Still Going with the Papers

Well, I didn’t think it could be done, but I went through SEVEN (‘7’) boxes of old papers and pictures which were removed from the closet and cabinet.

Two newly purchased Rubbermaid bins (actually made in the USA) have been brought into service as the For Keeps storage containers.
They are now on the top shelf of the closet (only the top shelf, not the whole area), where I will forget again for years.

I began clearing children’s books off the shelf.
Even as a TA, I don’t really need all the kiddie books I own.
Yessirree, the first shelf is only half full now, with the rest in a box going to the public library’s book sale.

No, Wait!  what’s this? at the far right side?
a folder with a newspaper clipping dangling out of the corner

Aarrgghh!  I simply cannot face another keepsake right now.

Except this folder holds information about birth of Son #3.
Paper clipping with the father’s name written incorrectly as Gary.
The list of who brought in meals, with marks for Thank You notes.

with the picture sent out to friends and family

brothers Lucas and Joey meet their brother Christopher 3/31/85

I put the folder, still intact, back on the bookshelf for now.
I don’t think my foot would like it much if I had to climb up on the stool again so soon.

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family | 7 Comments

Feet and Heart Both Ache

My left heel hurt so bad this morning that I barely could walk to the bathroom.  I believe I must have overworked myself yesterday, what with riding my bicycle to breakfast, climbing up and down on the footstool during the afternoon to organize the closet, then in the evening, walking while carrying my lawn chair and crochet bag down and back for the Concert on the Quad.

I fear the plantar fasciitis has returned.
It is probably purely coincidence that I wrote about the same thing last year.  I hope to be able to delay buying new shoes for a month or so, closer to when I have a job for the beginning of school.
Meanwhile, I need to renew my vigor for the proper exercises.

Later in the morning, I went to the funeral service of a neighbor.  She changed houses only a month ago, moved a few blocks, so I still think of her as a neighbor.  She was not quite five years older than I am.  On July 4th, she had just left a family gathering and was driving her grandson to another place, and there was a terrible car accident.
According to the news article, she was pronounced at the scene.
The casket was closed, but a real nice photo was set on a stand nearby.
A good-size crowd, very diverse in looks, reasons for attending.
She was quite busy with her church, and the regular minister spoke a fine message, but he was obviously moved about how she is younger than he, and gone so suddenly.
Her grandson was at the service today, with some visible bruises.

New storage bins were purchased for the closet.  There will come a day when I do more than sort this stuff, maybe organize them into nice scrapbooks by year or subject.  I sure don’t want to wait until a funeral brings the need to trot out mementos.
But right now, the floor needs cleared for space, and some exercise equipment is a necessity by the time cold weather comes.

So the pile will get contained and stored on the high shelf awhile longer.
Seven boxes of papers are now One, and a smaller one for pictures.

Having been in the Library Club in high school, I’m having a very difficult time with all this.

Maybe someday, a little kid will ask what’s this stuff about?  because most of our recent happenings are on back-up discs and viewed on screen.
Will it matter to somebody in a hundred years?

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Personal | 5 Comments

Dan Got the Most Votes

My sister Denise sent an e-mail saying:

Dan just called me
and said Field & Stream called him
and that he won by 75 votes!!!
He did not know what the final total was.
He was very excited to be going to Springfield.
Please tell your friends thanks.

and Here I am!!  Thank You All for Your Support!!
nothing quite like having friends with computers……

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family | 1 Comment

Here’s an ‘Eight Things About Me’ Meme

Over at Webs Random Ideas I was tagged to write some answers for the Eight Things About Me meme.
Along with the Evil One, Decrepit Old Fool, and A View to an Uzz, I do believe I’ll join in.

* Players have to post these rules before we give you the facts.
* Players start with eight random facts/habits about themselves.
* People who are tagged need to write their own blog about their eight things and post these rules. At the end of your blog post, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names.*
Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged, and to read your blog.

~~When I look in the mirror today, I am surprised that my face is not 33 years old.  That first birthday, the summer after my dad died, I took it hard.  My mind couldn’t comprehend such loss.
Earning an Associate of Arts degree the same month I made it to age 50 is helping me to get back on track.  I hadn’t really planned on using up so many years from my body.

