Wednesday, April 02, 2025

Probably too sensitive

 I mean, I know I am, people have always told me I am.

Right now it's hard, for a couple reasons. For one thing, the having to go to different buildings to teach is just a drag, especially in the spring rainy season. I never appreciated how good it was to be able to walk less than 300 feet, all indoors, from my office to my classroom. I could come in in the morning and park and not have to worry about moving my car or finding parking somewhere else. My building is a modern building and it has plentiful restrooms (and PARITY in restrooms, as many women's as men's). And the water fountains work (they do not, in some of the other buildings, or the plumbing has been deemed unsafe for potable water in the old fountains). And you also have to remember everything you might need - or do without it. There's no "I gotta run back to my office, I was going to hand your exams back but I left them on my desk"

So it just wears on me.  

But also, other things.

In another group I am a part of, one of the members is having issues. Apparently they have some either undiagnosed or undermedicated emotional issues, and they're kind of going off the rails - the sort of "everyone is against me, everyone is being rude to me" and they're firing off e-mails to the whole group. It's not an issue I caused in any way, I am not involved with the thing that upset them, and I furthermore have no authority to do anything to fix it. 

but they keep e-mailing everyone. I finally set up a filter, it really was that distressing, and in some cases there were eight coming in an hour. I asked a more senior member what we should do and her response was that we should ignore the e-mails and some in the group are trying to get the person help. But still, it is distressing to me - when this person is medicated, they are fine and I like them as a person. But now I'm gonna feel like it's walking on eggshells because I don't want them to go off on ME and think of me as an enemy. 

And another thing at work, today - I have a couple students in class who have been difficult. I've had to speak to them several times about being loud in class (side conversations, and, more commonly, CLEARLY texting each other and then laughing about it. As a result, I feel like *I'm* the target of what they're saying (it could be) and it throws me off my game and it's also.....just rude. It's loud enough it disturbs the students near them. So I keep reminding them, one day it was rather sharply said because I was TIRED and I was HURTING and it was like the third time I had to do it that day.)

well, one of them was coming down the hall and griping in to their phone - "I'm on my way to lab. I hate lab. I really hate lab" (the student sees me coming out of my office to go to my other class) and loudly adds, twice "I HATE BIOLOGY"

and yeah, I know, I take things too personally. But right in that moment - when I was tired and hurting and had been rushing around (taught two lectures, was leading a field lab, was unsure about the field lab because we'd had heavy rain and I was afraid the place would be muddy and difficult to sample in), it just hit me and deflated any confidence I had. Oh, I didn't react to the student, and they may never even come back to lecture (they skip A LOT). 

But the other, more clear-headed thing: why major in something you hate? I mean, yes, granted, maybe in that moment they were frustrated, but I don't remember ever saying I hated my whole major. I might have said, like "organic chemistry lab is super frustrating" or "I don't really see the point of me having to learn this specific thing for what I want to do, but okay"

But I have also dealt with people where, when I was doing something like career counseling and I asked them what they got interested in or excited about in biology, and their response is "nothing" (In some cases it comes out that they were told certain jobs in biology paid well, or they somehow thought they'd enjoy it once they got to med school or something). But like I remember I would have said stuff like "how plants work!" and "the different kinds of insects in areas" and things like that. In fact, I had a little difficulty choosing a major because I also liked French and English and linguistics....though I do think I chose the best one for me. 

But I also realized another thing: my immediate assumption when I get the sense someone dislikes me is to wonder what I'm doing wrong, what I could change that might make me more likeable (or: more likeable to them). Intellectually I know not everyone will like  a person, and I do have some people I am uncomfortable around or that rub me the wrong way. But I do wonder if maybe my "gee maybe I need to tone down my specific brand of weirdness and become more Normal" is a response to having been unpopular as a kid, where some of the teachers actually seemed to obliquely hint that if I were more "like" the other kids, they wouldn't harass me. 

I don't know. I struggle some times with human relationships because I dislike rejection and I also like to keep a lot of myself "back" because I'm afraid if people find out too much about me, they will use it against me (another thing that happened when I was a kid; confiding in people sometimes meant they just had ammunition against me). 

But I wish I could break through and go from "they don't like me, therefore something must be wrong with me and I have to figure out what it is and work to change it" to "they don't like me, that's their loss" or even "they're being rude to me not because I deserve it but because they're acting like a jerk" (seriously: being flipped off by a random driver if, like, I am not driving fast enough to suit them - even if I'm going the speed limit or a tiny bit over - it can ruin my whole day)

I also realize that lately, most of my human interactions have either been unpleasant (you see a couple examples here) or someone needing something from me. And I don't know how to get more "good" interactions, or ones that aren't "talking shop." I probably identify with my career too much (an offhand comment on, of all things, Monday night's NCIS, made me sit up and go "oh no. That's ME") and I really do need more "outside" things where I can interact with people without doing "work." But I'm not sure even how to do that! I can't find just-plain social groups here that meet when I'm free. 

That said, bringing the van back, I pulled in to try to park it (the parking area for the motor pool is TERRIBLE because some of the area was taken over for tennis courts, and it's too small) and the fifteen passenger vans are always hard to park. A man in a pickup pulled in in front of me (I didn't realize who it was at first) and it meant I couldn't easily fit into the place I wanted to go into. But then he got out of the truck and I saw it was the chief of campus police (whom I know slightly). He had come back from a funeral (our county sheriff died suddenly last week) and he motioned for me to roll my window down, and when I did, he said "do you want me to park that for you so you can just drop off the mileage sheet and go" and I thanked him and said yes - because I know he could do it better than I could, and anyway, if he clipped one of the other vans it wouldn't be MY fault then. (but of course he got it parked just fine). But yeah, that did make my day a little better, but I seem to experience too little of that sort of thing.

 

And yes, I realize some of this is that I'm over tired and my allergies are bad and it's the middle of the semester, and there are a lot of bad things happening, but it's just hard and human interactions have mostly not been great. 

Tuesday, April 01, 2025

Ahead of curve?

 Or, "I was doing it before it was cool, or even before it was seen as 'okay'"

 

CNN: Adults can sleep with stuffed animals, and in fact, it might even be a good thing 

I admit this was something I downplayed/pretended not to do for years (in college, I kept the couple I had stuffed under the pillow) because when I was growing up, it was seen as "abnormal." "Normal" people gave up stuffed toys somewhere before adolescence, and if they kept one around it was "I might give it to my kid some day" or "I keep it ironically"

But more and more we are learning that a lot of us are anxious people, and there are a number of little things we can do that relieve that anxiety and *don't hurt anyone else*

Stuffed animals are this. I have a lot. I've always had them. The low point in having them around was college/first-time grad school when I wanted to seem adult and sophisticated and thought "I don't want people to laugh at me if they come to my apartment" (almost no one ever DID come to my apartment)

Eventually, I just gave up. Realized I'd always be alone, realized few people ever come to visit, so I put more out and especially now I've bought and made a lot more. They're *everywhere* in my house now - I have a lot lined up on the back of the sofa and I have a chair with a number of them (including a couple of the iterations of Garfield - the vintage 80s-style plushie I bought from an Etsy seller when I couldn't find the one I had had and figured I had disposed of it, the "Gorf" that is a bootleggy version of one of the recent movie Garfields, and now a "Baby Garf" that was apparently from a poorly-received CGI movie that had his origin story. I know nothing about the movie in question but the baby Garf is awfully cute.)

