Archive for August 2010

Heartfelt Gratitude for a Kind Note

August 31, 2010

I can’t imagine anyone not appreciating the kind of note I received recently.  It was unsolicited, informative, sincere, complimentary, and supportive.  What a wonderful combination of qualities that my grandmother taught me to strive for when writing letters!  Remember those?  The mail carrier came, dropped off the envelopes at your house, and you got to sit at the dining room table and read letters from family and friends while sipping a cup of tea.

The note I recently received was an email and it was so touching, that I have yet to delete it.  Truthfully, I don’t think I will.  It came from a person I haven’t met, but who went out of his way to express some lovely thoughts and share them with me.  Since receiving it, I have opened it several times to read it all over again.  There is genuine kindness in the world and I always feel so blessed when some of it falls on me.

The gentleman writer used some superlative adjectives to describe me that I’m not sure I can live up to, but in the same breath, I am encouraged to want to live up to them.  So the note was motivational as well.

Words have power – all kinds of it.  They can be uplifting as well as hurtful.  I try to choose the former.  I fail miserably from time to time, but as I’ve gotten older, I’ve learned the wisdom of ‘counting to ten’ before I speak.  Sometimes I have to count to ‘seventy-twelve’ and even then, things may not come out as I’d like them too.  I’m improving with age.  ;-)

I plan to tack the essence of this person’s message in my heart and draw on his kindness when my own fails me.  Maybe it will help make me a better person.  I hope so. 

Messages as kind as the one I received deserve thanks.  The sender stated clearly that he wasn’t expecting a reply.  My immediate thought was, “How could I not want to reply?”  I typed my reply and sent it off.  Kindness impacts me deeply because I’ve made a firm resolve to allow the impact.

So . . . is there someone to whom you can write a note that will lift their spirit and lighten their step?  Or is there someone who has done that for you?  Take the time.  A heartfelt thanks is worth it.  Type it, write it, send it!

And to the gentleman in the UK . . . . . this one is for you!

Peace

“Long Stripes” – Super Scarf #1

August 30, 2010

I finished the first of my Super Bowl XLVI, 2012 scarves.  Check the link on my side bar for more information about knitting a scarf for one of the 8000 volunteers needed to help host the event.

I thought I would share the pattern.

 

I like the look of stripes and I wanted mine to run the long dimension and not the width.  So, I decided to knit the piece into a tube, and then graft the two long sides together.  I LOVE finishing, so the thought of using the Kitchener stitch to graft 320 stitches together didn’t bother me a bit.  But there’s a tip about that in the pdf to help make it feel more manageable.

The Long Stripes Winter Scarf is reversible, double, and seamless.  The ends of the tube are closed by simply adding fringe.

I’ve done this same scarf in red and white stripes for a Christmas gift, but for Super Bowl XLVI, I followed the color and design specifications listed.

If you’d like to knit the one for yourself, or to donate to one of the 2012 Super Bowl volunteers, click the link for the pdf pattern:  Long Stripes Winter Scarf

Happy knitting!

‘Crush’ed

August 29, 2010

My brother flew home to Smalltownville recently to attend his 40-year high school class reunion.  He’s always kept in touch with some of his peeps and it didn’t surprise me that he was the one who did the graphics on a booklet in memory of his classmates who had passed away.

I made the drive to Smalltownville to see my brother after the reunion, before he had to head back to the airport.  He showed me the little booklet he had made, explained how he did the graphics using his yearbook covers.  It all looked beautiful . . . . but I was befuddled.

I read over the names of his deceased classmates and knew some of them.  Near the top of the list was a name I was surprised to see.  I asked my brother if the names were listed in order with most recent deaths at the top.  He said, “No.  I listed them in the order of their passing.”

I was still befuddled.  “Crush died?”  He said yes. 

“Is this the same ‘Crush’ that . . . “  He said yes. 

“Crush died nearly twenty years ago?”  He said yes.

I was stunned!

‘Crush was a quiet boy in my brother’s class.  He had a beautiful broad smile, curly black hair, and a deep baritone voice.  Crush was shy, shy, shy!  But he wasn’t the kind of shy that seems aloof.  He was merely timid.