~~When I walked down the aisle for my wedding, the rain of an Autumn thunderstorm was pounding on the roof of the church.  I remember thinking I was glad for the darker quality in the pictures because the hideous yellow glass windows of the building messed up so many celebration photo opps.
The windows are still there, but carefully covered with blinds.

~~When I was in 3rd grade, I was done with my work, and it was almost time for recess.  In anticipation, I took my ball and jacks bag out and laid it on the corner of my desk.  My Aunt Sylvia was a seamstress/alterations expert for a department store, and she had sewn the bag for me out of a scrap of purple velvet.
Grandma used her long crochet hook to pull through a gold colored string to close it.
I loved that drawstring bag, and my friends and I had so much fun playing jacks on the playground.

My teacher was walking up and down the aisles making sure students stayed working.  She scooped up my purple bag with her hand, went up to her desk, opened the bottom drawer, and dropped my bag into it.  I don’t know why—I wasn’t bothering with it or disturbing my neighbors.

When it came time for recess, I asked for my jacks.  She said no, that I had to wait until school was over.

It was a long and dismal afternoon for me.

At the end of the day, I went up and waited beside her desk.  She opened her bottom drawer, but my bag of ball and jacks was not there.  She seemed as surprised as I was.

I cried all the way home.

My mother wrote a note for the teacher, about how if the bag got returned she would make sure I wouldn’t carry it to school to cause any more trouble (I never understood what trouble I was in anyway—the bag was just waiting there on my desk).
I never heard anything else about it.

My purple bag never did come back to me.

Since then, I crocheted two more purple bags w/ yellow strings

but I still wonder if the velvet one made someone else happy

~~Finding and reading the works of so many interesting blogging friends, and using my computer for news and research, I rarely read a real book now.  When I do, I prefer hardback.

~~My first job was when I was 12 years old, washing the floor for a neighbor lady.  I would get my own chores done at home first, then go to her house later on Saturdays.  I had to take all the chairs to the other room, pick up the scatter rugs and take them outside to shake hard.  I had to sweep every corner of the kitchen and small bathroom just off it.
On my hands and knees, using rag and bucket full of “hot, soapy ammonia water” filled from the bathtub faucet, I would wash the floors, then go over it again with rinse water.

While we waited for the floor to dry, we would sit in wingback chairs in the front room, having a treat of cookies and tea from a tray on the coffee table.  The tea had been waiting in a china pot under a crocheted cozy, but sometimes was lukewarm by the time we got to it.
When the floor was ready, I put back the rugs and chairs and got “paid for my time”.

Mrs. T would hand me $5 for this work of just over an hour.
This was high wages for a girl my age, plus tea and cookies was yummy.

~~My husband taught me to drive a clutch-and-stickshift car a few months after we got married.  I came to prefer to drive a car with a standard transmission, but I fear my sore wrists will protest.  It doesn’t matter right this minute, the car we own has an automatic, and we don’t plan on buying another car soon.

~~In our bedroom, I keep a small stool beside the chest of drawers.  When I get dressed in the morning, I sit on the stool to put on my socks, start my pants, then my shoes.
I had to figure out how to do this when I had a job beginning at 5:45am and didn’t want to bother my husband sleeping on the other side of the bed.

~~I don’t like Corelleware dishes because of the sound the utensil makes when I’m picking up the noodles or whatever food is there.  I much prefer melamine, because it meets the metal with a more pleasant tone.
When my father-in-law gave me a set of Corelleware dishes for a Christmas gift, I politely wrote a Thank You note, then put them into a side cupboard still in their box.
My husband brought them back out and insisted we use them, until one of our sons shoved a dish off the tray of the high chair.  The plate shattered into a million pointy sharp pieces.

These days, we have a couple Corelleware plates for use in the microwave, but all others are long gone without regrets.
If I could be dictator in the church kitchen, those Corelleware dishes would meet the same fate.

There, eight little stories.  Now I am supposed to Tag somebody.
Most of the folks I read out there in Blogland already have so much to say that they don’t need any prompting or making a list.

No, I think I’ll follow DOF’s lead and say
“if you feel like picking it up, enjoy!”

