Lately I've been noticing something strange. I've started to call them "outbreaks of happiness" and they are happening more frequently. The latest was today in church where I was sitting in a ray of sun and just felt happy to be in that place, at that time, sitting next to my husband. Just an "it feels good to be alive" kind of feeling.
Two things that make this a bit strange. One is that there are some sad things happening in my life at the moment. My parents' health is failing and I'm just wondering when the next crisis will hit. I attended, just yesterday, the funeral of a woman at church who died young and left a 16-year-old daughter motherless. And, most imminent, my 15-year old cat is dying. If we're lucky, we'll have her with us just a few more weeks. Still, there are outbreaks of happiness.
The other is that I haven't been what I would call unhappy. And yet, these outbreaks of happiness are quite a contrast to my usual dogged attempt to live a balanced life. And I think I like it.
ON MY NEEDLES
I just cast on a pair of socks, needing some "plain vanilla" knitting to carry around with me. I got through the ribbing while at Annual Church Meeting this morning (given I'm working on size 1 needles, that seems pretty good). They are the LongJohn Socks by Ann Hanson, meant to mimic the waffle weave of long johns. Pretty appropriate choice for the cold weather.
Still finishing up Nate's Christmas present, a vest.
OFF THE NEEDLES
Hibernate is done! All that is left to do is to block it and put buttons on it (when they arrive in the order I just placed with KnitPicks today). I ripped back the 7" of seed stitch on the bottom and made set-in pockets instead of the on-seam pockets that were part of the pattern. I rarely make big changes in patterns, so am rather proud of myself on this one.
Zeben's Christmas present vest is done -- drying on the blocking board.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Friday, January 17, 2014
Togetherness
I'm on a diet. Usually it is a lonely task, and although my husband has always been supportive when I undertake to lose a little weight, he gets a little grumpy about how my changes in food choices make his diet bland or even "bo-o-o-o-o-rrrring."
This time, though, we're in it together. We're taking a Preventing Diabetes class through the local hospital which I learned about at the wellness fair at work. I'm at very high risk of ending up with Type 2 Diabetes due to having both parents with diabetes, having had a pregnancy with over 13 lbs. of baby (even though it was two babies), having had to control my sugar levels with diet throughout my pregnancy, my age, and being a woman. Ugh.
The up-side of this is that the class is free, and I get to bring Don along as a support participant even though he is barely at risk despite having a father who is diabetic. And, God bless him, he's jumping in with both feet. We've been talking every night about how our eating day went, trading numbers and helping each other sort out fat gram and calorie counts (sometimes involving complex math!) as we track our eating habits, now in our second week.
This is a whole different experience than anything else I've tried (Weight Watchers several times and lots of self-imposed attempts) and I know the difference is having Don so closely involved. I'm feeling confident that I'll have success this time in getting my weight down below the "overweight" line on the charts and finding a way to keep it there. I'm fortunate that losing only 12 lbs is my first goal - there are others who are needing to lose 30+ pounds, including one woman who has already lost 60!
Togetherness -- thanks, sweetie, for really, truly being there for me in all the meanings of that phrase! Wish us luck!
Speaking of togetherness, here are the girls, sharing the electric cat seat I got to help keep the older one, who is ill, warm.
This time, though, we're in it together. We're taking a Preventing Diabetes class through the local hospital which I learned about at the wellness fair at work. I'm at very high risk of ending up with Type 2 Diabetes due to having both parents with diabetes, having had a pregnancy with over 13 lbs. of baby (even though it was two babies), having had to control my sugar levels with diet throughout my pregnancy, my age, and being a woman. Ugh.
The up-side of this is that the class is free, and I get to bring Don along as a support participant even though he is barely at risk despite having a father who is diabetic. And, God bless him, he's jumping in with both feet. We've been talking every night about how our eating day went, trading numbers and helping each other sort out fat gram and calorie counts (sometimes involving complex math!) as we track our eating habits, now in our second week.
This is a whole different experience than anything else I've tried (Weight Watchers several times and lots of self-imposed attempts) and I know the difference is having Don so closely involved. I'm feeling confident that I'll have success this time in getting my weight down below the "overweight" line on the charts and finding a way to keep it there. I'm fortunate that losing only 12 lbs is my first goal - there are others who are needing to lose 30+ pounds, including one woman who has already lost 60!
Togetherness -- thanks, sweetie, for really, truly being there for me in all the meanings of that phrase! Wish us luck!
Speaking of togetherness, here are the girls, sharing the electric cat seat I got to help keep the older one, who is ill, warm.
Thursday, January 9, 2014
2013 Summary
(Written on December 18, 2013)
2013 was a very unusual year. I think the ill luck of 13 was in the air this year. Fortunately, along with the bad comes some good – there definitely was a yin and yang to the year!
Yin: My Director in the Career Center made an emotionally
difficult decision in December, 2012 to take a job at Dartmouth and left in
April. He hired away another co-worker,
leaving the Career Center severely short-handed for the end of the semester and
the summer.