I also have a lot on my bed - mostly Ponies, yes, I am still a fan, but also some of the Bluey dogs now (including the Bluey I crocheted) and a few other random animals (including Francisco, the maned wolf I ordered as a "symbolic adoption" from WWF a couple years ago). 

I have a couple big ones - I still have Pfred the horse and the big polar bear I bought (and perhaps, I should try running at least that one through a gentle cycle on the machine; I do worry about dust mites and what they might do to my allergies).  The big ones serve almost like "crib bumpers" (back in the day, people used to put padded things up around the edge of cribs so the kid wouldn't bonk their head on the wood or something) and it does make me feel less alone. 

But yeah. When I finally gave up trying to be so "adult" and said to myself "where's the harm in hugging a stuffed animal to your chest when you sleep?" it did make things better. I dare say having them around helped me make it through the pandemic - for a while I was doing a little "stuffie of the day" post on Twitter - I'd get one of the animals and just hold it while I wrote stuff or graded stuff or whatever in my wfh set up. 

I do hope, as we seem to be going backwards as a society in compassion to one another (I have read many stories on how people seem to feel empowered again to use what we now sometimes call the "r-slur" (an old word for an intellectually challenged person) again, and that hits like a slap, because I remember kids calling me and others that in grade school and it was unpleasant), that we don't decide to once again mock coping mechanisms that, as I said, hurt no one and help the person using them.

Monday, March 31, 2025

two cable turns

 Working on a sweater where you're doing it in the round (so: the entire body circumference in every row) goes slowly. This is the current vest I'm using for invigilating knitting (but also knit some on it tonight)


 The yarn is a recycled polyester (they claim "old water bottles" but I don't know). It's not as unpleasant-feeling as you'd think, and I like the color. It was sort of an impulse purchase about a year ago at JoAnn's (sigh). 

The pattern I'm using is the British School Slipover from Cheryl Oberle's Folk Vests. So far, it's a pretty straightforward pattern.

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Got the painting

 I DID need to go out yesterday, I needed a day away from the stuff that had been worrying me and a day looking at other things. 

The first thing I did was go to Michael's. I asked the young man at the door and as I was explaining about the painting a woman walked over and said, "I'll walk back with you and see if it's done" (I had explained I knew the framer wasn't in yet for the day, but "it was supposed to be done and I never got a call...")

She apologetically said - after looking my name up - "oh, we marked down we had called...but it was the day our phone system was messed up so likely you didn't get it." It was the 15th, so I would have been sitting on a train, anyway (probably stuck in Poplar Bluff). So no harm, no foul.

 They did a good job. It's something to see the art you did professionally framed. I had to take a peek when I got it back to the car

 


I'm glad I chose that frame, not only is it a good color match but stylistically it works; it looks like weathered board-fence wood for a picture that could be West Texas.

After I got it home I took down the old reprint of a Pathe records poster I had up next to my piano, and hung it.


 Originally that was going to be a temporary home, but I like it there. And it's really nice to be able to see it in the room where I spend most of my waking hours. 

Here's another view, you can see it's next to the little shelves I have up, one is where I keep my Mirabel doll


 I also bought a book of simple cardigan patterns; I have some stash yarn I could eventually turn into cardigans. I'm also more and more feeling like "physical copies of things like patterns are good to have" 

I also went to Ulta - I needed more of the concealer I use and I wanted a new lipstick. I didn't go into JoAnn's but they do have a STORE CLOSING banner up and yeah, I'm still sad about that. (I admit the best case scenario might be Ulta moving into that space and expanding; the store near me is smaller than some I've been in). Or if we could get a  Barnes and Noble, that would be a little consolation. (There's a Books A Million in the same strip mall as the Michael's, but it's really gone downhill in the past year)

On my way out, I contemplated: grab lunch now, or try to get through the Albertson's and then eat at home. I decided to get lunch, since then I'd be able to go to the yarn shop, too, and I want to support them even if I have waaaaaay more yarn than I need (then again: yarn brings joy and I've dug out a few skeins recently from deep in the stash and planned projects with them)

I decided to try Cracker Barrel but when I went in there was already a MINIMUM 25 minute wait, and, ugh.

Going out - driving on a surface street that was basically two lanes each way, not an interstate, just a regular road going between shopping areas - I was nearly sideswiped not once, but twice, by large pickups (two different ones). First, they were going 10-15 miles per hour faster than the flow of traffic (I was in the righthand, "slower traffic" lane; they were in the lefthand one). And then they seemed to swerve over even closer to me,, like practically on the paint line dividing the lanes.

So I wonder: just really lousy impatient drivers, or is this a new person-in-a-giant-pickup-decides-to-act-like-a-jerk-to-people-in-slightly-smaller-vehicles behavior? I'm hoping it's just the first but it's hard to know; you see more instances of unpleasant behavior out in public now. 

Anyway. I got safely to Denison. Got to the Katy Depot where the knit shop is. I spotted this on a siding next to the building and thought it was nice, so I grabbed a photo:


 Yeah, I kind of like trains, and the old ones are interesting to see. I don't think this one actively runs; it looks like the windows are painted out. And few real trains use cabooses anymore; I assume it's there for the nearby railroad museum. 

The owner of the shop was in; she knows me by name, which is somehow a comforting thing. I decided to get yarn for a pair of the Huldre Socks (Ravelry link). I thought I MIGHT have had a dark brown or dark green for the background; I wanted to get the cream for the colorwork and the braid. I asked about the cream yarn; she showed me a couple choices including a West Yorkshire Spinners' yarn, which is both pretty affordable and well-made, so I grabbed that, and then saw a dark forest green in the same line, so once I finish one of the sock pairs I'm working on, I can start those. I also bought a skein of the special "limited edition" Dream in Color colorways - one called Kiss Me which is various shades of turquoise (from very dark to very light) with some reddish pink. I had seen it in the e-mails that the shop sends out (and mentioned it to the owner when I paid for the yarn) so yeah, I guess those e-mails work as advertising. 

Then I went to CJ's, which is a little coffee place that does a few sandwiches, including  a "breakfast sandwich" that is a croissant with scrambled eggs and cheese and meat if you want it, and it's surprisingly good for something so simple, so I had that and a hot tea and felt a little better after the upset of the bad drivers.

And then I got to Albertson's and got supplies ahead (including blueberry pie filling for a simple cake I made for today's potluck), and then home. 