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Personal | 2 Comments

Today’s reading list

First place I go every morning is Comics Online.

Decrepit Old Fool has Questions Three about experiences in education.

Vitamin Sea has a wonderful way to cook burgers.  Actually, her family is having a pretty fun week, including a boat, so read some other writings as well.

Momma’s Corner celebrated the holiday with her family earlier in the week.  She has something to say about current events.

I’ve been back about six times to watch the kittens frolic at Truths and Half Truths.

I realize most of these are in my sidebar already, but a little extra touch is nice.

Also, about 40 hours left to Vote for Dan as the Total Outdoorsman.
A new picture is up, my sister (his mom) is the photographer.

Now I gotta get back to working papers through the shredder.

~~love and Huggs, Diane
ps with all those open links, I have the Comments closed

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Today’s reading list

Don’t Hesitate beside the Shredder

I’m tired, folks.
Really and truly at the bottom of energy.

All day long, with an eats break once in awhile, sitting between the shredder and a lopsided pile of dead tree products, I have been going through boxes and bags of our family history.

For Christmas 1999, we received 109 greeting cards, many with photos and newsletters tucked inside.
And all of them were stashed away, in a nice bundle, inside a plastic bag, taped shut with 1999 marked on it.
There were over 20 such bags in that cabinet I emptied.

There are some who would say I should save the fronts and send them off to some do-gooder outfit that makes new cards from old cards.
I’m on a personal mission here, which is to CLEAR SPACE Do Not Waste Thoughts so most of those cards were dropped into a box and hauled away to the town’s re-cycle bin on Walnut Street.

That word up there Do-Gooder reminds me of something that happened a couple weeks ago.  Chris and I were talking in the kitchen, and he asked me if that is a real word, or did I just make it up, since I am the only person he has ever heard to say it.

So I went around and asked some folks at Sunday School if they knew the meaning of the word.
Of the seven persons I asked, in age from their late 20s to early 60s, and who had grown up in 4 states and one province of Canada, all knew the general idea of a do-gooder.

My mental health and smart mother status remain intact.

Anyway, loaded into the car at sunset this evening, were two bins of shredded papers, a trash can of paper, a large box of greeting cards, and our usual container for cans and bottles.  When Husband wanted to put in another box of old paperback books, I had to say there was no more room, we’d have to go another trip later.

As Uzz said in the comments of the last post, it kills me to throw stuff away.  And yet, how long should I keep the bulletin for a wedding, when the marriage lasted a few months short of five years?
I had three sons of my own, and dozens of youngsters under my care for years.  There are only so many rainbows and butterflies, or space aliens drawn with crayons I can keep track of.

Some items are no-brainers.  Both our dads are long gone, but while we had them, they wrote chatty letters and sent pictures and post cards for the grandsons.  Just seeing their handwriting causes a tightness in my throat.
Their memories will get re-sorted and lovingly organized later.

Another trend I noticed was Thank You notes.  Usually for something I had crocheted as a gift.  Good Glory, I sure do keep busy with hook and thread.  However, I began having the troubles with carpel tunnel aches in the Fall of 1997, and so could not crochet.  My Thank You notes dwindled off for a year, until after surgeries on my wrists in the Summer of 1998.  The first item I crocheted was a cross for a wedding the last Saturday in September, and sure enough, a note came back awhile later. 
The notes for Husband are along the line of “thanks for your help with my computer” or “you did a terrific job with the program”.

He told me to shred them all, what’s done is over now.

Our computer correspondence must have picked up around 1995.  There are fewer contents in the bundles since then, considering many folks are sending e-mails.  I must admit, I do print out some of the nicest writings, but I hit Delete more often than I would if the message had come with a stamp on it.
Which is another place the Thank You note comes in—many are done with actual handwriting on a pretty card, so it seems a travesty to destroy a thing of beauty.

There are cars parked in front of the house, with their owners walking up the street to the city park for the fireworks.
I’d better get out to the end of our front walk and have a look, too.

