Sitting Here

I sit here in this black and gray swivel chair. The heater is on, with a noise my stomach makes when I feel hungry, but is also making a soothing blowing sound, like a giant trying to cool a bowl of soup – one that is delivered to his table still boiling. The air is slowly warming around me, giving me comfort.

I sit here and sip my chai tea, this morning sweet, yet with a bite of spice as the aftertaste leaves my tongue. I’m having tea after my fruit-filled breakfast. I had oatmeal with raspberries and blueberries that were on sale last night at the grocery store. I also have banana and walnut in my oatmeal. It is sweet, tart, crunchy, and satisfying. It is warm, and now it is gone, so I continue to sip my tea until it too is gone.

I sit here and read about a glutinous man eating nine steaks for dinner with eclairs for dessert and some mints to follow because his wife asked him to lose weight for six months and instead he gained 70 pounds to rid him of her. He talks about filling his life with his gluttony and to stop filling the lives of others with his thoughts of caring for them or what they think. I will take from this not the gaining of fat on my body, but to fill my time with activities that bring meaning to my life and maybe those around me – not to waste it on trivial matters that fulfill someone else’s empty ideas and poor planning.

I sit here and listen to the weed whacker outside hacking the bits o’ grass and cutting their life in half. This is the desert. How much do you need to trim something that already grows so slowly and uniquely and most delicately…though obviously these plants were added to the design post-construction. I listen to the leaf blower clear the sidewalks of the little green leaves that fall from the tree that makes me feel like I am walking through a Japanese painting. It’s all so romantic and has rained these last three days. Rain at all is usually short-lived in the desert. I ran five kilometers in the rain and it stopped for no one – for hours.

I sit here and out the window I see leaves breathing in the wind, brown tree branches the size of my calf hanging in the breeze and obscuring some of my view of the golden hills (because of the sun resting on the desert dirt amongst the shrubbery) beyond the red-roofed houses on the other side of the cinder block wall – a wall tall enough to keep my eyes from wandering into someone’s bathroom routine, but low enough not to obstruct a view of the power lines that add to the decor that is the city.

I sit here typing this on someone else’s keyboard. I am surrounded by things that are not my own, but that are so familiar to me and my chair-of-peace. There is a small lamp keeping me company as the sun finds its way through the different windows of the day. There are knitting needles and seashells. There are headphones and chapstick. There are empty cups and partially read books (currently The Broom of the System). There is a spoon resting after its morning use and pens waiting to be written with.

I sit here watching my fingers keep themselves busy while also keeping an eye on my disobedient doggies – the dogs that are now playing cute and innocent on their makeshift bed – the same dogs that make treats out of things they don’t own (yarn, cashews, plastic bags) and the same dogs that have forgotten they are potty trained. Or is it I who have forgotten that they are dogs, not small non-talking children, that have, by nature, smaller bladders that need to be tended to more than I’ve deemed necessary lately.

I sit here in my red pajama pants with pink hearts – not with relevance to Valentine’s Day (a day reserved for over affection of teddy bears and chocolate), but one with reference to love – to love always and without judgment. I wear pink wool socks – not for coordination purposes, but to keep my toes from feeling that they are the farthest extremity from my heart – to keep them warm. And to cover the rest of me to conform to societal norm I wear a school-spirit sweater that I acquired from my mom’s house. It was not cool to wear this stuff while in school, but now, wearing her old taste, gives me a younger appearance – one that keeps me warm no matter the definition of cool that I lack to keep up with.

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The Smaller Half

tiptoe

Knitting used to be stressful to me – learning anything new is for me (especially when learning from people who are experienced – they just make it look too easy). But I’m grateful to be shown the ‘right’ way to do something so that I’m free to make plenty of my own mistakes. If I was taught from someone who had no idea what they were doing, well, I doubt I would be able to call my creation a sock…it could be a deformed polygoness shape.

sockheel

I was going to attach these pictures to this post, but this sock comes with a story too. I said I was going to knit this sock a size smaller and went down two sizes…and still too big. I can only look forward to what the next pattern will bring, but I will continue to decrease until I find the right fit for me. I decided against the purl stitch above the heel, as I accidentally did with the first sock. So instead I purled the heel – the whole thing before noticing!

toptoe

I thought I had the ‘turning the heel’ thing down, but that too was a difficulty all its own. I spent over an hour attempting to unknot my yarn. I was working from the center of my ball and had multiple strings in my hands – otherwise I would have cut sooner. By the time I got to the center the knot was too tight to tangle with (pun intended). I was glad that I was able to handle it with patience, but oh was it tested. I would repeat this process twice more causing me the need to ‘knit-in’ a few times and causing a mess of the heel flap (which translates to – not being rounded just put together).

bottoms

I didn’t want ladders this time (so the sock gave me zigzags) and I have a few holes that may have gotten there from rotating the yarn forward as I worked (partly distracted). I also paid attention to the gussets and got them on the sides this time – ya! But…after a few more hours I was ready to decrease for the toes. I was worried that the sock would be too long and had a reduce-the-stitches party and now I can feel a lump under my toes. Note: these decreases should be on the sides or top next time, but over all it is still a sock.

sideby

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Throw It Out

computer too slow - throw it out

computer too slow – throw it out

a powerful shit - throw it out

a powerful shit – throw it out

cart too wobbly - throw it out

cart too wobbly – throw it out

tireout

tire wearing down – throw it out

dogs legs broken - throw it out

dog too lazy – throw it out

shart destroys chair - throw it out

shart destroys chair – throw it out

dishes not clean, blame the sink - throw it out

dishes not clean, blame the sink – throw it out

cheap cat food - throw it out

cheap cat food – throw it out

empty plate - throw it out

empty plate – throw it out

kid too obnoxious - throw it out

kid too obnoxious – throw it out

steps to nowhere - throw it out

steps to nowhere – throw it out

husband forgets chocolate - throw it out

husband forgets chocolate – throw it out

*No dogs were harmed (or thrown out) for the making of this post.