But it's really nice to have my painting back and have it up on the wall. (I admit to vacillating between being kind of proud that even as a rank amateur I could do something that good, and feeling like "yeah it's not really very good at all" but that's how I am about EVERYTHING I do)

Thursday, March 27, 2025

I'm still sad

 (Some of this is a repost from stuff I said on Demon Trolls over at Ravelry)

 I'm frankly surprised at how the loss of JoAnn Fabrics' has affected me. Yes, I know: it was a big box store, it was run by greedy corporate overlords, it was full of cheaply made stuff from overseas that may not have been made under the most humane conditions for those making it.

 And yet. I could walk in those doors and relax a bit. There were nice and fun things to look at and to consider buying.

There isn't/wasn't a lot here for me that I specifically like, that feels aimed at me and my demographic. For me, losing JoAnn’s is mainly losing a place to GO. There’s not a lot locally for “me.” Where I live, the biggest activities seem to be hunting/fishing/casino going, none of which I enjoy. Or it's doing stuff with/for kids or grandkids, and I don't have that. So every 4-6 week’s I’d take a jaunt to JoAnn’s to just look at supplies. Yes, I bought stuff. Yes, I have stuff I may never use. But it was nice to go and look.

It was just......it was like my Tiffany's, to make a movie reference. To me, it felt like  a place I could go where nothing very bad would happen to me. Sometimes the grocery store even is bad - I've been in stores when a couple was having a giant fight, or a parent was abusing their kid (and I found out for sure that got called in). Once, I was checking out at the Kroger and was told that I should take my stuff and get to my car as quickly as reasonable because there was someone who was suspected of carrying a gun walking around over by the meat case (and yes, they said their security was on the way, but still). More and more the world feels unsafe to me, JoAnn's at least still felt somewhat safe*

 

(*If even, like everywhere else, that "safety" is an illusion)

It had stuff I can't get anywhere else now**. Michael's doesn't have fabrics. The quilt shops generally don't have fabric OTHER than calicos. There are some notions and supplies that I can't get without mail ordering now. I sometimes made stuffed toys and it was a place to get the fur and other fabrics I needed. I guess if i want that I mail order now. I have a Michael’s but it’s a VERY small one (currently no fabric, and not that much yarn). So it’s a big thing lost. Fortunately I do have a LYS but they are also small and mostly focus on the fingering weight yarns, so if I want to make, for example, amigurumi out of worsted weight acrylic, I have to go to Michael’s or wait on mail order if they don’t have the right color.

 

(** there IS a Hobby Lobby but both for political reasons, and for the fact that the last time I was in there some years ago all they had was their own cheapie brand of yarn - no Paton's, no Lion Brand, no Bernat - I won't shop there.)

JoAnn’s was where I was usually able to find Simply Knitting (The UK version) and for a few short months they had a glorious book section. I did notice a decline beginning a while back - maybe around 2018. When the “Adult Coloring Book” fad hit - I walked in one day and almost their entire book section was coloring books! At the time I thought “huh, so are they just admitting that we’re all so exhausted we don’t have the energy to actually craft, and we color instead now? Or is it that these books have a higher profit margin because they don’t need technical editing and they get “used up”?"

And yeah, they did seem to carry more and more home decor stuff (though I did buy some of that - several of the seasonal doormats I use came from there, and some of the little garden flags I have). And they carried toys and other tchotckes. I figured, maybe that brought in more money and helped subsidize  the craft supplies. 

I didn’t buy a lot of fabric there recently. I don't sew clothing any more, really.  I did use them as a source for cheap quilt backings (when they had good sales or were clearancing “weird” fabric) and for the solid-color Kona I use for sashing. I can still get that but it may take waiting on mail order or getting to a (more distant to me than Jo Ann’s) specialty quilt shop.

And also notions: I have a wal mart and they carry some but it’s spotty what they have and a lot of them are not the same quality as even what JoAnn’s used. And buttons! They were my go-to for buttons. I guess when I knit cardigans now I will need to mail-order.

I also suspect we don’t ever again see another craft chain start up - it will be larger, wealthier, more-populous areas having the specialty store; those of us in the boonies or less-prosperous locations will have to mail order or make do with what wal mart carries. 

 It's hard not to feel that "once again the middle is being hollowed out; the very wealthy will get whatever they want, but the rest of us, even people who could afford stuff, will get the bare minimum of wal-marts and dollar stores." New sumptuary laws, perhaps - only instead of being forbidden certain things, they're just not made available to the "non aristocracy"

it just makes me sad. It makes me sad in a deeply sad making time for me (I won’t get political, but: entirely possible the whole “industry” I am in (higher ed) closes down and I may be forced into an early retirement, at a time when finding a new job will be even harder). It feels like another loss in and around dozens of others - we lost one of the big specialty quilt shops in the next city over because their landlord tripled the rent on them. And yeah, I still feel sad about Quilt Asylum closing. The owner said "it's time to retire given they did this to us" - the landlord tripled their rent. And okay, I admit a tiny bit of bitter, salty joy when I go down to Denison and see that building with a "For Rent" sign on it still. Didn't find so very many golden eggs when you cut that goose open, did you, hey, landlord?


But I do wonder what's in the future. Will there be anything new, anything good? The only shops that have opened in my town are thrift stores recently and while I know some folks love the hunt, and other folks love getting inexpensive clothes for their growing kids, I also look at it and the phrase "economic indicator" flashes in my brain - that will, shortly, we have to be handing around the same pair of falling-apart jeans because there are none that are affordable or available any more? And are hobbies other than staring at screens just going to die? It's hard for me not to feel kind of "it's 2020 all over again" - where I wondered  if there was going to be anything left to come out to.

And yes, I know people talk about "remaking" the world, but the remaking I've seen thus far in 2025 seems to have made most things worse for many people.  


Anyway. I have Saturday free enough (I still have to bake a cake or something for a potluck on Sunday) and I think I'm going to go to the yarn shop (though I don't *need* any yarn) to be there and to maybe buy something WHILE I STILL CAN (because I now assume every good thing that I personally value is now doomed) and I will go to the Michael's and REALLY HOPE my framing job is both completed and still there (they have never called me, I hope they didn't lose my painting) and to the Ulta - because I need some stuff. Yes, Ulta is in the same strip mall as JoAnn's and they may still be doing the clearance sale, but I won't go in - I prefer to remember it as it was before the vultures of private equity descended. 


Maybe there will be "new dreams, maybe better dreams, and plenty" but more and more I am wondering instead if ..... this is all there is. If the good things for my life are over now and it's just going to be a continued tide of losses big and small. I wish I didn't feel that way, but...it seems there's too much evidence for me to be convinced other wise.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

and it's Uma

 The other thing I completed over break was that unicorn kit I got for free with the voucher I earned at Michael's. 

The box said it should take about 8 hours, and lol at that, it took me a couple days. For something so small, it's pretty fiddly


 I will say there was enough yarn (sometimes kits do run short) and the instructions were clear (and came in both French and English, though I suspect the French may have been autotranslated, the yarn was called "laine 100% polyester" which is funny to me because "laine" is wool. And yes, it's common to refer to knitting yarn as "wool" (or at least in UK writing it is) but "polyester wool"? (you can also use "fil" (thread) for yarn, and so "Fil 100% polyester" might make more sense)

Everything else needed was in there, but I used my own size E hook because the one supplied with the kit didn't have an ergonomic handle and I really prefer those. 

The mane and tail use the same method of "locking" in the hair that I used on the My Little Ponies I have crocheted - where you do something not unlike the half-hitch knot in latch-hooking to anchor the yarn around one of the stitches on the head or the butt. 


 She came named Uma (on the kit) but I kept the name because I kind of like it for her. Those are two little crocheted flowers you make for her to wear on her head. Her horn is made of the same multi yarn as the hooves and the snount, and then you use strands of different colors of yarn for the mane and tail

She is not very large, as you can see:


 

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Tuesday afternoon things

 * My mom's phone is back. A tree had come down on some of the equipment Frontier had, and it took clearing that up. She had it back midday Monday. 

I will admit the "not being able to reach her for a bit" perhaps brought up a bit of old trauma for me and also reminded me there may be a day when I try to call her and can't get her....ever again.

* I mowed the lawn for the first time today. Well, it was more a "ceremonial" mowing - mainly to knock down some of the weeds going to seed, and to get the deadnettles cut before they got their usual powdery mildew (which I'm allergic to). It took the entire charge on my mower to get through stuff - some of the weeds in the backyard had gotten tall. (The grass doesn't take over until it's a bit warmer)

I'm hearing thunder now and it's supposed to rain the rest of the week, so I'm glad I got it done. 

* Darwin (the cat) was back in again today. He's really grown


 Even though it's been a couple months, he remembered me. His owner said he perked up and started looking around when he heard my voice coming down the hall.

He is very soft. He started twining around my legs when I was petting him. 

He's probably going to be a good-sized cat; he's not quite six months old and he's fully as big as one of my parents' last cats was when she was an adult.

And his ears are proportionally big on him, which suggests to me he'll get larger yet:


 It made me happy that he remembered me and was still my friend. (Later on I came down the hall again and he was hanging out in a "tunnel" that was formed by the tables stacked up from one of the classrooms being renovated, and he came out when he heard me and said "Mrrrp?" and I had to pet him again)

* I'm currently reading The Poison Squad, which is about early food-safety regulations. It's fascinating but also hair raising - I guess another way little kids just randomly died a hundred or more years ago was that they wound up getting milk that had had formaldehyde put in it to mask that it was going bad. Or candy that had been colored with some kind of toxic heavy-metal compound. And I guess you really, really could not trust food stuffs to be pure, not like we can now. (Even given periodic recalls). 

I really hope we're not going to go back to those days. 

*Busy week, and to my disappointment, I will have to carry a lunch also on Thursday and Friday.....Thursday noon we meet to assign the scholarships for next year, and Friday (unless I hear otherwise) is a mandatory Zoom to learn to use yet another new piece of software we have to use to manage stuff. 

I like teaching a lot but all the add-ins of the monitoring and the assessment and the like just gets me down. 

 

 


Monday, March 24, 2025

Finished some socks

 I didn't get a lot of knitting or crochet done over break, but I did finish a pair of socks and begin another.

I finished the Gusto color-blocked socks. These are the ones where I did the two skeins in opposite directions rather than struggling to try to match colors.

I'm a lot happier with how they came out than I thought I would be, they actually look pretty good and there's enough of the same colors in both that you can tell they're a pair

 


 I then pulled out a ball I had brought with me of WYS yarn (I think it's the colorway called Woodpigeon, at least, it's one of the "British Birds) line. I didn't get very far:


 It's mostly purples and greyish purples. 

I just started on the knit-plain part. 

It's been another stressful day - weird-bad news, and I found a dead woodrat in my drive this morning (almost certainly one of the neighborhood cats). I was rushing to get over because I THOUGHT I had a student coming in to make up an exam at 8 (turns out they had car trouble and couldn't get in) but also I didn't feel like cleaning it up in my work clothes. 

So when I got home at the end of the day today, I decided to quick bury what was left (the city doesn't like animal remains in the rollcarts though I suspect if I had put it in a trash bag no one would have known. By then there was......half a rat....(the cat must have come back). It had also dried up somewhat so it was easier to scoop up with the shovel and bury. 

I also think I'm hitting a point where I "leave it all on the field" in class and I'm worn out when I get home - one of my classes is covering a difficult topic right now and I work hard to try to teach it, and then I'm just worn out after the day. And I think when you've been teaching a while, it catches up to you (or my age is catching up to me) and you don't rebound with a short rest as fast as you did before. 

***

After piano practice, while looking over the notes for tomorrow's (8 am) class, I put Bluey on in the background. And I realized something: there's a Japanese genre of anime called Iyashikei,  which translates to "healing" or "healing anime" - mostly slice of life, worldbuilding storytelling where nothing very bad happens. Apparently My Neighbor Totoro is an example (though I would say that the little girl going missing for a short time is a little....not restful). I think that's the only one I've seen of the ones listed here, but I'd happily watch more if I had the chance to do so easily (I don't have any streaming services)

But I also realized, that in Western animation, Bluey might be a pretty close example of this - nothing very bad happens, there's a LOT of slice-of-life and gentle humor, and a lot of the things that happen - a lot of the ways the episodes end - is gentle and soothing and makes you feel good. One of the episodes tonight was the one where they clear out the old nursery, and Bluey asks if she can move into it and have it as her bedroom, and she does (but with a lot of horse-trading with Bingo about which of the "teddies"* and books live with each girl

(*I presume "teddies" is the generalized term in Australia for stuffed toys/plushies/stuffies)

And then they start scooting notes to each other across the hall until their mom stops them. 

But Bluey winds up lonely in her new room - and at the end, she and Bingo wind up both back in their old room, sleeping in the same bed (and hugging each other, which is very sweet and wholesome). And Chilli (the mum) says to Bandit that he will have to move the beds back to the same room the next day, and while he groans a bit, it's clear he will do it. (And he asks - "does she miss her old room" and Chilli says something like "No, she misses something else" and then it cuts to Bluey and Bingo sleeping happily in the same bed)

And yes, it is, for me at least, a healing show - it depicts a really nice family dynamic, and nothing very bad ever happens, and there are some gentle laughs along the way.

And maybe we need more animation like this? Even adults? I think "Summer Camp Island" (which can be hard to find but Discovery Family used to show it) comes close. But there aren't a lot of shows specifically for adults** where it's just restful and nice and there's no major horrible conflict. And maybe, especially now, we need this?

(**though arguably, Bluey puts in some subtle things grown-ups would pick up on, both bits of humor ("It was the 80s, man!") and things like subtle sly glances between Bandit and Chilli, that kids might not pick up on. And some episodes seem to have deeper meanings; I take "Flatpack" as an attempt to somewhat reconcile some kind of theism/deism with evolution, in a way)

Saturday, March 22, 2025

And finally home

 Sort of a difficult trip. 

Oh, it was good seeing my mom, and I had some good meals and did a little knitting and some crochet, and my mom bought me a couple of dresses ("the rest of your birthday present") when we went out one day, but difficult things happened.

Friday evening (the 14th) there were bad storms in Arkansas and Missouri when I was on the train. I know I looked out the window a couple times after going to bed and seeing lightning everywhere. And then we sat for several hours outside, I think, Little Rock, because of tornado warnings up ahead.

Then, when we finally got to Poplar Bluff, we stopped. And then went *backwards*. They finally announced that there were trees down on the track, and the track needed to be cleared and inspected.

So we sat for like six hours. And then we had to wait even longer on a new crew.

They did feed us lunch. But unfortunately - womp womp - I realized I now have the third triad of the "celery-carrot-spice" sensitivity that some people with birch and mugwort pollen allergies get - I can no longer eat cumin, or at least not in the quantities in the butter chicken the night before and the enchiladas that day and had some gastric distress as a result. (At least now I know, and looking back - several 'stomach viruses' I had over the past year were probably THAT, and the "oh no, is my gall bladder starting to go bad" was probably THAT).

 Makes cooking and restaurant food harder, but oh well. At least now I know.

Anyway, we were super late. (They fed us pizza for dinner, which didn't help with my stomach). 

We finally got in to Bloomington around midnight (a bit before, but it was after midnight when I finally got home because...) My mom went out about 11:30 and it was a very dark night (cloudy) and some of the roads in town are not well lit, and she is in her 80s.....and she caught a damaged curb with her tire and tore the tire. She was close enough to the station that she decided to sacrifice the tire and get there. Someone called the cops and they showed up

(She later told me they gave her a field sobriety test, which of course she passed!)

They called the local towing company (for those who did graduate work at ISU: it is the one that shall not be named; they had a very bad reputation for rudeness and requiring payment IN CASH one the spot for services rendered). They changed her tire for her; I was afraid the axle might have been damaged but apparently she didn't hit as hard as I feared, and it just punctured the tire

I wound up paying; they wanted a cell phone to send the link to and she doesn't have one that accepts texts. 

Then she had to arrange for a new tire but her good mechanic was able to take care of that, and they concluded the other three tires were still new enough (months rather than years) that replacing one would be OK.. 

(Also, the "spare" was actually an in-good-shape leftover from the older set, so she wasn't driving on a donut)

But that ate up time in a too-short break. 

And coming back, I had to take a "bus bridge" for part of the way - trackwork - but that wasn't so bad. Drove home, ran to the Albertson's (which is now going to be my "big shopping" store - it's closer and nicer and has some more of the familiar-to-me brands). 

Got home, was about to eat lunch, but decided to call my mom first to assure her I had gotten in.

No answer.

Okay, fine, maybe she stepped out to get the mail, it was about that time. 

Called again in a few minutes, left a message, hoping maybe she was out talking to a neighbor (that often happens). 

Then my brother called. He NEVER calls me except in emergencies. "Have you been able to reach mom? I've been trying since last night"

Oh.

Oh, no. 

I still remember that Friday night in January 2016 when my brother made a similar call about our dad, and it turned out he had had a surprise hospital admission (bad medication interaction) and I didn't find out he was OK for some 20 minutes and it was *awful*

After that, I got all the neighbors' numbers.  Well, one set is out of town right now but I called Barb and trepidatiously asked "do you know if my mom is okay? I can't reach her on the phone and my brother just called...." 

and she said "your mom is fine" and I was about to yell HOW DO YOU KNOW but she followed it up with "something went wrong with her phone and internet service, she's been over here trying to talk to someone from Frontier to get it sorted, she said she'd come back at about 2 and call you so you wouldn't worry."

She also said her housemate texted me but I didn't get it, I suspect she texted my landline, which can't accept texts.
 

So I called my brother back to tell HIM, and then shortly after that, yeah, my mom did call. I reminded her she had a cell phone (which normally lives in her car) but I knew she didn't have it and I don't know the number anyway.

So she went and got it and I now have the number, and at least she has a phone she can call out on if there's any emergency. 

But yeah, now i'm TIRED. I did go over and set up Monday's lab, and grabbed the stuff I need to write Friday's exam, but I'm not sure I have the energy to. And I'm not sure what to do for dinner given that it was nearly 3 pm here when I finished lunch.

Saturday, March 15, 2025

On the road

 But currently stuck in Poplar Bluff.


Storms overnight brought down a tree and we have to wait for it to be cleared and the track inspected before we can proceed. 

Hopefully soon; I heard a couple freight trains coming in the opposite direction, unless they had been on totally different tracks 

Anyway, we’re like five hours late 

At least I have a roomette so it’s quiet 

Some photos. The air quality is terrible (haze, I guess it’s blowing dust)






Thursday, March 13, 2025

Five years on

 Everyone else seems to be doing it, so I will, too.

Today is the five-year anniversary of my university going all-virtual because of COVID. I remember the day because it would have been my father's 85th birthday (he had died the previous July). It was a Friday; the last day before Spring Break.

I had already cancelled my plans - I had been going to visit my mother, but figured Amtrak travel, even in a roomette, would not be safe (In retrospect, given the spread at that time, it might have been, but my mother and I are both cautious people). I was able to get a voucher for future travel with no loss of value; my thought was "well maybe I can use this at May, or failing that, Thanksgiving"

It would be May 2021 before I traveled again.

Similarly - my campus started out saying "faculty can come in to teach from their offices" and "we may only be online for two weeks"

The week after spring break we were told no, we had to stay home and do the best we could to teach from home. A colleague who didn't have internet at his house (out in the country) would record his teaching videos and "sneak" in late in the evening to upload it on campus. 

We weren't officially welcome back on campus until July (which was also the start of a new fiscal year, and that may have been partly why that date). I finished up some research I had begun (And I got it published the year after that )

We went back to being sort-of in person in the fall, but one of my classes was too large to "distance" in the room (people were supposed to stay 2 meters apart, which probably was based on outmoded research, but) and to wear masks (and I had one or two folks I had to mask-police during the time masks were mandatory, and it was unpleasant for me to have to be confrontational in that way, but it would have been my fault if I let someone not-mask and someone else got sick.)

Anyway. My one class had to be online; the only other option would have been to get to the ballroom that was about a half-mile across campus and then back after class (in 10 minutes) for my next class in my regular building. Parking has ALWAYS been an issue, and while I didn't have an injured knee then, I figured it would cut it awfully close many days, and if it was storming, I would not like to walk in it.

So I taught over Zoom from a classroom. It was distressing at times - the time a colleague leaned in the door and turned  out the light thinking the room was empty because I was supervising some kind of think-pair-share type thing, the fact that I had to put everyone on automatic mute after having a day of being interrupted by (a) someone watching tv while on the zoom, (b) someone trying to supervise their kids during class, and (c) the worst - someone doing McDonald's drive through with class apparently on their phone. 