I was the accompanist for the high school choir all four years I was there and Crush sang in the choir.  He also sang in madrigals because he was the only boy with such a rich, low voice.  I didn’t notice it right away, though.  As a freshman, I was just an annoying new person who had to wear a beanie on my head for initiation day and had to get used to running around from class to class without running into my older brother or his friends.

Crush didn’t live in Smalltownville.  We were a consolidated school that had kids bused from another town even smaller than mine.  Crush lived in Villageville.  The kids that lived in Villageville couldn’t participate in extracurricular activities because they all had to catch the bus back home.  So I didn’t get to see Crush much . . . . except for choir practice.

Crush competed in the choir competitions, though, and I got to play the piano for his madrigal and duet pieces, not to mention the whole choir, too.

As I got to know Crush, I liked him.  As my granddaughter would say now, I didn’t like like him, I just liked him.  In retrospect, though, I had a crush on him.   You know how those things go . . . . they can last a long time.

I asked Crush to be my date for the Sadie Hawkins Dance one year.  That’s the one time when it was proper for the girls to ask the boys.  Crush just smiled and said no.  I wasn’t devastated, but I didn’t ask anyone else, either.  He was just a nice, quiet boy whose company I would have enjoyed.

Years later, my brother told me that Crush said no because he didn’t have a car to get to the dance, and wouldn’t have been able to afford it.  You see the Sadie Hawkins dance was held before prom and Crush thought if he went with a girl who asked him to Sadie Hawkins, he would have to ask her to prom and that’s what he couldn’t afford.  “And besides”, my brother said, he was just too shy.”

It softened my rejection to hear that from my brother, I guess.  By the time I heard that part of the story, it was water over the dam, because I had been out of high school and college a while and it didn’t matter anymore – not too much anyway.

Life goes on and I had been hired to work at the college, a position I still hold.  I used to take the city transit system to work before I met Officer Friendly and before Goodnight needed to move in with us.  My transit route took me through the heart of the city and sometimes I could hop off, do some shopping and then catch a transfer a little later.

One time while doing just that, I ran into Crush.  We hadn’t seen each other since he left high school and I didn’t know where he had landed.  We made plans to have lunch together later that week.

I wasn’t nervous as I had been when I was when I was a young school girl, but there was still that little ‘crush’.  We met for lunch and chatted about work, our elderly fathers, and hometown stuff.  He was still the same shy boy, now gentle-man, with curly black hair, a broad grin and a deep baritone voice. 

Our lunch date was nearly twenty years ago.  It didn’t seem like so much time had passed until my older brother told me when Crush died.  My brother said that Crush was found in his apartment after having been dead for a few days.  He had never married.

When my brother handed me the memory booklet he had made for his 40-year reunion, I got to feel young again for a moment, and then instantly sad for the shy boy whose name was too near the top of the list.  Crush didn’t even live to see his 40′s.  As my brother and I chatted, we figured he had to have died within a short time after our lunch together.

And yet his life had purpose.  I may not know all of it, nor any more of it than the purpose it had for me, but he was a gift.  He was never rude in high school.  He never got into trouble either.  He didn’t have an arrogant bone is his body.  I never heard anyone say a bad word about him, ever.  When he turned me down for the dance, it wasn’t hurtful, but he didn’t make excuses, either.  His dignity was intact.  He was just a quiet boy who made me smile.

He still does.  Like I said, it was the kind of crush that can last a long time.  And if Crush was poor, it was in money only, because the way he walked, spoke, carried himself and treated others should have made his parents proud.

I’m still sitting quietly with the news of his death, but what comforts the school girl in me who wants to mourn, is knowing that our lunch date together was probably a much better time than the Sadie Hawkins dance would have been.

Hey, Crush!   If they have Sadie Hawkins dances in Heaven, save a dance for me . . . .

A Cautionary Plea to Knitters

August 29, 2010

There has been a fair amount of traffic to my website this week.  Folks have been coming in search of two knitting patterns that I posted a little while ago.  They have the links that go directly to the pdf files, so knitters may never read this post.  But just in case:

The two patterns that have caused all the buzz recently are my Skunk Scarf . . .

 . . . . . and the Pastor’s Winter Cap and Scarf.

If any knitter has decided to take them both on as gifts, I IMPLORE you not to mix up the recipients.

