatigue
  • Blurred Vision
All are due to the Diabetes and its attendant neuropathy. These seemingly unrelated health issues have a common cause and a potential cure.

Yeah rah!

Except for the neurological symptoms. I understand those are irreversible, but at least I can prevent further damage.

Boo hiss!

And please don't fret; this is so NOT going to turn into a blog about my medical condition. After all, there are so many other more interesting things to talk about...

Like, oh-I-don't-know, YARN?

It does, however, have me thinking about how many times we look back with 20/20 hindsight and see all the little things that added up to our current position.

My time with the Arts Chorale and the Indianapolis Opera brought me confidence in my own abilities and taught me the due diligence of hard effort. It reshaped my self image to innovative, dynamic individual (who me?), rather than a flibbertigibbet. I doubt I would have had the cojones to start Sunflower Designs without this experience.

My mom's illness taught me compassion and the need for support in difficult times. It also showed me a strength I didn't know I possessed until then.

The depression brought me my good friend and colleague Greg. It also gifted me with an entirely new personality and outlook on life. I learned to look deeper. Which blesses me to this day.

My time at seminary added up to my emergence as a writer and a contemplative. It made me comfortable talking of things like calling and mission. It led directly to both my book and, most fulfilling of all, this blog and all the communion that has sprung from it.

As my ever-wise BabyBoy/FamilyMan puts it:

"Mom, I wouldn't give up any of the hard things I have come through in my life, because it made me who I am."

Don't think I can improve on that one.

You know, if we really knew all that we would accomplish at the beginning of our journey, we would find it most intimidating.

If I made a list for Conner, it would run to hundreds of pages. If not thousands. He has his entire life (minus 7 months) ahead of him.

He just concentrates on sitting up and creeping. And balancing himself on Grandpa's shoulders.


That is more than enough for today. The rest can unfold in its own time...

I am sure that someday I will have a long list of blessings that Diabetes brought me. Already, it has brought me your support (THANKS!!!!) and knowledge that I m not a hypochondriac.

That is more than enough for today. The rest can unfold in its own time...

*****

Speaking of adding up...


The great destash of 2009 continues apace. You guys have NO IDEA how much yarn I have!


But you might be starting to get the picture.

Four weeks of sales and still going strong...

I am more than a little embarrassed by y'all knowing how excessive obsessive my desire for yarn has been. I think I was looking for something and just didn't know what it was until I began designing.

And now, by letting go of it, I can clean out my psyche.

To say nothing of my closets.

This Saturday: Sundara, Fleece Artist, Handmaiden, Debbie Bliss, Rowan, Blue Moon, Malabrigo, Jo Sharp, Vittadini, and much much much MORE!!!

And lest you think that all has been medical research around here...


This is Vinyasa, one of the Zen Collection scarves.

Vinyasa yoga is all about flow. I think it is the perfect name for this sinuous creation.


She is a stole, rather than a scarf, but only takes 6 balls of Rowan Purelife organic cotton 4-ply in natural.

Can't wait to see her blocked out...

And this is Ohm.


I think...

Not sure if I like the pattern. Although the little drops seem a natural for the blue. Maybe I will like her better blocked out...


Leave me a comment and let me know what YOU think.

Now I think I will sign off and go cast on for Pampas - the first design in the 2009 Garden Variety Collection.

That is more than enough for today. The rest can unfold in its own time...

Monday, January 12, 2009

Back Ups

"You must back up your ambition by your whole nature, by unbounded enthusiasm and a determination to win which knows no failure."
-Orison Swett Marden

So much has happened since I last posted. Where to start?

We have bad news and good news...

Bad news (VERY BAD!): On Thursday, my hard disc failed. Why me? Why me?

Maybe the fact that it hit the floor had something to do with it?

But I did NOT drop it. I just watched in horror as my new laptop slid (seemingly in agonizing slow-mo) from its here-to-fore thought safe perch atop my foot stool. I tried to catch it as it bounced off my magazine rack (now neatly re-purposed as a catchall for my stitch dictionaries, design journal, pattern hard copies, & paperwork - who has time to read?) and made its way to the hardwood floor.

Ouch! As Yoda would say, "Do or do not; there is no try."

I did not.

And just like that, all my patterns, my mailing list, my pictures...

All gone.

Had this happened a bare week and a half earlier, my business would have been toast. You see, ever since I got the new laptop in September, my DH has struggled to get it to back up correctly. It seemed the old machines in the house didn't like the newcomer and chose to express that disregard by ignoring the new laptop's weekly requests for back up. They weren't talking to each other.

In response to my desperate pleas (I think my asking for back ups for Xmas turned the tide) DH finally installed Windows Home Server on Baby Boy's old computer and set it up to back up every night while we and the stubborn machines slept. Sort of a stealth back up.

Hooray! I had back ups. What a relief!

All we had to do was buy a new hard drive ($60) install it in the laptop, and use the recovery discs that came with it to reboot the system.

Except my laptop didn't come with a recovery disc. We were supposed to make one ourselves.

OOPS!

No problem, DH said. We can restore it from the home server. Except the server kept crashing. Once. Twice. Third time's the charm...

It failed permanently on the fourth try.

Overnight.

Seems Baby Boy's old computer just wasn't up to the task of a full system restore.

Now what? DH called his office, told them he had an emergency at home and was going to work from home on Friday. Then he went back to the computer store to purchase a new server ($500 - double ouch!).

Made us really nervous when the new machine staged a little demonstration to remind us just who was in charge.

We told it to "restore system." It chose to "install system." The mere thought that all of my existing data might be wiped clean in favor of a fresh new start, sent me into conniption fits.