And even outside the frustrations of having to say "hey, the mask goes over your mouth AND NOSE" a couple times a week, and making sure the tables were wiped down with antibacterial goo after every class (even long after fomite transmission was largely disproven; we got angry-grams when our goo didn't get used up fast enough, to the point where I contemplated taking the bottles and just pouring a bit down the sink every week) and the fact I had to change up how I did certain labs (in one class: having to run between two rooms as students worked), there were the "outside" frustrations

Things like, "will the grocery store have organic milk in some denomination (skim, 1%, or 2%) that I will drink" or "are eggs in stock?" (which ironically and uncomfortably, has become an issue again). Things like "will the store be too crowded to go in?" All the little inconveniences which, while they did increase our safety, were another cognitive load and also another reminder of the terrible times we were in.

And this was long before masks became politicized! That started when our governor banned mask mandates - not merely DROPPED them, but said no facility could issue them. (I continued to wear a mask into 2022. I got multiple complaints on teaching evaluations about "I can't hear or understand you" which may have been as much a political as a practical statement, I don't know. And I got laughed at by some woman once in the walmart for wearing a mask. Eventually I quit - it's uncomfortable in our high humidity with my asthma and once I'd been vaccinated 3 or 4 times, I decided "well, if my being careful to wash my hands and stay apart from people and my vaccines aren't enough, fine, I'm done")

As far as I know, I've never yet had COVID. Of course, I'm also a near-hermit, and I do have a pretty vigorous immune system - and I've kept up with the annual boosters. 

There was also the emotional fallout - early on, staying strictly home (only going out once every week or 10 days to grab groceries, doing nothing "fun," not seeing anyone not through a computer screen - and then later the whole "third quarter phenomenon" where you were just SO tired but didn't know for sure when it would be "over," if it ever was going to be. 

There were weeks in summer 2020 where the only other human I spoke to was my mother, over the phone.

It got bad. I thought I was an introvert but that level of isolation was too much for me; looking back I can tell I really had some trauma and maybe something like ptsd for a couple years; I'm just now snapping out of it (ha ha ha just in time for all the chaos in the federal government) 

It was a big big day in 2021 when, after the first vaccine, I decided it was "safe enough" for a quick masked trip into JoAnn Fabrics (I had been doing no "unnecessary" shopping)

(And now JoAnn's is gone, sigh). 

And how things slowly returned. I was MUCH slower than most people I know to go back to eating in restaurants - even in 2023 I was mostly only ever doing carry-out, or eating somewhere where I could eat outside.

I also remember it took me a long time to be comfortable driving to Sherman again. Part of that was the construction on the bridge over the Red River; for a while it almost felt unsafe (no wiggle room and the barriers so you didn't go over the edge were lower) but also the length of the drive felt like a lot. 

And I've now worried for a while about a "new pandemic" - I was thinking H5N1 (and we might still get that in humans), but now it looks like measles? A vaccine-preventable disease? (I have had three doses of the vaccine, might get a fourth if it seems like it's showing up right where I am). But man, there's been a lot of bad history I lived through.

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Fixing an error

 In retrospect, I probably should have pushed harder to get the body part of the vest started over the weekend; I didn't quite finish the ribbing* and start on the body until this morning during the exam, and I didn't read the pattern carefully and I assumed the cabled part set-up was going to be p2 k4 p2 k4 p2 k4 p2 k4 p2 k4 p2 k4 p2 k4 p2, and I did that as the set-up round.

And then in the next round I had 10 stitches too many. And my first thought was, "I messed up during the cast on and couldn't tell because the ribbing was all the same thing" and started making plans to decrease my way over rounds to the right number but then realized that would look bad, and in frustration, I looked at the pattern and it's

 p2 k4 p2 k6 p2 k4 p2 k6 p2 k4 p2 k6 p2 k4 p2

which actually accounts for the extra stitches.

So I had to unknit a round and a half (so: close to 300 stitches) and that took up the remaining time. I didn't want to just take the needles out and try to rip back, I knew that would end in grief, so I undid it stitch by stitch. I didn't finish during the exam

So I took it home and did the rest tonight, and got the set-up round and the second round done; it's now up to the first cable round. And I give an exam tomorrow so I can work on it some there. 

It's not the most fun yarn to unknit and it got a little fuzzed when I did that but I don't think it'll be noticeable. 

(*ribbing is BORING to knit)

 It's a recycled nylon yarn (from water bottles) that I got at the late, lamented JoAnn Fabrics (And yeah, I'm still unhappy about private equity destroying them like they destroyed Borders' and some other good chains; where I live it's mainly big-box stores 'cos we're a lower SES area and there are  not a lot of people who do crafts, so losing them means a lot of resources I used are lost.

I mean, I still have the little local yarn shop (well, local a half hour away) but they mainly sell fingering weight wool, and their book selection is extremely small. And of course they don't have sewing supplies. And we have surprisingly fewer quilt shops now; several have moved far away from me or closed altogether. (In at least one case it was a landlord jacking their rent - tripling it! - and it gives me a tiny bit of petty joy when I am down that way and see that the building STILL hasn't rented. Suck it, greedy land lords)

And yeah, as I look at what's happening in the nation I grimly wonder what there will be left at the end of all the chaos; will we still have any nice and fun shops for supplies, or will it only be wal-mart? Will we be left trading the few things we have left from the before-times back and forth until they completely fall apart?

I dunno. Doesn't help that this week is the fifth anniversary of the declaration of a COVID pandemic and my university going all virtual. And yes, back then I wondered "will there be anything left to come out to?" and yes, a lot of places DID close down then - and I suspect more will now with the ongoing shocks. And I don't like it. I especially don't like it as someone with out spouse, kids, or nearby family; sometimes going out to somewhere like JoAnn's was my one solace to look forward to and if we lose all that, well, I don't know. 


 

Monday, March 10, 2025

The weekend past

 * Never got a call despite being told my framing job was supposed to be done. I was unwilling to invest the hour's round trip to drive down there in the rain in case it was done. I called the place and was told "the framer gets in at 1 pm, she'll call you" but she never called so

a. the message did not get passed on

b. the framing job was not done

I admit this frustrates me slightly - the lack of communication. I mean it's fine if something takes longer but if I call to check a call back would be nice. I won't be able to get it until after spring break now; I hope it's safe there. I have already paid for it and have a receipt so if the worst happened and it got lost or damaged I guess I can demand the cost of the framing back plus the $35 I paid for the painting session. 

But I really want it back and framed.

But this is something I've seen - increasingly poor/inattentive customer service. I know people are busy and often low-paid and all that but given how much time I devote to e-mailing back to students and similar it would be nice to get a little reciprocity there. 

I'd pay more for stuff if customer service were more reliable. But again: it's a bimodal situation where the hyperwealthy get what they need and the rest of us are just left hanging

*  I didn't quite get the ribbing on the vest done even though I have an exam to give tomorrow. I guess I figure it out during the exam. It's my small class so it should be OK; I am just out of energy to do more. 

