Saturday morning I take advantage of my chance to tower over someone and I go harass Julie on the air mattress in the living room. I try to get the dogs to eat her, but mostly they just want to snuffle her face and snuggle. Jerks.
I always think of my dogs as these ill-behaved jackasses, spawn of Cerberus himself sent to destroy me, but really, they’re pretty good. I hadn’t given much thought to it until Julie mentioned it, but they are pretty well trained and behaved. They will let you know they want some of your food by using the hypnotic Meaningful Stare but they don’t beg or climb on you or get pushy. They know good behavior and they know when they are being bad and sometimes they intentionally do something like get in my seat just for the goofiness of it all.
Right now they are passed out in bed with me, their faces angelic and sweet. Thinking of them as good dogs is really easy right now. Later, when they are scrabbling around the house and playing hippo stampede I might assess the situation differently.
Anyway! It’s all up and at it. Showers are taken, coffee and cupcakes are consumed, calls are made, plans are solidified!
We head off to the MOA and meet up with Dawn. What follows is an intense few hours of yarn related…standing in line! There are very long and orderly lines to take you from one booth to another. At one point it is suggested that maybe we should just skip the lines and cut in at each booth. I am adamantly opposed to this. I’m a jerk about rules. Systems only work if the rules are followed. I get us all fired up on the system and the rules and the constitution and we’re feeling quite patriotic (even Julie!). It is our duty to our country to stand in line in an orderly fashion!
It is also our duty to show much disdain for the people who do try to cut in line.
So, here’s the thing. We’re in line and we are patient and we are watching the people around us and we each independently come to the same realization. Some 90% of the line cutters are not young jerks with no respect for authority, no! Not at all! The line cutters are predominantly upper middle aged white women from the suburbs (presumably the suburbs, you can smell the Thomas Kinkade on them). The very same women who poopoo the current young generation as being disrespectful. Damned jackasses! They learned it from watching you! What do you expect! Your wash and go hair and perma-press slacks from Kohls are not an all access pass to the world!
Oh, right! We stood in line and received our freebies. Sadly, many people had promised that we would get much free yarn, but we only got one free ball of novelty yarn. Hmmm. But many patterns and whatnot. We even got light up knitting needles. I’ll be giving mine to my mom. As much as I would have loved to use them as light sabers, I just don’t need extra stuff lying around and we’d probably break them soon.
We stopped for lunch at Tucci Benucch, a sorta passable Italian restaurant in the mall. Definitely better than Olive Garden, but still one of those places that puts ‘balsamic’ vinegar in the dipping oil. Let me have a little tangent here… Let’s just stop with the balsamic vinegar thing. It’s had its run, none of the things called ‘balsamic’ vinegar were the real thing, putting caramel color and a bit of sugar in some vinegar does not make it balsamic vinegar. The condiment grade stuff that we see mass produced isn’t anything like what the real thing is. The real thing is thick and sweet and used sparingly. It’s used as much on desserts as on entrees.
Sorry. Anyway, I had the gnocchi with a pretty good bolognese sauce (a good bolognese sauce is one of the treats this world gives us to thank us for standing in line!). The funny thing is that I’d only ever been to the restaurant once before and I sat in the same exact booth.
After lunch we headed out again to stand in more lines and pick up more stuff. Many people come to ask why we are standing in line and it takes a supreme effort of will to keep my mouth shut and not answer “your mom”. People from Ravelry find me! It’s both fun and peculiar. I am one who for years made a concerted effort to not be found by anyone for any reason. All in good fun! people recognize me by my Ravelry bag, my tiny feet, my general aura of jackassitude (except that I’m standing in line and other people are being jackasses about the line!).
After the lines we are exhausted. We slip into Barnes and Noble to sit in the relative quiet of the Starbucks there and crochet and drink coffee. We discuss all manner of TMI subjects. Julie and I explain to Dawn how we met and what led to our friendship. I have been working on a scarf all day while standing in line, just a simple basketweave crochet stitch. As I am sitting at the table working on my scarf when a lady comes up to ask about it. That was fine, lots of people like to ask about the ongoing projects being worked on in public. it WOULD have been fine but she put her hand on my upper thigh and rubbed it!!! SHE RUBBED MY UPPER THIGH!! PERSONAL SPACE ISSUES!!!! HELLO!!!!!
