The fifth
piece of the Silly Christmas Project was not only bigger than the four
preceding, it also involved more fancy footwork. I got about halfway through it
last night, and polished it off this morning during the hated half-hour I have
to wait after my osteoporosis pill (Wednesdays only) before I can have any
coffee or even lie down. I could, of course, have been blogging.
I love the
way this thing is looking – if only I can do it justice in the assembly and
embroidery. I’ve got to go back up to St James Centre today to dispatch a
birthday present to a grandchild. I think I’m far enough along that I can allow
myself to buy a couple of skeins of embroidery thread.
This kind
of book – “Knit Your Own Britain” by Jackie Holt and Ruth Bailey – requires not
only a good deal of ingenuity from its authors, but also ruthless accuracy. I
can tell you that page 114, at least, is perfect.
Non-knit
I read in
one of my magazines yesterday that Marks & Spencer are selling chocolate
Brussels sprouts. Now that I am seriously engaged with the dreadful holiday to
come, I might as well walk along and see if I can get a few of those.
My sister
and her husband are in DC, getting acquainted with their long-hoped-for
grandson. My sister says he is a calm baby, good at eating. Theo sent this
picture yesterday of his father and his son. Grandparenting is hard work.
Thanks for
your comments about my Strathardle problem, and about longevity. This week was
relatively clear and has now filled itself up; that’s good. I’ll let things
drift until my husband brings the subject up again. He is often calm and
sensible, and may have some ideas of his own on the subject. November has the
advantage that he would be outdoors only for a couple of hours, at most, at
midday. By the time he gets up from an afternoon nap, it’s too dark to venture
far from the fireside.
But of
course it’s November itself, and the darkness, which increase my sense of
foreboding.
I was
interested in your comment, Barbara M., about your anxiety when you were the
age at which your mother died. This has long been a theory of mine – that
passing through the age at which one’s parents died or had a major stressful
event can be a hard time. My husband’s father died young of a brain tumour, and
being that age himself was hard on my husband. I had a bad year when I was the
age at which my parents divorced. I’ve seen it in others.
Back to
knitting
…although
there’s little to say. The second rank of rams is done, on the Rams & Yowes
blankie – I should reach the half-way point on the patterned centre by the end
of the week, or nearly. Milano needs four more every-other-row underarm
increases. It remains a great comfort at the end of every day.
Regarding you comments about passing the age of significant event in our parents lives...I think, also, we worry that we will replicate their mistakes and omissions. (Or, in our adolescent cockiness, say we will never fall into THAT behavior.) Sometimes in a way that leads to unnecessary misery. How much time we waste dreading possible future pain, or being paralyzed with fear of error.
ReplyDeleteChocolates that look like Brussels sprouts, or chocolate-covered Brussels sprouts?
ReplyDelete-- stashdragon
This is the same question I was going to ask!
Delete