Where Did You Go, O Dish and Spoon?
I'd pretty much reached the conclusion that -- like the dish and the spoon -- my blogging mojo and my quilting mojo had run away together. I wasn't exactly sure when they'd left, nor did I have a clue as to where they'd run off to, but it was pretty clear that they were gone. It went on for a little more than a month. I tried to blog and I tried to sew, but I just wasn't feelin' it. So finally I just gave up. I stopped trying to blog. I stopped sewing except for a couple of necessary things -- blocks for a swap deadline and sample blocks for upcoming bee participation.
I couldn't even pinpoint why they'd left. I know I was saddened -- perhaps to a disproportionate level -- by the departure of the autistic school from my work place. There is also my perception that The Little Church is dying and that I'm sitting a death watch as I work. But that is a post for another day. Finally, there was the aforementioned influx of hurtful input from readers, comments I might have just shrugged off had it not been for the other sadnesses.
Then, much as they'd run away, those mojos appear to be back. I don't think they've quite settled in yet, taken off their shoes and unpacked their bags, that kind of thing. So I'm going to be gentle and not make a lot of demands.
Yesterday Marsha and I went out to the Mancuso show at Oaks. We've done it before: I drive, she navigates, and we both do a B+ job. I didn't have an extensive shopping list and neither did she. I had told my daughter that I would make a baby girl quilt to donate to my granddaughter's ballet school tea party that raises money to fight breast cancer, and I thought I might find some fabrics. That was all I wanted and nearly all I actually purchased.
I wasn't home more than an hour before I was digging out Tula Pink and pressing and straightening pinks and violets. And after dinner I was back at it.
They haven't said where they went. Or what prompted their return. Or why they didn't even send a post card. But I think that the fewer questions asked, the better.
I couldn't even pinpoint why they'd left. I know I was saddened -- perhaps to a disproportionate level -- by the departure of the autistic school from my work place. There is also my perception that The Little Church is dying and that I'm sitting a death watch as I work. But that is a post for another day. Finally, there was the aforementioned influx of hurtful input from readers, comments I might have just shrugged off had it not been for the other sadnesses.
Then, much as they'd run away, those mojos appear to be back. I don't think they've quite settled in yet, taken off their shoes and unpacked their bags, that kind of thing. So I'm going to be gentle and not make a lot of demands.
Yesterday Marsha and I went out to the Mancuso show at Oaks. We've done it before: I drive, she navigates, and we both do a B+ job. I didn't have an extensive shopping list and neither did she. I had told my daughter that I would make a baby girl quilt to donate to my granddaughter's ballet school tea party that raises money to fight breast cancer, and I thought I might find some fabrics. That was all I wanted and nearly all I actually purchased.
I wasn't home more than an hour before I was digging out Tula Pink and pressing and straightening pinks and violets. And after dinner I was back at it.
They haven't said where they went. Or what prompted their return. Or why they didn't even send a post card. But I think that the fewer questions asked, the better.
Comments
Since AMIL's sudden stroke and death, I cannot sit still to read but am sewing again. The baby who will receive the baby Single Irish Chain quilt has now been born and I am hand stitching the binding on her quilt. I have a Halloween project to quilt and bind, and at some point in time, AMIL's 3 quilts will come back from the quilter for me to bind and label. Hope I don't make those quilts soggy with tears as I stitch.
Didn't mean to get maudlin.
Hugs!
Good luck with the new quilting projects. I have my new project in mind, but haven't quite gotten to the shopping stage. Once the materials are in my house, they tend to call me to work with them.
I am glad you are blogging again as well.
(PS---my daughter and son-in-law have made the move to Philadelphia and love it. Hoping to get out to see them soon)
I too did not see the post titled The Company I Keep. Gosh by golly it is malarkey like that which cause my head to spin and my desire to bitch slap someone. I am not sure what has happened to people. It seems we cannot have a difference of opinion with out fear of being bullied. And that is exactly what some of it is. Well, my dear sweet GF, I got your back, even if our views ever differ. <3
Such sweet, soft loveliness......