Oh crap that was weird.
Dawn had to take off as she was going to pick up Kim Werker and I am insistent that the world will bow to me and I will meet her!
Julie and I head back to the house to collapse for a bit before dinner.
Coming up: I admit to getting it on with Kim Werkers grandmother in law, I eat delicious food and am generally inappropriate)
Category Archives: Craftin
How to move non-stop for a few days (part 2 in which I make a mediocre dinner and David becomes a hero)
Upon arriving home and greeting the dogs and jumping around and peeing I got started on dinner.
I pulled the pork roat out of the crock pot and shredded the meat, I pureed the sauce, I cooked the squash. I got all my stuff together to make spicy pork and squash enchiladas and i realized that I hadn’t really thought any of this through. My process was haphazard at best, i hadn’t given a thought to all the ingredients I would need or even how to balance any of the flavors.
To say I was disappointed with the results would be an understatement.
But there was salad with peppadew peppers and chevre and a handmade raspberry vinaigrette and that wasn’t too bad.
As the meh-nchiladas were baking I went to show julie how to use the ball winder and swift. I set up her first hank of yarn on the swift and discovered that the knots had been tied by Peru’s criminally insane! I did not want to cut the knots because quite often they use the yarn in the skein to tie things in place and I didn’t want to cut that sort of thing. After fighting and fighting it was discovered that they used scrap yarn to tie it off and it could all be cut. Jerks.
Julie wound ball after ball and the magic that is my ball winder and swift truly came alive.
After dinner she went back to wind another ball of yarn and just as she got started it was discovered that the yarn was cut in multiple places, probably by a box opener. Things got tangle quickly and it looked like a loss.
David, in his invisible cape and hero underpants stepped. He slowly and patiently untangled the mess and wound as many partial balls as possible. He is truly our hero.
Coming up: We stand in line, and stand in line and stand in line and then I get freaky with Kim Werker!
How to move non-stop for a few days (part 1 in which I spend some money)
Friday.
Julie is on her way. I sit quietly on the sofa and drink my coffee and wait for her call. waiting and waiting. Then she calls and I speed off to the airport to pick her up.
I’ve not seen Julie in a couple years and I am excited to see her. Our first stop is Cupcake, but our route is hampered by the lack of bridge between here and there. Put me in minneapolis and tell me where to go and I can follow the grid of streets and get you there. Tell me to go to a place in St Paul and remove the bridge and the wacky angle of the streets caused by the bend in the river gets me every time. For those familiar with the area, I went from the airport to near downtown, turned around, got on 35E, got off at downtown, drove to 94 and took that to 280 and managed to find it there on University Ave. Of course I am sure there was a less zig-zaggy way to do this, but I imagine it was not at fun.
Julie and I ate and laughed and talked about…i don’t remember, maybe it was penises. Cupcakes were consumed and more cupcakes purchased for later. The superawesome cupcake of the day was the Mexican Hot Chocolate cupcake with it’s cinnamon/coffee goodness.
We packed up the cupcakes and headed out. We were delayed by the biggest yellow lab on the planet. I’m pretty sure Trogon the Galaxy Humper has a smaller head than that dog! But he was the sweetest thing ever and I am incapable of ignoring really sweet dogs that obviously want my love. The owner was one of those lucky women that got to bring her dog to work every day. Super envy!
Cash money was pulsing in my purse and the only cure for that is to spend it on yarn! We went to Borealis Yarns for a yarn hunting safari. We met up with Dawn and her son, the amazingly cute Nick. Little boys with curly hair are such flirts and they know it works!
The front of Borealis is good, but I am always drawn to the back room. And entire room populated with sock yarns and fingering weight yarns. Sigh? SIGH! I shoved my head into the last crate of Smooshy and managed to find enough Cool Fire to use for a lovely sweater.
Julie was drooling over some peruvian wool and got a couple hanks of a coppery color and a few hanks of something red that I think was a Cherry Tree Hill supersock but I can’t remember and she will have to tell me.
On the way home I got to impress Julie with the American healthcare system. In Canada everyone may be entitled to healthcare, but in America we have drive thru pharmacies! Where’s your poutine now??
Coming up: Mehnchiladas and David becomes a hero to many.
