Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Yarnalong

I have been working in the garden a lot this year and am really enjoying it.  But before you get the wrong impression, I hired someone to help me clean things up so that I could enjoy the fun and pretty stuff.  That hasn't kept me from knitting and reading, though. 


I finished my Seahawk socks.  And then I started the Red Robin Shawl in a really fun yarn.  It's called Supernova from the Knitted Wit on Etsy. 


It's so much fun to watch the colors change and the pattern isn't too hard so far. 

I've been reading the Miss Silver mysteries by Patricia Wentworth, an English author who wrote classic English mysteries in the 1920s through the 1960s.  They are good stories, but not too taxing.  Just right for my current mood.

I've really been feeling good and doing more, for which I'm grateful to the Lord and to summertime and a new anti-depressant.  I'm sharing this in the interest of keeping things real and taking away the shame from mental and emotional struggles.  Anyway, I'm glad for the sweet days of summer.   I hope you are enjoying yours, too.



 
 

Monday, June 27, 2016

Encourage One Another




I got a special package in the mail today that lifted my heart.  It was from a friend met on the Internet.  It contained these things:  a beautiful teapot in a decorative box and an assortment of teas, a handmade bark basket that now proudly sits on my dining table filled with rocks and acorns gathered by her children, and a letter. 







The teapot is inscribed with this poem: 

I said a prayer for you today
and know God must have heard. 
I felt the answer in my heart
although  He spoke no word.

I didn't ask for wealth or fame
I knew you wouldn't mind.
I asked Him to send treasures
of a far more lasting kind.

I asked that He'd be near you
at the start of each new day
to grant you health and blessings
and friends to share our way.

I asked for happiness for you
in all things great and small
but it was for His loving care
I prayed the most of all.


I think God engineers lives intersecting and through her kindness He showed me that He loves me and I am not alone.  Thank you, friend.  Your encouragement has touched me more than you'll ever know. 


Linda

Monday, February 2, 2015

Robbed!

I have been living in a fantasy world , at least about some things.  I live in a safe, quiet neighborhood.  I haven't locked my doors for the nearly 30 years I've lived in this old house.  But when I came home from my writer's group last week, the front door was locked and the back door was standing wide open.  Something was wrong.  I looked into the bedroom and saw open drawers, but still held disaster at bay by putting water on for tea.  (No, I'm not kidding.  Now that I look back I see how foolish that was, but I decided if I had to face bad news I would have a cup of tea first.)  I then calmly looked in the bathroom, noticed the window was wide open (and a lawn chair underneath.)  Further investigation revealed my jewelry containers dumped empty on the floor, all drawers in every room open, lots of things gone.  Both laptops, nearly every bit of jewelry I owned, my kindle!!!!!!! passports, checks, etc. 

I forgot my tea, husband came home, we called the police.  They came and even took some fingerprints.  I'm not really expecting to hear back.  Yesterday I called the homeowner's insurance, the bank, and began the drudgery of cleanup. 

I've always loved Mr. Rogers.  And I remember him saying whenever bad and scary things happen, look for the helpers.  There are always people who will come and help.  And that's what I noticed.  Right away, I called the one of my three sons who lives close by.  He commiserated and then unexpectedly, at the end of a tired day of doing construction, showed up.  He sat with us while we waited for the police.  That's all.  His fiancée called and she came, too.  I called my friend on her way out of work.  She offered sympathy and a promise to pray.   That's all.  And it's odd, but after we were alone and closing drawers and wiping up the weird fingerprint powder and taking inventory, I felt strangely blessed.

I know.  I frequently have opposite reactions.  I'm kind of a strange person in some ways.  I think it comes from writing for so many years.  There's always a part of me that's outside, observing whatever the rest of me is going through.  So of course, I've been analyzing that strange response.  I knew I had been robbed.  Some things that were very important to me were gone--my mother's costume jewelry, her wedding rings, things I remember her wearing, that made me feel her presence--were gone and not likely to be returned.  I felt like my life had been given one brisk shake and some things had come loose.  But I felt a surge of joy when I knew, firmly and certainly, that I hadn't lost anything that really mattered. 