Part of this is DST; I don't like it, I don't sleep well for a couple days after the change and I will have to go in in the dark tomorrow (I have to turn on the muffle furnace before my 8 am class and I don't relish walking across uneven ground on my bad knee to get there; I might break out my cane again for security - I keep it in the car just in case)

Part of this is just teaching fundamentally four classes (covering a gen bio lab means a level of preparation before hand more than I'd do for a majors' intro lab). So I'm more or less teaching four classes this semester and it really feels like three is my limit along WITH trying to get research and service done.

* We had two more interviews (online) today. At the end of the day, too, after teaching three classes.

* Telling myself I'm not allowed to look at my retirement funds (heavily in stocks) until I actually plan to retire; today was a bloodbath. And Social Security's probably gone; it feels like the plan is for all of us to work until we die.

In truth: I am just very tired. And it feels like nothing has been all that successful lately. 

*  Most actively reading "Death of a Bookseller" (Bernard J. Farmer, not the newer one - this is from the 50s at the latest). It's another of those British Mystery Classics. I'd never heard of Farmer before, but he's a pretty good writer and the story is fairly complex and moves along. Fundamentally: Wigan, a police officer, makes friends with a "runner" (A bookseller who goes around picking books and trying to resell them for a profit). The man lucks into a very rare manuscript, and then is found dead (stabbed). Another runner is picked up on suspicion, and there's a lot of circumstantial evidence against him, but Wigan suspects justice is being miscarried (and this was back in the day when capital punishment was common; the suspect is scheduled to be hanged). A number of other booksellers either seem to be suspects, or Wigan tries to draw them in to get help from them to free poor Fred Hampton (if he is innocent). Right now it's taken an odd turn (I'm perhaps 1/2-2/3 of the way through) where it's suggested that Fisk (the victim) was into the occult, and was trying to summon the devil, and it's implied the devil could have been the one who killed him. It seems a bit jarring given the "police procedural" tone of the rest of the book, but I'll see where it goes.

It's a good story though and I admit I hope poor Fred IS innocent, and that he gets acquitted in time. There's also a woman bookseller (Ruth)  who's an unpleasant piece of work. And there's a bit of a look into the antiquarian book trade in the 1950s - again, with the complaint that some of the wealthy collectors (most of them Americans) don't care about books, they only want them as an investment

(though given events of today - maybe they're better than stocks?)

I sort of collect books. I haven't bought any old-ish ones in a long time, though, mainly through lack of access for places to buy them - the few used book shops around here carry mostly recent publications, and I haven't really done much antiquing. And this climate is hard on books, so they often aren't in as good condition as in cooler/less insect-plagued climates. 

But it's interesting to read about.

Friday, March 07, 2025

Week is done

 I'm trying - slowly - to get the ribbing on the vest done so I can move on to the body. I give a couple exams next week and I'd like to be there before I go for them - I don't want to have to do a LOT of counting while trying to give an exam. 

I also got the heel turned on the second ombre sock

But, I really need to clean the house up this weekend. I'm not going anywhere tomorrow, unLESS Michael's calls me to say my painting is framed (they promised it to me "March 8 or earlier" but I suspect that was ambitious, and who knows what supply chain screw ups have started - the last time I was in the wal-mart there were a LOT of empty shelves)

It's also supposed to be chilly and rainy. We've had really up and down weather and my sinuses aren't happy.

At least I'm caught up on the urgent things for next week - all the grading, the exams are done and in to the print shop, I've got things ready to go for the labs. I will need to be sure to have enough time to get packed and to do things like print off my ticket before next Friday.

I really need a break. I'm just tired and I find I'm not sleeping well; I think it's just the combination of stress with what's going on in government, and the stress of "why don't we see any guys doing the construction we were promised would be done by May in our building," and trying to get everything done, and I've been having, if not exactly unpleasant, slightly stressful dreams - mostly trying to get things done and not being able to.  

So I'm hoping a little time away might help? I don't know.

Thursday, March 06, 2025

Thursday afternoon things

 * I found out the badly-damaged house (where it looked like a tree made a direct hit on what was probably a bedroom) near my office building was unoccupied, so no one was injured. The house will probably have to be torn down but at least no one got hurt.

* Yesterday was, of course, Ash Wednesday. And because most of us work (so no "typical" early morning service) and because we're between ministers, the secretary and I, between us, worked up a short Ash Wednesday service: a couple of prayers (she did one, I did one) and some Scripture reading, and a "the purpose of Lent and ashes" reading. And yes, we distributed ashes.

 Not all Disciples churches do this. I find it important and valuable, and our secretary was raised Catholic so I know they're meaningful to her.

Yes, it was odd this year being one of the people who marked crosses on people's foreheads and whispered "from dust you came and to dust you shall return" to them - it was something I would never have been prepared to do before but these past few years have changed me. 

 Oh, not all the changes have been good, but perhaps this greater acceptance of (or at least: less tendency to want to turn hard away from thinking about) mortality, and willingness to do things that might be "hard," are probably a good change. 

I do admit as I got towards the end, as our newest members (a couple of men) came up and I did it, I could feel the catch in my throat and my eyes watering a little - one of them is like 80 and the other just a bit younger, and they're really nice guys, and I had the thought of  "I might not have them as friends for very much longer, given their ages" and that got to me a tiny bit. But then it was my turn and I turned to the secretary and she did it for me and she was very nearly crying at that point.

 


 

 Ash Wednesday can be a lot. I think it's especially a lot for those of us who lived through the pandemic now. It's probably more a lot for people who lost near and dear ones; the only people I lost were a cousin I'd not been in contact with much and an old family friend who had been very ill (leukemia). 

I think it's a lot for me also because I remember my dad, whom I still miss. Next week - the 13th - would have been his 90th birthday. 

* But also, I caught myself  thinking how maybe this was my "zombie apocalypse" skill - people joke about that, like "are you good at repairing engines? can you deliver a baby and cut the cord? do you know how to spin yarn from wool?" and most of the skills I have - knitting, and baking bread, and sewing - are things that lots and lots of people can do, so I wouldn't have high demand skills

But maybe the more spiritual side? I have presided over, if not exactly a funeral, an interment of ashes. And I've preached sermons. And I can come up (usually) with prayers pretty off the cuff if needed. And in an end-of-the-world situation, maybe God would forgive me for being unordained and yet presiding over marriage vows for couples, if there were no longer the legal or ecclesiastical structure to support such a thing, but people wanted the officialness of a vow. 

It's strange to realize that I seem to have Skills in this area despite wrestling very hard with doubts some times, but I guess maybe that's also evidence of God's much-vaunted sense of humor?

* So far it looks like my trip next week is still going. There are some claims on Social Media about "DOGE is looking at Amtrak" but Amtrak is a semi-autonomous company that is just subsidized by the government, and appropriations for this year have already been made* and also, the board it has is on through 2029 so.....hopefully. Though you never know now, it seems lots of "extrajudicial" stuff is being done and if the courts try to stop it, it's slow. At any rate, I expect to be getting on a train next Friday night for a short break, which I badly need

 

(*yes, those appropriations could get ganked, just like NIH/NSF funding, just like some of the student financial aid stuff was....but I hope not. Or at least I hope selfishly Amtrak has enough funds to get me to Illinois and back.)