Yang: We were incredibly fortunate to find a local applicant
(through a national search, of course) to fill the position in July. The new Director brings skills that were very
much needed to the job, along with enthusiasm and energy.
Yin: The Career Center limped into the academic year still
down a couple of staff members when the person we were very excited to hire as
an Assistant Director let us know three weeks before the semester started that
she had taken another position.
Yang: We were able to hire a colleague in a temporary
position for the year who already knew a great deal about internships and so
aren’t limping as badly as we might be, even though we’re still down,
technically, a half person (and, in reality, 1 ½ people).
Yin: This was a biggie.
Over the 4th of July weekend, when we were away (naturally),
our cat sitter discovered one morning that our house was full of water. A pipe had burst in the upstairs bathroom
vanity (the mesh kind that are supposed to last forever) during the night and
our kitchen and basement below were flooded with over 650 gallons of water.
Yang: Thank God for cat sitters and their fathers! They called Advance 1 and got the basement
pumped before we got home (we were 5 hours away in RI). When we arrived there were fans and
dehumidifiers installed throughout the house.
The fast response, I’m sure, saved our hardwood floors in 4 rooms.
Yin: The kitchen we gutted and refinished just 10 years ago
was once again torn out to the studs.
The bathroom floor and vanity were totaled. At night, for several weeks, you could see
light from the bathroom to the basement, or the other way around, between the
base floor planks.
Yang: The toilet, shower, refrigerator, utility sink in the
basement, and the washer and dryer all continued to function. And it was summer, so we were able to cook on
the patio using the grill and our Coleman stove.
Yin: Because we often get water in the basement in the
spring, we had everything in plastic boxes or up off the floor. However, we weren’t prepared for water coming
from above, so we spent many hours sorting out wet things and drying them or
pitching them.
Yang: We’ve been wanting to clean out the basement for a
long time. We built new shelves and are
happier with the storage and the room generated on that side of the basement. We had a lot of stuff to contribute to the
church fair sale.
Yin: It was 3 ½ months before we had a functioning
kitchen. Two weeks after everything had
been installed, the stalwart refrigerator died, extending the project to a full 4 months.
Yang: We have a brand-new kitchen that looks a lot like the
old kitchen (same color walls, same style cabinets since we had to match the
ones in the mudroom). But this kitchen
has all new appliances (stainless steel since we can’t get “bisque” anymore),
including a gas range (upgrade from electric and we love it), granite
countertops (Maine granite, no less), and vinyl flooring (much less worry in
the kitchen and mudroom than the old laminate floor).
Also Yang: The bathroom also enjoyed a renovation, even though
technically only the floor and vanity needed to be replaced. We put in a new ceiling and tiled over the
bathtub ceiling, got a taller vanity, love the new vinyl flooring, and found a
remnant piece of granite for the vanity top that I find endlessly fascinating
to look at.
Yin: Hardwood floors in 4 rooms were damaged. We had to completely empty them for a week to
refinish the floors, which meant that the other rooms left (our bedroom, the
living room – which was already full of boxes from the kitchen – and the porch)
were jammed to the rafters with furniture and “stuff.”
Yang: We have 4 rooms with beautifully refinished
floors. While they were empty we painted
the ceilings in 3 of them (along with the bathroom and kitchen ceilings). And we are still slowly moving back into each
of them in a more intentional way, throwing things out (or putting them in the
church sale).
Yin: my sewing room was engulfed with furniture and “stuff”
and all of my knitting supplies are still boxed up in the basement. I skipped the Maine Quilt Show completely for
the first time in probably 15 years. I
held out some yarn for projects I wanted to work on, but had to go buy new
needles every time I needed a different size because I couldn’t for the life of
me find them in the basement boxes.
Yang: I’m actually going to have a real “fiber room/studio”
– the kind I’ve dreamed of for many, many years. Nate’s old room got re-plastered (one of
those “while we’re at it” projects that had been “on the list” but wasn’t
probably going to get done for another year) and painted. Don and I took apart my massive sewing table
and moved it into the room. We purchased IKEA shelves and I’m slowly moving in,
trying to be thoughtful about where and what will be in there.
Yin: I’m exhausted.
Which has pretty much sapped any Christmas enthusiasm. I came home from visiting my parents last
weekend to find Don putting up decorations because he was afraid I wasn’t going
to put any up myself. The tree has been
in for well over a week but all it has on it are lights. I’ve done absolutely zero holiday cooking
(though I’m planning to spend a lunch hour to make spiced nuts). Gift buying has been painful – I just don’t
seem to have any good ideas and don’t want to face the traffic in the stores
and the parking lots.
Yang: I’ve got the next 12 days off and am particularly
looking forward to the after-Christmas days.
I’m also really, really looking forward to seeing my sons. Zeben will be home most of my vacation, and I
hope we’ll see Nate more than once during that time too (in addition to
Christmas Eve and Day). If the weather
doesn’t interfere, I’ll get to see all of my cousins on the Talbot side, as
well as all of my siblings this Saturday, and cousins on the Smith side on the
26th. And, we’ll have our usual
family-full Christmas and a fun New Year’s Eve with friends.