I’m just saying . . . you know . . . . be careful.  They are both knit with black and some white.  I love a good blunder from time to time, but this might not be the right time to goof.  The Pastor’s Winter Cap and Scarf goes to the pastor, ok?  The Skunk Scarf goes to . . . I have no idea, but for sure NOT the pastor.  ;-)

It’ll get worse, you know, when I round out my black and white knitting with my Zebra and Penguin scarves.

Carry on!

I’m Ready . . .

August 28, 2010

 . . . . . for some FOOTBALL!!!

 

 

We interrupt this church service . . . . . for mirth

August 27, 2010

I might not have noticed at all . . . but Goodnight notices everything and seldom feels the need to keep things to herself.  Besides, she’s shorter than I am and her eyes wander in church a little more than mine do, I suppose.  Add into the mixture her irrepressible mirth and there are bound to be times when it’s contagious enough to . . . just enjoy it.

I only need my glasses for reading.  They’re just cheaters and when I don’t need them, they tend to be perched atop my head.  But in church I need them on and off more frequently than at other times during the week, so I guess I’ve been holding them in my hand in between hymns.  I haven’t really paid attention.

On a recent trip to church, however, Goodnight’s head was bowed longer than is typical for a girl her age, so I wondered if she was actually . . . . praying that long.

NAH!!!!  She spotted some spooky eyes on the pew in front of us and was just trying to contain her laughter and hide the smirk on her face.

I’m sure I set a T-E-R-R-I-B-L-E example by actually taking out my camera and snapping a photo in church instead of just ignoring it.  But it was rather amusing how the light from the chandelier over my shoulder passed through my spectacles and made an eery image on the wooden bench.

I was able to suppress the little girl in me and not break into laughter and after all, we were standing for the final hymn . . . . . . BUT . . . . . if the choir had broken into “Mine eyes have seen the glory . . . “  or “His eye is on the sparrow . . ” or “He gave us eyes to see them . . . “, I think Goodnight and I would have had to race out before the final note.

I’m reserved . . . . . but I draw the line at stuffy!

Breakfast Date with an Old Man . . .

August 26, 2010

I seldom get a chance to veer off the beaten path of my daily morning routine, but when I get the opportunity, I grab it!  What I do with that opportunity can vary, but sometimes I have to visit an old friend.

The Old Man and I go back a long time.  We’ve taken walks together for many years, though less frequently lately.  Despite having a number of years on me, his step is much quicker than mine.  In fact, his fast pace always fascinates me.  I think that’s why I’m attracted to him.  He’s invigorating to be around, particularly while he’s working.  At the same time, I feel oddly at peace.

I packed a light picnic breakfast, some hot coffee  and went off to meet him.  We’ve always had a sort of regular meeting place; I just haven’t been there for a long time.  He’s more predictable than I am . . . . and perhaps more dependable as well.

When I left the house it was barely 5:30 a.m. so it was still dark(ish) outside, but with the vestiges of the full moon still high in the sky, I had a pleasant drive into the city.

I spotted him before I even parked my car.  He wasn’t really ‘waiting’ for me, but he was there, nonetheless.  As I walked up to him, I could feel a grin start in my toes long before it showed up on my face.

The moonlight from the west reflected off the Old Man and lit up my soul.  The hint of dawn to the east  made its own magic light and I had to stand still just to take it all in.  I set the picnic breakfast on our usual table, but I didn’t sit down to eat right away.  We had to just chat for a while and catch up on . . . . things.  He had a bit of work to do while we chatted, but I didn’t mind.  It’s his way of listening.

I asked him to pose for some photos, but he told me that candid action shots are really more his preference.  I must admit that he’s right.  His strength, reliability, and stamina are much more evident when he’s in motion.  He’s a sort of quiet giant, involving himself in industrial endeavors as well as entertainment ventures.  It makes him rather busy, but  so many people depend on him that one can hardly complain.

What a fortunate change of pace for me!  I had an hour with the Old Man this morning.  The moon set, the sun rose, the coffee tasted warm and good.  I wanted to linger, but I knew the Old Man couldn’t and neither could I.  I waved and smiled as I walked away, but there was a spring in my step and a song in my heart that will stay with me through the day. Click the link, sing it with me and tell me if it has the same effect on you.