That is change we most certainly DON'T need.

I went to the yarn store, and calmed myself by breathing deeply of the restorative wool and silk fumes. You drown your sorrows your way; I'll drown them mine...

I returned home about 3:00, a full 24 hours after the initial incident. With considerable trepidation, I dragged my weary carcass up the stairs to my DH's study for the impending burial rites.

And he smiled.

He told me he had everything up to Wednesday night at midnight. I only lost four hours of work.

I kissed him hard and told him he was the best person I knew.

He still is.

My hero.

By Friday night, I had a fully operational system. And two recovery discs. And full back ups on a reliable (Hell! At that price, it better be infallible) non-crashing system server.

There is a God.

I am back in business; all is right in the world; and I can testify personally to the soothing effect of endless knitting in times of trouble.

I know these are small matters when compared with so many genuine tragedies. Still, I am reminded of my own myriad opportunities for failure and the supreme comfort and importance of having someone back me up.

Tomorrow, I'll share pics of a finished icicle scarf and two new projects for the month of February.

Today, I am thankful for my most reliable back up - my darling, darling husband, otherwise known around here as:

  • the cavalry
  • the miracle worker
  • the High Supreme Pooh-bah of Data

All hail...

Monday, January 5, 2009

Are We Having Fun Yet?

"Blessed is the man who has some congenial work, some occupation in which he can put his heart, and which affords a complete outlet to all the forces there are in him."

-John Burroughs


WARNING!
SERIOUS DROOL INDUCEMENTS AHEAD
RECOMMEND EVASIVE ACTION
GET BIB...

So...

What did I do on my Christmas Vacation?

No, no, besides filling a ginormous amount of garden variety orders (thank you SO SO MUCH!)

I played.

Of course, my play looks a lot like work. With one critical difference...

I work on play with whatever I want to.

Not what my customers want most.
Not what my family wants most.
Not what is most delayed.

But whatever I darn well please.

What a concept!

Want some show and tell?

Of course you do!

I started with a couple balls I had floating around from the fall that never quite developed into full blown designs.


This is Classic Elite's Moorland in misty morning: a beautiful soft heathered single ply DK wool. It is deceptively simple. The slight halo tends to obscure fine patterning and texture stitches aren't as crisp as I'd like. But I loved the soft, foggy nature of it, if I could just find the right pattern for it.


After much knitting and subsequent frogging, I settled on this simple zigzag pattern, composed mostly of knit and purl stitches, with only one yarn over and decrease each repeat. I'm doing a stole. No name yet.


And this is Rowan's lovely Purelife organically dyed DK wool in Ivy: a very pale and subdued grey green. A natural for this leaf pattern. A scarf, I think...

Then I moved on to the hard stuff...

The Artyarn goodies Santa brought me. Simply the best. Loads of fun. Seriously drool worthy.


This is Ensemble, an absolutely pet-able fiber consisting of one strand of silk and one of (be still my heart) cashmere.

Excuse me for a moment. I'm getting all verklempt...


This one was a challenge. I loved the soft springlike colors, but I didn't want streaks. I settled on this pattern that combines cabling with lace work.



Once blocked out, I should have a lovely open early spring scarf. I think I'll call it Trellis.

Then there is the little lovely I showed you at the top of the post.


This is Drift: a pristine cream colored confection of Silk Rhapsody Glitter. The pattern is a combination of the gentle curves of a snow covered landscape, the tracks which form in the snow from our cars, the footprints of forest animals (or pets), and the schussing pattern of slalom skis.

See the little footprints between the tire tracks?

But the best part is the little silver filament that runs along with the silk and mohair strands. Its subtle sparkle reminds me so powerfully of the way new fallen snow sparkles in the sunlight.


This one just has to be a sumptuous stole. A brilliant bit of comforting warmth to wind around my shoulders on a cold midwinter day. I know it is indulgent, but I rushed right out and spent some of my ill gotten gains on three more skeins of this beauty. It is so yummy to work with and the pattern is just enough to be interesting, but not a pain in the rear.

But wait! There's more!


This is my icicle scarf, knit from Artyarns exquisite bead AND sequins silk mohair.

SHUT UP!

THIS STUFF IS TOO GORGEOUS TO BE LEGAL!

AND YOU CAN GET IT OVER THE COUNTER?

YOU MEAN I DON'T HAVE TO GET IT IN A DARK ALLEY FROM A YARN PUSHER?

NO WAY!



This stuff is like crack. It is that addictive. And that easy. No crochet hook required. Just knit.

When you have fiber this gorgeous, you really don't want the pattern to get in the way. I worked it with a simple four row, six stitch repeat lace pattern that results in a vertical wave that reminds me of melting ice. Just for panache, I did pointed ends, because that's what icicles do.

I made it thin since the yarn is so expensive, although it will block out a little wider. Besides, icicles are skinny little suckers.

You could get by with one skein for a short little scarf, but I am doing mine long and lean, with two. And this is so fast it is a turbo-aperitif. I knit the full skein in one day. Very gratifying after all those lo-o-o-ong projects...


Just look at that sparkle! I love this so much that I returned the green sweater my DH gave me for Xmas in favor of a light taupe one that will go with this scarf. Am I crazy, or what?

Now surely, I must be done, right?

Wrong.

The best thing I played with on vacation?



My grandson Conner, who accompanied us to the frozen north for a four day post-Christmas visit with family in Leland, MI and then came home with Grandma and Grandpa to stay another two days, while Mom & Dad celebrated the New Year in Chicago.

Six days...

Seriously drool worthy...

Can't say I didn't warn you...