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family | 2 Comments

Temporarily Empty Cabinet

Do you know why this cabinet shelf is now empty?

because I pulled out all the birthday and Christmas cards, and many, many, many other paper keepsakes of all our years of living here.
It’s probably not good to be keeping each and every one of these items.  They are in boxes next to the shredder machine.
Decisions not easy today.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Thinking | 2 Comments

Vote For Dan, then go to Concert on the Quad

My nephew, Dan Powell

is entered in the Total Outdoorman Challenge.
Would you please click your vote? which has been extended for another week.

This morning the calendar pages got turned or torn off.
I have six to do, so this is a meditative/reflective activity.

Good Grief—the 7th month of the year already! 07/02/07

The Monday evenings of July are pencilled in for Concerts on the Quad at ISU.  Tonight’s music is

33rd Illinois Volunteer Regiment Band

Description:  The band is an authentic reenactment of the actual Civil War Era band that was mustered at State Normal University in 1861.

so I’m excited to be able to carry my lawn chair and crochet bag down the street.  One of, if not the highest, favorite activity I do solo is to listen to music with a hook and yarn in my hands.

I’m working on cotton potholders.  Small enough to hold up off my lap, and easy to tote around during the busyness of Summer.  And they do seem to sell well at craft fairs.

Over the weekend, I wrote up and turned in my Resignation as the Hostess of the Fellowship Class during Sunday School, to be effective Labor Day in September.
It seems like 3 years has been a nice term of service.  Once public school begins, opening a paycheck job as a TA-Sub, I will probably want my weekends to be a bit more easygoing.

Kittycat Oscar is back to being his pesky self, and wants me to stop typing and start scratching his neck.
Now it’s Mahalia who isn’t eating much, and she is sleeping on dad’s side of the bed.
Not having children at home anymore, I have lots of time to be watching cat behavior.

Ah well, the washer is on its last spin, so I’d better be hanging the laundry out on the clothesline on such a lovely day.
Have a good one, yerselfs.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family | 1 Comment

Brights and Blue Granny Patch Blankie

This small afghan is 72 granny squares crocheted with a size I hook, from 100% acrylic 4-ply yarn.

click to embiggen
Most of the yarn was previously owned by Rachel, with the blue coming from my stash.

I was asked by a friend of her family to crochet another blankie for a grandson due later in the month.  All tests say the little one is a boy, yet much of the yarn has pink as a part of the color combination.  I tried to de-emphasize the pinks, even while using the yarn scraps.
It worked out quite nicely.

And I’ll tell you, the thing is WARM.  It’s a good thing the baby will grow into it for winter, because he won’t need it much before then.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Crochet | 11 Comments

Must be Strong Now

Woo Hoo!  I was able to give blood to the Red Cross today!
There is a new system for measuring the contents, so my iron was 12.6.  Even at a 12.5 I would be able—both fall within the old number of 38.
It was at the new Hampton Inn, so I walked across the parking lot to Hobby Lobby, just to see if anything nice might be on Clearance.  I did see some good stuff, but for the first time in quite awhile, I left that store empty-handed.

Onward to the church building, where I hoped to find a big table and be able to set out all my granny squares and arrange them all pretty.  Alas, not to be—the carpets were being cleaned.

I had to return a book to the public library, so I decided to use a table there.  The librarian approved, even helped to trade around a couple colors.  Now, all I have to do is stitch the dang thing together.

At home, I had lunch of leftover sloppie joe sandwich, and decided to take a nap.  Oscar hopped up beside me, and next thing I know, it’s 4:30 in the afternoon.
Well, the nurse said I should take it easy the rest of today.

The shredder machine is calling though.
Another 2 boxes of papers wait.

It was mentioned about storage space around here.  Well, we have closets—1 in each of 3 bedrooms, 2 in the hall, 1 in the bathroom, a double wide here in the study (formerly the dining room).  Then there is a big cabinet here under a buffet countertop, many shelf units assembled years ago, and some husband-made-built-to-the-wall bookcases. (I’m not going to take the time to count).  Plus 2 storerooms in the basement, and an attic.

There is plenty of space where stuff collects.  And after 24 years since we moved in, bunches of stuff did accumulate!  It’s gonna take me a month to get over my sentimental attitude to toss it out or arrange it.
Also, there is a suggestion to paint the walls a new color.
That’s another story.

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family | 2 Comments