The hippo has fangs
A few years ago David bought for me a handmade leather hippo from the French Market in New Orleans as a Christmas present. He bought it the day before I flew down to meet him there. When I got there he took me to the French Market for some shopping or whatnot and INSTANTLY I saw the table with the hippos! I fondled and caressed them, I engaged in bad touch. I really wanted one. In some inexplicable moment of magic (responsibility), I decided that with all I’d spent on Christmas and flying to NOLA and upcoming expenses, I would forgo the awesome hippo.
Of course, a couple days later I unwrapped the hippo that David had already bought for me. We’d only been dating a few months at the time, but it was pretty much the sign I needed.
I have 3 hippos on the end table next to the sofa, he’s the biggest. He’s all lovely and handcrafted and everything, but his teeth…not so right. The teeth are just very cheap plastic and they are shaped like fangs or sabers. They’re insane, they are not hippo teeth in the least. They are completely wrong,, but somehow, completely perfect in their awesomeness.
In completely unrelated news…
I wrote up my first real pattern (a cowl) and sent it off to pattern testers. Pattern testers will save your life. They all found the same giant mistake! They also gave some really valuable feedback on the project and gave me more confidence. I will have the pattern available for download in a couple weeks. If you would like me to make one for you I’ve settled on $30 plus materials.
Speaking of…
A coworker saw me wearing one of my awesome pirate skull hats and told me her grandson would like one (she’s done this before to me). I offered her the pattern, she asked if I could make one. I said I could but it would probably be $15-20 plus materials. She tsk-tsk’d me and said “oh come on”. This is something that I find HIGHLY IRRITATING. She’s a knitter, she is aware of how much time and effort goes into a project. This is a custom/adapted pattern (adapted from knit to crochet and then broken down and rebuilt to be shaped differently) and it is hand made. I was being generous at $15-20. $35 to $40 would not be outside the realm of reasonable for the item. Yes, yes you can buy a winter hat for cheaper, but I am not competing with machine made store bought hats. It’s an entirely different product, sure, both keep your head warm, but they are not the same.
I do not make these items in exchange for money to support myself, so I do not have to be competitive. I do not have to undercut myself in order to sell. I do not have to hire chinese orphans in order to stay in business. I make my items and price them according to what my time is actually worth to me, not the ‘market’. Someone either appreciates the item or doesn’t.
Of course if I was trying to make a living selling them, then it would all be polluted factories and orphan slave labor and a document titled “basic human rights” that I would pee all over. To listen to any corporation talk, this is the only way they can survive! It seems they are always on the verge of going under! Without their billions in profits they’d go out of business! Thank god for orphan slave labor to keep our struggling economy afloat.
Am I a little skeptical of the motivations of big business? yeah, sometimes.
Unrelatedly…
My kitchen is still clean, my living room is clean but not entirely organized, the dining room is halfway there and the bathroom is next.
Also…
we got a new water heater the other day! We also got a gas leak from it but they came out and fixed it right away. That was pretty good. No one died.
By the way…
Which one of you recommended I watch “Year of the Dog”? Because I would like to kick you in the knees. First, I really did not need to see a movie about a dog dying. Secondly, the rest of the movie? insane! I only watched about the first half hour, David watched the rest. BAD PERSON!!! Do not recommend these things to me!
And I’m…
off like your mom’s prom dress. Awesome? like a 12 pound possum.
so many projects
I still owe people handmade mittens for Christmas. These are the people who know they are coming late. I am working on them. I also volunteered to be a pattern tester for someone so i need to make a sweater in the pattern. I also need to make mittens for me, remake a pair of mittens for my dad, make two other sweaters for me.
Also, I have to work on Bubbo Designs and try to write up my patterns for sale. That’s the first step. Then there are all the other steps. All of those steps will require a lot of work.
Also, also, there is the “big project” with Anna. I will go into more detail when I feel we have done enough that detailing it won’t jinx it.
And i need to clean the house, deal with some financial things, get a spring installed, get chester in for his shots, try to find a cheap vacation out of town because I really need to get out of town and away if only for a couple days.
So what I’m saying is that I’ve been busy and when I am not busy I am thinking about the things I should be doing but not doing. Then I dream that no matter what I do, I am judged for not doing the things I am supposed to do, the things I forgot to do or didn’t know about. And I wake up with an untenable sense of dread and I can’t remember what I am dreading…then I do.
And maybe I shouldn’t use my website as a therapist.