Yin: My parents’ health continues to decline and that makes
me sad, mad, and sadder.
Yang: My parents are still with us and are still living
independently. And their health issues have
prodded me to take a “Preventing Diabetes” class through our local hospital
starting in January with the hopes of losing a bit of weight and also replacing
some bad habits with some new good ones.
Yin: I started out the year wearing a brace day and night to
help jumpstart recovery from tendonitis in my right wrist.
Yang: With the help of an OT, daily wrist exercises, and
wearing the brace at night, the pain is now very nearly gone.
Yin: Our older cat (15 years) is suffering from pancreatitis
and has lost 4 of her 11 pounds of weight in just three months. We thought the weight loss was from the
stress of the work on the house, but after blood tests were done it clearly is
more than that. We have to check the
floors when we come home as she has trouble keeping her food down.
Yang: Pandora has given us a great deal of companionship and
joy over the past 15 years. While she is
getting more and more frail all the time, she doesn’t seem to be in major pain
and more than ever wants to be wherever we are.
She’s still eating and drinking, even if she can’t keep it all
down. I’m looking forward to lots of
Pandora lap time over vacation.
And, major Yang: Don has been my rock through all of this,
even when all I can manage to do in the evening is play Candy Crush on the
iPad. I’m so grateful for his love and
support.
Now, let’s put 2013 behind us and move forward into a new
year. Two bright spots that hopefully
indicate our luck is turning – I recently won a gift card in a drawing a work
and won a sweater’s worth of yarn from my local yarn store in another drawing. A little more paint and the whole house will
look refreshed from top to bottom. We’ve
gotten pretty good at cleaning stuff out and hope to apply those skills to the
garage and other side of the basement (that miraculously didn’t get wet at all
in the flood) next summer. We’ve got our
health, good jobs, and each other. I’m
sure there will be bumps in the road, but overall I’m looking forward to a
great year.
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Happy New Year!
I have two goals this year. First, I've declared it the year of finishing unfinished projects. Second, I've got to make some steps backward in my health.
As far as projects, the first is to finish the house projects. I'll post my year-end summary the next time I log on, but suffice it to say that there are a number of things left to do after a major renovation project over the summer and fall. One result of the renovations is my own, real work studio. I have a room of my own! But as I slowly move my knitting and sewing stuff into that room, I'm finding all kinds of unfinished projects. Finishing them would free up a lot of storage space.
Four of these cubes are filled with unfinished knitting projects. The rest with unstarted projects, but that is a whole different story. First up to finish? Two vests for my boys, two sweaters for me, mittens for Don, and a label to be added to Nate's quilt.
Going backwards on health sounds like it isn't a positive thing, but I'm looking at is as going back to a level of fitness I've had in the past. I'm starting a "Preventing Diabetes" class through the hospital on Tuesday and dragging Don along with me. Hopefully that will help me lose some weight. And, we're going to try to get outdoors doing something active (starting today with snowshoeing) at least two weekends a month this year. My athletic goal is to run a 5K by the end of the summer.
Last, but not least, I'm going to try to get back to blogging. There was an NPR story recently about the value of writing in keeping a positive outlook (my take on the story).
ON MY NEEDLES
Hibernate, knitting with Brown Sheep Bulky. Pretty much an instant gratification sweater if there is one. I started on Christmas Day and have finished the body. I've got to go pick up some needles to do the sleeves (still can't find all my needles from the summer chaos).
Two vests for my boys, using Cascade Superwash which I'm loving -- it is a lovely, springy yarn.
Those are the only three active projects at the moment.
As far as projects, the first is to finish the house projects. I'll post my year-end summary the next time I log on, but suffice it to say that there are a number of things left to do after a major renovation project over the summer and fall. One result of the renovations is my own, real work studio. I have a room of my own! But as I slowly move my knitting and sewing stuff into that room, I'm finding all kinds of unfinished projects. Finishing them would free up a lot of storage space.
Four of these cubes are filled with unfinished knitting projects. The rest with unstarted projects, but that is a whole different story. First up to finish? Two vests for my boys, two sweaters for me, mittens for Don, and a label to be added to Nate's quilt.
Going backwards on health sounds like it isn't a positive thing, but I'm looking at is as going back to a level of fitness I've had in the past. I'm starting a "Preventing Diabetes" class through the hospital on Tuesday and dragging Don along with me. Hopefully that will help me lose some weight. And, we're going to try to get outdoors doing something active (starting today with snowshoeing) at least two weekends a month this year. My athletic goal is to run a 5K by the end of the summer.
Last, but not least, I'm going to try to get back to blogging. There was an NPR story recently about the value of writing in keeping a positive outlook (my take on the story).
ON MY NEEDLES
Hibernate, knitting with Brown Sheep Bulky. Pretty much an instant gratification sweater if there is one. I started on Christmas Day and have finished the body. I've got to go pick up some needles to do the sleeves (still can't find all my needles from the summer chaos).
Two vests for my boys, using Cascade Superwash which I'm loving -- it is a lovely, springy yarn.
Those are the only three active projects at the moment.
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