While you’re listening, let me share the photos the Old Man was kind enough to let me take this morning.

The moon still high in the sky looking over the Old Man’s shoulders provided a soft backlit effect.

Dawn’s faint light showed the Old Man already hard at work as he greeted the first barge traffic of the day.

I’m a romantic at heart, I guess, but I erred when I told you that we ‘walked’.  One doesn’t actually walk with this Old Man.  One must . . . . promenade.  :-)

Have a great day!  Oh!  and if you happen to swing by the house, you must promise not to tell . . . . . Camel!  ;-)

Back to School Sweater for Gram!

August 25, 2010

In July, I wrote about a vest that I was knitting.  You can click the link to refresh your memory.  The vest has been done since shortly after my post, but I haven’t worn it.  I was saving it for ‘back to school’ for me.

I liked the vest a lot the way it was in the magazine and that’s the way I knit it.  But most knitters I know make changes on the fly – adding or changing elements of the design.  So . . . . that’s what I did.

I have more of a ‘shawl soul’ than a ‘sweater soul’ yet I wanted to make the vest for work.  It can get chilly in the office even in August.  I decided to add a fringe to the vest in the hope that it would have a shawl ‘feel’ to it when I wore it.  You can’t tell by the photo below, but the vest has fringe from  just in front of each shoulder and all the way around the back.  It also looks like the fringe isn’t cut evenly, but it is.  The yarn just curls a little and that will hang straighter as I wear it.

I also wanted to button the vest up a bit higher than the original, so I added five buttonholes and buttons instead of three.

After I added the fringe, I laid the vest on the bed, shot a photo . . . . and then wasn’t so sure I like the final result.  But that’s been typical of me for all my years of knitting, so I knew better than to start ripping immediately.  I knew I needed to set it aside for a while and think about it again at a later time.

Well . . . I thought about it enough.  It’s been a bit cool in the mornings lately and I’ve been wearing it.  I actually like it a lot.  The added fringe adds more loft to hold in warm air.  I didn’t continue the fringe to the front because I didn’t want it dangling in my soup or bothering me when I worked.

So I’m going to leave it as it is and get some mileage out of it before I need to add some long sleeves underneath.

I keep wishing it was black or gray, but then when I look in my closet, I know there is PLENTY of clothing in those colors already.  Gram needed a little color boost.

So – let the classes begin!!!!

Washington Monthly’s Top Post-secondary Schools in the Country for 2010

August 25, 2010

I work in higher education and I have school on my mind . . . . so I found the following information interesting.

Washington Monthly Magazine just published its ranking for the top schools in the country.  There are several categories, with like schools being ranked together.

In the category of National Universities, the University of California, San Diego, was ranked #1.  To read the other 99 of the top 100 National Universities, click the link.

In the category of Liberal Arts Colleges, Morehouse College, GA, was ranked #1.  To read the other 99 of the top 100 Liberal Arts Colleges, click the link.

In the category of Master’s Universities, St. Mary’s University, TX, was ranked #1.  To read the other 99 of the top 100 Master’s Universities, click the link.

In the category of Baccalaureate Colleges, Bard College,  Simons Rock, MA, was ranked #1.  To read the other 99 of the top 100 Baccalaureate Colleges, click the link.

In the category of Community Colleges, Saint Paul College, St. Paul, MN, was ranked #1.  To read the other 49 of the top 50 Community Colleges, click the link.

To round out the lists, Washington Monthly published a list of drop-out factories, as determined by the graduation rate.  To read the list of the top 50 drop-out factories, click the link.  The graduation rates are astonishingly low in that group, with none on the list having a graduation rate above 18%.

Skeleton Gets a Knit Cap

August 24, 2010

I suppose this could be good for an ongoing gag, but last night after Goodnight went to bed, I stayed up a little later to knit a little stocking cap for ‘George.’  That’s what she named her skeleton after she finished putting it together.

I know I should have better things to do at 9:00 at night, like ironing or sleeping, but George just stood there on the table . . .  staring at me . . . .  so what’s a knitter to do?

Now that it’s finished, I’m not sure the color matches his eyes.  :-)

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