Sometimes we Christians recite the right answers.  Here's one of my favorite examples.  A little boy goes to Bible camp and after a week they ask him, "What's grey with a fluffy tail, lives in trees and hides nuts for winter?"  He thinks for a minute and says, "Well, it sounds like a squirrel, but I bet the answer is Jesus."

I feel like I could make a card file with the "right" answer and response for every situation:  death--I know they're in a better place, job problems--I need to work as if I'm working for the Lord, theft--my treasure is in heaven.  And I have to admit that most of the time, when I try to put these over whatever I'm really feeling, the results have been less than successful.  But this time it was like I was clearly seeing things, for just a flashing second.  I felt a joy that my son and his fiancée had loved us, that my friends had loved us, that the police had come and done their job of standing between us and chaos.  And I felt a strange freedom and hope.  Lighter, somehow, like a rope that tethered my balloon had been cut. The abstraction of heaven seemed real.  I would go there--probably within the next 20-30, certainly 40 years.  It was this place with its moths and rust and thieves that would fade into dim memory.  I felt excited and joyful.  As if the focus had suddenly been adjusted and I saw everything clearly.  Values were flipped on their heads.  He was real, and nothing else, certainly nothing I owned, seemed all that important. 

It comes and goes.  After I realized yesterday afternoon that they'd taken my kindle, I went back to muttering.  The paperwork feels overwhelming.  I miss my earrings.  But it was there at least for a minute.  And I'll remember. 

We are such curious creatures, aren't we?  Half bound and half free.  Straddling the line between earth and heaven.  We know what we were meant for in some deep part of our heart and yet we slog through a world that daily dims that awareness.  And yet...Sometimes the strangest things cause our eyes too look up and glimpse, however briefly, that brilliant and beautiful place where our hearts will finally be at rest. 

Lofty thoughts.  Mundane life.  Flashes of who we really are and the future that awaits us.  Our lot until He comes.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Cables


I finally decided to try cables and so far so good.  Like everyone says, it's fun and not as hard as it looks.  This Christmas was so stressful that I've decided to try to make more gifts this year.  I know that sounds backward, but I think a simple gift given from the heart will stress me out a lot less than just throwing things in the cart.  I'm already starting a list of ways to make the holiday more meaningful and less mindless next year.  We'll see how I do.  I may have said this before.  The pattern here is Easy Cable Scarf and Headband from Ravelry and I've lost the tag for the yarn.  Berroco Vintage, maybe, in a wheat color which shows up poorly in this picture. 



I'm having a picky period in my reading.  I go through spells where I just don't like any book I pick up.  I went to the library again today, ever hopeful.  In the meantime I'm reading Cuttlefish, by Dave Freer.  It's steam punk-ish young adult.  A good story, but I find the alternate history stuff cumbersome and distracting.  I guess I'm not going to be a fan of the genre. 

And for a true confession:  this is the reason I started my blog.  So I can link up with all of you on Yarn Along.  I've enjoyed reading about all of your lives and decided it was time to return the hospitality.

Blessings,
Linda

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Finally beginning

One of my favorite authors, Chaim Potok, said all beginnings are hard, and it must be true because it's taken me several years to finally start a blog.  The thing that finally spurred me to action was that I want to be a participant rather than just a lurker.  And lately I've been thinking of blog posts that melt away when I don't do them.  Like all inspiration, I guess.  My uncle said ideas were like the manna the children of Israel were fed in the wilderness.  They last for a day.  So today I'm starting. 

I live in the Pacific Northwest with my husband.  I love fiber arts, knitting and crochet.  Sometimes I quilt.  I do a half-baked job of gardening.  I am a writer of fiction.  I am a Christian.  I love having my sons over and spending time with my grandsons. 

I am linking to Ginny's Yarnalong today just so I don't chicken out and delete this thing in its infancy.  As usual I have too many projects going, but what can I say, I love starting. 

I'm just beginning this hat for my son who is a big Seahawks fan.  But first I have to have the graph blown up for my ancient eyes. 

12th Man-Eyes on You Hat KIT

Available at http://www.yorkshireyarns.com/ my lys. 

Reading Sentinels of Andersonville, by Tracy Groot.  I love her writing, but am thoroughly depressed by the conditions in that prison.  I'm actually looking forward to be done with it, but I can't stop reading.

Enjoy your first week of October, friends.