Enabler

A few years ago, Husband made a walking stick for me from an old shovel handle.  He trimmed and smoothed it near the bottom so the end would fit into the little rubber tip he bought at the drugstore.  He drilled a hole near the top so I could braid a string and have a way to hang it.

Although I have used the stick before, I’ve been using it more often this week during my walks.  The sidewalks are covered with dry leaves and small branches, making my quick pace a bit questionable.
I like how the stick helps with support and balance.  There is no way it should be mistaken for a medical device, and yet some folks treat me more kindly while I’m carrying it.

Today I walked downtown to put some items into the blue mailbox in front of the post office.  I’m able to walk a bit faster, have more confidence when I have a sturdy aid in my hand.
Near the ISU Science Building, a girl was coming towards me on the same sidewalk.
As we got nearer, she paid me a compliment about the nice walking stick, using that proper name.  I said Thanks, and that my husband had done it for me.  She said I’m lucky.

I think so, too.  ~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family, Partner | 2 Comments

What goes in must come out

When I worked at the cafeteria, I was allowed, without charge, three 20 ounce soft drinks from the fountain per shift.  The tap water left a yucky aftertaste, and bottles of water were for putting into the vending machines.

I was the baker, and my work table was between the steam cabinet and the convection ovens.  Hot climate, short sleeves through the winter.  I had no trouble reaching the drink limit.

Even on days off, I would drink a couple cans of pop at home.  I’ve never learned to like the taste of diet drinks, and often get a headache and a crawly feeling on my skin when I do partake.

At the daycare job, there was a vending machine by the back parking lot.  Even though I drank a can of pop with my lunch, I would often stop at the machine to have something to drink on the drive home.

My weight and complexion were telling me that the habit wasn’t good for me.

And so, for the year 2001, as a New Year’s Resolution, I gave up cola.  Didn’t buy any more to bring to the house.  The vending machine at work had been taken away for electrical problems, and the director said it did not need to be returned.

For the first three weeks after cutting myself off, I was sluggish, bitchy, and my skin got worse than ever.  I was drinking twice as much water as I ever had of the pop.
It got better.  Water was able to quench my thirst.  I had a mug of tea at lunch.
My eczema and complexion got easier to manage.

My resolution held strong until April, when there was a week of Teacher Appreciation.  Free 2-liter bottles and a stack of cups all day long in the employee Break Room.

Trouble was, after drinking a glass, even diluted with ice, I got a bit dopey and drowsy for the afternoon.  Not good at all, there was work to be done, children to supervise.
My body had made adjustments, and now I tipped backwards.

The sick feeling lasted for several hours, and was so bad that the memory stayed with me until June.  I worked almost 4 hours of playground duty on a hot and humid day.  On the way home from work, I stopped to put gas in the car, and decided to go inside and get a cherry Pepsi from the fountain.  The rest of that evening, I was on the couch, dizzy and sleepy.

These days, it is a rare occasion when I ask for a cola drink.  Enduring the after effects would be too difficult.

I decided that a soft drink should be considered a gift every once in awhile, especially with popcorn and a video.  Not cola, but Goose Island, which is a high quality root beer, made with cane sugar.    I seek it out at a store near the church building, and even that place can’t keep it in full stock.

Sodapop has become a treat rather than a habit.
It seems I was getting on the right track because, according to a recent news article, Cola is bad for Women’s bones.

Until today when I was looking for the picture, I did not know there is a blog devoted to root beer.
I think I’ll go poke around over there.

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Reviews | 1 Comment

His contribution is fine and dandy

Today is Open Mic night at Latte Time.  I forgot until we were eating supper.  I checked several books of poetry on my shelf, but couldn’t find anything with quite the proper feeling that I would want to read in front of everybody.

Meanwhile, Husband was sitting at my computer.
I thought he was doing some kind of Administrator code.

A couple minutes later, he laid a sheet of paper in front of me.

“Here, Read this tonight” he said.

NOVEMBER
November made good on its promise
to cool the Earth’s fevered brow
To draw more sharply the distinction
between body and world.