Posted in Animals, Cycling, People, Photography, Places, Things, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

A Sock a Day…

top o' the sock to ya

top o’ the sock to ya

keeps the toe shivers away. I just finished my first sock (started here) and it’s a size too big. I can now appreciate more the women that made and mended socks for their families. I would make socks of a certain size and just rubber band or attach buttons for tightening for little kids to grow into them. I thought this might have been where the idea for leg warmers came from – sock too small, just cut the toes off; but it seems ballerinas get the credit for wanting to keep their legs warm and cramp free during practice.

heel close-up

heel close-up

I made it from top-to-toe and while working near the cuff accidentally turned my work inside-out causing the yarn to bubble there (perhaps a personal design). I’m proud of my heel flap and heel turning abilities, but my gussets ([supposed to be] triangle bringing the heel back to the top of the sock) was done on the wrong needles so that instead of decreasing down the sides, my work was decreased more on the top. I have a lot of ladders (rung-like gaps from loose knitting with double-ended needles) throughout the sock.

sidesock

Thanks to Caroline for yarn, pattern, and guidance!

I am proud of this sock and look forward to wearing a pair…though with practice I’m guessing the second sock is going to look a lot different. I kept no count of rows or notes on design so it will be difficult for me to attempt the same ‘mistakes’ for a second time. The pattern I used wasn’t as descriptive as I needed for a first time socker so I looked to YouTube for help which hasn’t failed me yet. And I’m going to make the second sock a size smaller. I’ve always been a fan of mismatch socks and now have the ability to make my own – in all their differenty goodness.

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Felting and Nalbinding

Just another day in the office…oh wait, the boss is back from her daughter’s wedding in India and has already opened the store this morning – on time. We talk about pictures, emotions, family, henna, food, and flights of her trip; and discuss the receipts, mail, inventory, customers, and lessons I learned while running a business with a different ethnic majority. She shows me some purses she got from Advitya (a non-profit in India) and watches as I ooh and awe at them and then tells me to pick one. She had seen the bag I had and kept an eye out for similar styles (over the shoulder). The bag is great – reversible, colorful, shiny, handmade, and a gift!

reversebag

Sonal goes home to rest at noon and my dad comes in to watch the store at 4:30 pm so that I can stop by Saba’s (best flaming baklava ever!) for two falafel pitas – one for me and one for Caroline. I pick her up from her desk at work and drive us to the First United Methodist Church of Mesa for the Telarana Weavers and Spinners Guild meeting. We are getting there early to help Christine (also a Phoenix guild member) set up tables and chairs; and to eat my pita that I deemed to messy (and dangerous) to eat while driving – especially after a recent accident.

From 6:30 – 7:00 we got introduced to nalbinding (single-needle knitting technique) by Bill who prefers to keep his hands and mind busy by finding new methods and creative ways to make things. He showed us some socks, gloves, and a bag he had made; and without planning to do so sold three of his handmade (by him) wooden nalbinding needles – two to visitors of the guild (Me and Nicole) and one to Caroline (a fiber junkie). Starting the double-loop is the hardest part, but Caroline was able to grasp that concept. I will be looking up YouTube videos later.

At 7:00 it was time for felting (and snacks). One of the guild members has an alpaca farm to supply her woolly needs and sell what she doesn’t need. She shows us pictures and shares some history with us. She was also able to answer all the questions from the crowd – a good audience. Now that we knew where the wool came from it was Sue’s turn to show us one way we could use it – felting. We all got a block of foam, a felt patch, some yarn, an anti-prick stick (used to hold down work space and keep fingers from sharp tool), and a fish-hooked felting needle.

feltart

work of Telarana members

She showed us bags, shoes, bracelets, and a pin on her sweater – all including felted wool then gave us permission to cut and stab (if we happened to hurt ourself or others there was a volunteer band-aid nurse nearby). It’s a peace inducing process and there are so many creative possibilities that we (30 or so women and a couple men) spent at least an hour and a half working our creations between raffles, announcements, and show-and-tell.

member of Telarana

The meeting may be over, but the excitement is not. I’m working on a pair of socks and once I have that lesson complete I can attempt a pair of nalbinded socks with some of the gray wool that Caroline gifted me from the raffle she won at our prior guild meeting together. I may be the youngest one participating at these meetings, but I know this kind of fun isn’t just for boy scouts and grandmas – and I don’t want to miss out on the fun and creative process that is the fiber arts.

Posted in Art, Education, Family, Fiber Arts, Food, Friends, People, Photography, Things | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments