Make-Do Pincushion - 100th post give-away!
To celebrate my 100th posting, I will be giving this to a randomly chosen winner. If you want to be part of the pool, please leave a comment here, on this posting. That's it! I will select the winner, using a random sequence generator, next Wednesday, October 29, sometime after noon (USA - Eastern Time).
Totally optional, but if you'd also add me to your links list, or add your name to my "followers" list, I'd be very appreciative! Thanks. :-)
The show I almost did
Time to take care of me
The last few years have been so weird. Several illnesses, including cancer; lots of time in the hospital - one stretch was 33 days; several operations. My mother going downhill for many months and dying, in the midst of it all. My husband becoming crippled with a bad hip and needing new hip surgery, in the midst of it all. Giving my dog, Willa, to another owner - a really good owner, but still not the same as having her here with me - because we were jus
So, my sewing and fiber work pretty much went down the tubes, for a long, long time. And I got very depressed. And I started spending almost all of my time in bed. And I didn't leave the house for months. Until I finally started seeing a shrink, so I had to leave the house for that. And he got me on some medication, and after switching and tweaking, that finally started to help. And then I started this blog, which helped. Finally, several months ago, I thought I was maybe ready to re-enter the world, so to speak. I even signed up to do one show - as you know if you've been following this blog.
Re-entering the world turned out to be more difficult than I anticipated. Mostly because I continued to be so tired. And it just got worse and worse, instead of better. I didn't feel depressed so much as I just felt groggy and out of it. Like I'd be sitting in front of the computer and I'd start to nod off, in the middle of the day. I pretty much stopped driving, certainly for long distances, because I w
I finally made plans for surgery - with a doctor at Yale who is internationally-known for this particular operation. Cool! The plan was to also remove my thyroid. I figured I'd have a quick recovery and then go into heavy duty overdrive to get ready for the show. Ha, ha, ha. At the pre-surgery meeting, they told me to expect three weeks recovery! Oh, no!
So, I made a decision I probably should have made a few weeks (or more) ago. I canceled my participation in the show. I feel bad about doing it. The show producers are very nice and I don't like to cause them difficulty. However, I canceled six weeks before the show, and there is still room for a few exhibitors, so it's not like I was taking up a space that caused someone else to be denied. Maybe I am just rationalizing, but I'm trying to keep myself from feeling guilty about backing out of the show.
As fate would have it, we decided, pretty much at zero hour, to remove only the parathyroid and leave the thyroid alone, except to monitor it. I feel much better with that decision. The recovery is also a lot easier, although I am in no way ready to do anything in overdrive.
What I am finding is that it is time to take care of me. To focus on healing. To not stress about whether I am doing a show, whether I have enough stuff to sell. Time to say yes to things like lunch with a friend, instead of no because I'm too busy with getting ready for a show. Time to get back into yoga class, to try eating a healthier diet - caffeine and sugar all day to stay awake isn't healthy! Time to read a book. Time to have a date with my husband. Time to take a walk - which I did yesterday, camera in hand. These pictures are the result. I hope you like them. And I hope this post isn't more information than you really want to know.
Comfort
The universe really does pay attention
Recently, it seemed like so many of my favorite fiber blogs were showcasing wonderful projects using kimono scraps. I yearned! I pined! I coveted! Then I remembered, my cousin Holly was, at that very moment, in Japan! I sent a quick e-mail asking her to please do some scavenging for me. Alas, it was the day she was leaving to return home. The photo on the left is of Holly and me, on Halloween, circa 1955. Aren't we adorable?
By this time the thought of kimono scraps just wouldn't leave my mind. The universe must have heard, and whispered in my bloggy friend Mary's ear. Out of the blue, I received an e-mail from her asking for my snail mail so she could send me a bundle of antique kimono scraps. [Insert the Twilight Zone theme song here.]
Mary is a very generous person, as you can see from the photo on the right. She sent me a wonderful collection of kimono pieces. Just absolutely delicious. I could sew them all together and have
Mary also included a darling little stuffed heart, made from an old quilt. I love it, and I have turned it into an award avatar which I hereby present to some of the many online artists who, knowingly or not, have given me great inspiration and support as I stitch away in my home studio:
- Mary Stanley - Art Spirit - Mary, who gifted me with all those wonderful kimono scraps, makes the most wonderful, whimsical hooked items of all kinds. Today's post shows some sweet hooked pins to wear and also shows a new book, Felt, Fabric and Fiber Jewelry by Sherri Haab, which features Mary and her charming hooked flowers.
- Beate Knappe - Mixed Media Art - Beate has a great deal of fun mixing fiber with her inner child, and the results are always a treat. Her blog is in both German and English; she also offers online classes.
- Dijanne Cevaal - Musings of a Textile Itinerant - Here you'll find experiements in textile making, sewing, dyeing, and so on; with a little bit of travelogue thrown in for good measure. Dijanne also has a book, Seventy Two Ways Not To Stipple or Meander, which is for sale at her blog.
- Deb - Whiffs, Glimmers & Left Oeuvres - Fabulous fiber doings and a sense of humor that makes my day. Deb has been very generous with her bloggy support of me and what I do.