We thought of winter
of death, and urgency
of the contemplative arts
now that the lawn would rest from its tyranny

Leonid meteor showers poked holes
in the thought that our world
was bounded by the sky above
where had they been?  These icy travellers.

We planned a feast,
we bundled up
In hushed tones nary a falling leaf
escaped the pull of gravity

Let it come!, November.
Let December follow
On the other side of Earth’s trackless orbit
we know, spring awaits, patiently.

~~George Wiman 2006

Turns out, there were so many good musicians at the shop that I just sat over in the corner and crocheted two bookmarks in Christmas colors.
I didn’t read anything out loud, so this is the world debut of a poem which seemed to just flow out of his fingers.

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Poetry, Reviews | 2 Comments

Bookmarks Done, alas No Picture

Well, Folks, I took at least six pictures of the latest 8 crocheted bookmarks.  However, the camera and chip were not communicating properly.  The chip is blank.
Rest assured, they are quite lovely.
I delivered them to the Senior Center, where they were oooed and aahhed over quite a bit.  Along with the baby afghan, they are resting in a box marked Completed Projects, ready for the craft sale coming the last day of this month.  Also in that box are 3 knitted scarves, two knitted hats and several ornaments done by others.  It is one of many boxes back in the storeroom.

I’m having bunches of fun with the Needlework Group.  We have a time of show ‘n tell at the beginning to let everybody see what we worked on all week.
There is much chatter, catching up news and opinions.  Once we get into the actual work or lessons, not so much noise, just the occasional sentence or so.  A nice couple hours with pleasant people.

Today I was helping someone who hasn’t crocheted in a long time to try her hand with the bookmarks.  She wants to make a bunch for Christmas.  While she did her rows, I worked the entire center post for a lacy cross.  She got a bit defeated, but since she knew how to crochet before, I told her the memory and joy will come back with practice.  And to remember how much knitting she does, which I can’t do at all.  My fingers do tend to fly with the hook, so I told her to stop comparing herself to me!
We made a copy of the pattern, I gave her my phone number and e-mail.  She says she doesn’t want to be sitting and crying come Saturday afternoon and then have to wait until next Thursday!

I told her my secret about putting on some soft music while I work, then I simply have to stop when the music does.  Partly so that the chores get done, but mostly so that I do some movement of other body parts!

This, plus an unexpected mid-afternoon coffee break with Husband were the highlights of my day.
Now I gotta figure what we’ll have for supper.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Crochet | 4 Comments

Sunny Morning outside my window

NOVEMBER
I am rich today with autumn’s gold,
All that my covetous hands can hold;
Frost-painted leaves and goldenrod,
A goldfinch on a milkweed pod,
Huge golden pumpkins in the field
With heaps of corn from a bounteous yield,
Golden apples heavy on the trees
Rivaling those of Hesperides,
Golden rays of balmy sunshine spread
Over all like butter on warm bread;
And the harvest moon will this night unfold
The streams running full of molten gold.
Oh, who could find a dearth of bliss
With autumn glory such as this!

  ~~Gladys Harp

Posted in Poetry, Reviews | 5 Comments

It’s as old as our marriage

When we first got married, we were in a small townhouse apartment a little way off campus.  Our furniture was referred to as Early American Attic, because we used whatever anyone wanted to carry our way get rid of and feel generous.

There was a kitchen table with bright blue legs and a round white top, a few non-matching chairs.  An olive green two-seater couch commonly called a love seat.  I nursed all my babies there at one time or another.  My mother gave us an old washer, which nestled into a closet beneath the stairs, and I hung our clothes on a couple folding drying racks or a line strung across a corner of the kitchen.
There was a desk in the living room, and a metal shelf unit to hold books.  Probably a few other things, like my cedar chest, and of course the wedding gifts.
I had a twin bed almost as old as I was, but we put it into the second bedroom because it seemed there was always someone needing a place to stay for awhile.

Someone from church gave us a crib for the baby, and someone else gave us a queen-size mattress, and yet another person gave us a gold print fitted sheet.  We thought we were doing pretty good, not actually sleeping directly on the floor.

