It sounds stormy out there this evening. I didn’t walk, yet again, but C. took me to Mass, which involves a certain amount of moving about, and later on I did a whole course of exercises by myself, unprompted by Helen or Daniela. Thank you for your inspirational messages yesterday. My next objective must be to do them twice a day. They leave me slightly breathless.
I did quite a bit of knitting. I seem to be zipping
back and forth, although I think I still must have nearly 70 stitches in the
centre square of my hap. I’m enjoying it a lot. It is pleasant to think that if
life takes everything else away, I can probably knit garter stitch squares in
my care home. Or even in prison, where there might be a livelier crowd. But that is
an unrealistic, if comforting, belief. I read somewhere that when EZ’s dementia
was pretty far advanced, Meg tried one day to put knitting needles in her hands
but she wasn’t interested. And she loved garter stitch.
I have begun mental work on the borders. I will have
to face the fact that I can’t knit one of Gudrun's schemes, and must concentrate on
arranging the colours I’ve got over the right number of rows.
I've finished "Old Filth" and have started Gardam's "Bilgewater" which you suggested, Cat. I'm reading it with great pleasure.
Wordle: Ketki and Alexander are usually early with
their contributions. Today neither appeared until Alexander showed up in
mid-afternoon with a four. Ketki is still absent, and I’m worried. Her absence
altogether takes the bloom off the fact that I scored the only three. (We
can shake hands across the miles, Mary Lou, assuming we’re talking about the same
day.) My starters gave me one green consonant and two brown vowels. I struggled
mightily for quite a while to think of a qualifying word. When I finally came
up with one, I didn’t think it at all likely, but it was right. That has
happened before. Fours elsewhere except for Mark, who needed five.
Good going!
ReplyDeleteSometimes life just gets busy.