* But yes, it's been a VERY busy week, and next week will be busy. I have two job candidate interviews Monday and have decided to skip CWF as it's at 6 pm and it's likely the last interview won't be over until after 5. 

I really hope the candidate for another position we made an offer to will accept, both because they will be a good fit for the department but ALSO I really want to be done with these. I realized the other day I've served on a hiring committee for most of the times between 2019 and now, even including the pandemic (that's when we started heavily doing Zoom interviews)

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

The heavy weather

 They were predicting storms last night. At first they were kind of dismissive, but then as the evening wore on they warned more and more strongly.

I moved some sturdy shoes and "street clothes" (I was in my pajamas) to the interior bathroom I would use as a tornado shelter. As it turned out, I didn't need them. 

We didn't get storms overnight, but they came in very early this morning. I lost power a couple times (and finally, when it came back, even though it was about an hour before I needed to leave, I hit the button on the garage door opener, just in case)

Suddenly, the wind got very strong and I could hear rain being driven against the front of the house. No sirens, and they said later it was mostly "straight line winds" (which can still cause pretty serious damage). They warned there were downed trees in town, but fortunately I could wait until it was light out to drive in. Around me I only saw small branches and twigs down. I taught my first class and then went up to my office building, and, well:


 The groundskeepers came later (while I was trying to write an exam!) to cut it up with chainsaws.

Also, a couple houses in town were damaged; one near my office building had a tree come down on what looked like a bedroom. I hope no one was hurt, but I think if they had been I'd have heard about it on the news. 

After the storm blew through, it got really windy and chillier and now we're having issues with blowing dust - my car is VERY dirty now and I thought to run it through the car wash on my way home but MAN the lines, so I guess I'll try Thursday? (Tomorrow is my longest teaching day and I have to help with the Ash Wednesday early-evening service, so I don't think I'll have time). 

I also noticed when I got home that one of my yaupon hollies had partially broken. I think it'll survive but I'll have to get out and cut out the broken piece (it's a very large branch, one of the major branches). I may wait until I can get someone to spot me on a ladder: I don't think I can quite reach it from the ground. But it's not crucial at the moment because it's not blocking anything.

At any rate, I got lucky at my house (no real damage) and I'm glad I had that ailing big elm taken down this past summer; it probably would have come to grief today if I hadn't. 

Monday, March 03, 2025

working on socks

 I have the heel flap almost done on the ombre socks. I think I'm glad I worked from opposite ends of the ball rather than trying to make them "matchy"


 It's getting tot he point where I will be into the pattern - I don't know that I'll get into the dark pink on the toe of the second sock or not; that pale pink and lavender color didn't make it into the first sock.

Over the weekend I knit some on the Roadside Attraction socks; this is the ball of yarn I have on that Pendel thing, which works well to corral the ball of yarn


 Other than that, today was long and tiring and a little upsetting, and we're likely to have severe weather overnight. I like spring here but I sure don't like the tornado risks. We're under a tornado watch until like 5 am. I use my phone as an alarm clock now so I expect to be awakened by the weather alerts.

 Which is better than NOT, if it's something serious, but if it's far away from me or something like "lightning in the area" that I don't need to react to, it's not too great.

Friday, February 28, 2025

the day out

 I was tired yesterday evening, and also had to make a dish to take to a potluck (we had a job candidate in and it had been a while since I provided the main dish for one of these). 

And today was equally long: gave an exam, graded another exam, went to the candidate's job talk and then out to the dinner with them.

But I did go out yesterday after my office hours. Got a seafood lunch, went to the yarn shop

The dark blue yarn is for a simple slouch type hat (knit double and folded in on itself) from the Van Gogh Knits book - it's a recreation of a hat (the original was red) that Van Gogh painted an agriculture worker as wearing. The pink and gold yarn - there are three skeins, it's a  Life in the Long Grass yarn - is for a shawl. Yes, it was a LOT of money for yarn, and yes, I haven't knit much on a lace shawl in a very long time. But maybe I get back to it soon, I hope. I'm not sure what pattern to use but I have a bit over 1200 yards, so that's enough for most fingering-weight shawls. I will have to look at my patterns. The color is called Rose Gold and it's two of my favorite colors - that pink, and a soft golden yellow.

 I also wound up going to Michael's (Well, I had WANTED to go to the used book store, but couldn't see a parking place anywhere near it, so I planned to go back later)

I had a $20 voucher, thanks to the money I spent on the framing (which still isn't done, but they didn't think it would be until March 8). I decided to just spend it all at once; there might be a while before I can get back.

It took me a while to find something I wanted but I bought two skeins of Wool-Ease (I couldn't find any of my true mittens during the recent cold snap, just fingerless gloves, so I decided to knit myself some new ones) and a kid for one of these little critter things:


 

There was about 55 cents or so left on the voucher and Michael's has a program that donates craft supplies to kids in the hospital, and it asked me if I wanted to do that, and why not at that point? I had what I wanted and it would just expire anyway. 

I then went back and did find parking near the used-book shop; this is the one that moved down there from here. (I'm still a little sore about that, though I suppose they had their reasons). The owner remembered me though.

I did find two recent mystery novels I wanted


 I've never read an Arcenaux novel before but it looks interesting (set in Louisiana) and I am a big fan of Louise Penny already and this is one of hers I've not read.

I also walked over to what used to be called the Coffee Collective (it goes by a different name now, I guess). They sell houseplants and while they are *pricy* (most of my houseplants are ones I got as cuttings from friends), they had one I've wanted for a LONG time. A Hoya contorta, which once upon a time was called Hindu rope plant (I have no idea what, if any, common name it has now). I remember my mother having one when I was a kid; I think she gave it to a friend in Ohio when they moved from there in 1989. I don't think she took many houseplants with them when they moved; I think she figured they wouldn't survive. I guess she did take the Christmas cactuses she wound up inheriting from her mother (who died a few weeks earlier that year) but I think most of the plants she had were rehomed.

Anyway, I wanted one of these for a while


 It's small. And it needs repotting - I need to look up what kind of soil it prefers and get a better pot (or find one - I think I have an empty one that's suitable) for it. I want to take care of it both because it was expensive, and it was one I really wanted. 

After all that, I realized I was close to the Albertson's, and I needed milk, and I thought, "Well, they were kind of sad and run down the last time I was in years ago, but I can still get milk.

Turns out they've been renovated, and it's a REAL glow-up. It reminds me of the "nice" Schnucks and Jewel stores near my mom - they even have some of the same brands (Signature and O Organics) as Jewel does. So I did a little shopping (got the milk, and some other things ahead for the weekend) and then this:


 I hadn't had time to make a cake for myself, and I knew I wouldn't, so I got myself this. It was pretty good for  "store" cake. 

And also, maybe this Albertson's is my new "big shopping" grocery. It certainly feels easier to get to than the Kroger's in Sherman, which isn't that much farther, but is a less direct route - the Albertson's is close to the nice Denison downtown, where I'd want to go anyway, and it's almost right off the interstate.