This little set-up lasted from October until March.  My father-in-law was on Spring Break and so he drove down with a pickup truck full of furnishings.  Their divorce was in the works, and he was emptying the house.
He carried in matching coffee and end tables.  Something my husband lovingly referred to as “the donkey” which looked to me like a storage cabinet.  Other things I can’t remember, getting untied and uncovered.
From where I was sitting nursing the baby, it looked like the apartment was gonna get crowded real fast.
That night, Dad noticed we were sleeping on the mattress on the floor.  He stayed in the creaky old twin bed, and said he was fine.

The next day, my father-in-law said it wasn’t right, us being without a bed.  Husband had to go to work, so we took the baby carseat out of his car and put it into Dad’s truck and off went the three of us to go shopping for a bed.

I didn’t know the town very well, since our primary focus was the college campus.  And I had never been furniture shopping before in my life.  And it didn’t seem quite right that I should be looking for a bed with a man who was not my husband.  Being from different states (and a story for another time) my father-in-law was still a stranger to me.  I had been in the same place with him only once before, and that was the church for the wedding.
But he was determined newlyweds should have a proper bed.  I could see the connections for where my husband gets his stubborn attitude.
Dad spotted a sign for a SEARS store, and so that’s where we ended up.

As I mentioned, I don’t know about furniture.  We looked in a huge room full of beds, and sat on the edge of mattresses, let the baby crawl across, and Dad asked about delivery.
I told him I thought the one with the round knobs on the headboard was nice.  Next thing I know, the order is getting rung up, I’m giving my address and directions, Dad paid the tab in full.

It was a bed bought on a whim at a chain store.  Dad said it would not have been his first choice, but he was under time pressure for the trip, and he didn’t really know my tastes.
The delivery guys got it upstairs and mostly put together.  It had a consistent squeak not welcome by newlyweds in a building with thin walls.  And the round knobs weren’t such a good idea either, because of their close proximity to that same wall.

We moved out of that apartment a few months later.  When Husband and a friend put the bed back together, a couple of the sturdiness problems got fixed.

The bed got moved to yet another apartment, and then finally here to this house.  It has supported 5 mattresses during its 26 years.  We noticed the last couple months there was a sagging towards the middle, and a leg/rail connection was wobbly.

Saturday, Husband made preparations for more repairs.  He had to take the mattress and boxspring away, put on his breathing filter, sweep and vacuum cubic feet of dust and debris.  I don’t know what all he had to do—I was banished from the room for the duration.  I put most of the bedding through the laundry, but that was my only contribution.  Chris says he admires his dad for fixing an old bed rather than buying a new one.  Remember I did mention the stubborn attitude genes.

Late in the afternoon, Husband left the house.  I sneaked into our bedroom.  The door was closed tight to keep the cats out.  The windows were left open to dissipate the fumes.

This is what I saw.


Do Not Disturb bed until 8 pm (Epoxy setting)

At 8:30 pm, we went in together and made up the bed.
Trying it out, there are not so many noises as it was making before, but there is a new one we can’t find its source.  The spot under my shoulders provides support, nice and comfy.
The Temperpedic mattress feels like it is getting treated properly again.

There are many references to the marriage bed, but I’m pretty sure this is the first I’ve seen the word ‘epoxy’ written for a note on mine.

And may it give us enough time to expand the budget to include a whole new bed.  No matter how good the repairs, I don’t want to put up with the noises for another 26 years.  At least the ones coming from the furniture itself.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Family | 3 Comments

Mint Blue Baby Afghan

This is the latest crochet project.

Description: color is a mint blue, 100% cotton thread, double crochet with a triangle edging.  Finished size is 32” by 33”.
Off a bit in the left of the picture, you can see the squares for the bookmark I’m working on.  I’d like to get a few markers done for the sale, then start on a Christmas project.

I have mentioned before that I am able to attend a Knitting and Crochet Group which meets at the Senior Center.  Someone who closed a knitting machine business donated a box full of cones of cotton thread to the center.  In fact, the back room is full of donations.  It’s almost like being in a store, all the shelves full of yarns.  The Group Leader announced that nobody should buy yarn for awhile, just use whatever is available and get creative!
Actually, the orange thread for the bookmarks came from storage.  I haven’t seen that bright orange at the craft stores for awhile.

When I saw this sample on a 2 pounder cone, I knew it would work up into a nice blanket.
The bottom of the cardboard cone is marked by the manufacturer

The Knittery
Walker, MN 56484
Cone Yarn Capital
date 25APR85

Yes, indeedy, I made something nice from 21 yr old thread.  Everywhere I carried it, someone remarked about the pretty color.  At the coffee shop, one lady even reached out to touch it and say how soft it is.

It will be going to the craft sale happening in a few weeks sponsored by the Center.  There will be so many nice things there!  Except for the knitted baby hats.  Those were donated to the Nursery at the hospital.
We packed up almost 60 the other day.
I would have loved to be the person who got to deliver them to the nurse’s station.  As it is, I have to be satisfied that I got to count them into the box.  And I didn’t have my camera with me at the time, so I can’t show you!

I’ll be going now.  There’s shopping and laundry.  It is Saturday.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

 

Posted in Crochet | 3 Comments

We’re Still Neighbors

This is Saturday, the morning when Husband and I go out for breakfast.  For one reason or another, we haven’t been able to go for the last 3 Saturdays.  Even yesterday, I was thinking, “Wow, tomorrow we’ll be able to have a date with pancakes!” and last evening, just before we settled in to watch our show NUMB3RS, my spouse looked at me and hopefully asked “Is there any reason we can’t go out for breakfast tomorrow?” so I knew he has missed our routine as well.

We got to sleep in an extra 45 minutes after the usual weekday alarm clock time.  Nice, very nice.  I take a leisurely shower and it’s still not 8 o’clock yet.  We are out the door, hands on the handles of the car, when our neighbor pulls up.

He seems much more gracious this morning.
Maybe Saturday time is good for everybody.
He tried to apologize for treating my mister so abruptly the other evening.

I told him I tried to go outside and talk to the guy, explain that he was doing too much and we would take care of our yardwork ourselves, but he didn’t seem to understand.  And yes, he did come back again and tried to rake some more, but finally left.
Then he says the fella he hires to do these little odd jobs is homeless, and a bit off in his head, iffen ya can understand that.

And Yes, after a small matter of neighborliness, breakfast tasted even better.

The yard is doing just fine today.
Husband says he will run the mower with the mulching blade soon, so that will take care of the leaves and some of the sawdust left from the tree removal.  We prefer to leave a bit of cover over the winter for birds and other critters, so most care of the yard gets done in the spring.

Thank You for your concerns.  One would think I have learned by now that such matters will eventually get sorted out.
Especially when about leaves on the ground in autumn.

~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Thinking | Comments Off on We’re Still Neighbors

My Knickers in a Knot

You wouldn’t believe what’s going on!

For the last couple hours, I’ve been hearing a dang-blasted leaf-blower being used by the maintenance man hired for the rental house next door, which actually is owned by the pain in the derrierre realtor who lives down the street.

I came over here to the computer, put up the blinds.

This is what I see:

Note the nice semi-circle away from that garage and into the part of the yard I should be raking soon.

And this one taken with the other hand stuck out the window

See that nice clear driveway?
It’s because the brown leaves are blown onto our property!

There’s a sweet lady, retired schoolteacher who rents the place.  She doesn’t have much say in how and who does the upkeep.

I’ll tell ya, I’ve been attending the Mennonite Church for years, but I’m not sure I can be peaceable about this.
Although past experience tells me that battling with the owner is a lost cause.

Maybe we’ll get a wind storm tonight, so by tomorrow, nobody will know the difference.

This is picture proof it happened!

~~love and Huggs (I sure need some) Diane

Posted in Thinking | 6 Comments

Who Has My Name?

This says it is for entertainment value only.

HowManyOfMe.com
Logo There is:
1
person with my name
in the U.S.A.

How many have your name?

Only Myself has my name in the whole USA?
  with 330 people having the same last name.
Hmm, maybe I should go Google myself.
~~love and Huggs, Diane

Posted in Personal | 2 Comments