Friday, February 10, 2012

Catching Up

Hi All!

So, I dropped off for awhile there. Here's some catching up:

I found a group of moms and babies to hang out with! We try to meet up once a week, taking turns hosting at our houses. It is so nice to talk about poop and sleep schedules without having to worry if you're boring someone ;-)

We did, in fact, run the 5K in October. I walked just a little bit, so I'm proud of that. But then I stopped running all together. I guess without a race for a goal I lost motivation (it also got colder here). I hope to start up again soon so I can be ready for the Spring races. Right now my friend CCR is laid off (boo!), so we're taking advantage of the fact that we're both home during the day and going walking a few times a week.

Simon is huge! He'll be 8 months old on Monday, but he's wearing 18-month clothes. He's in the 100th percentile for weight and 98th for height. When we compare his weight history to Patrick's (his mom gave us Patrick's baby book), he's bigger than Patrick at every point!

More soon!

Monday, January 30, 2012

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Window Arts Malden 2011


So, WAM 2011 is officially on! I have a small piece hanging in E&C Barber Shop--small, yes, but it took me about 12 hours. My mother-in-law was visiting, so she helped me a ton, teaching me new techniques: freezer paper applique, machine quilting, making all those points come together in the center of the circle. The colors go with what will eventually be the color scheme in Simon's room, so that's where it will go when the show is over.

There's a reception on Thursday, October 6th from 6-8pm at the Senior Center for artists, businesses, sponsors, volunteers and fans. Food and drink--try to make it if you can!

In other news, I'm on week 5 of the C25K program! That means that by the end of this week I'll be running 20 minutes or about 2 miles without stopping. I've started physical therapy for some old knee problems to help me make it to the 5K without injury.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

C25K Week 0.2


OK, I did my walk yesterday--yay! We did the cemetary loop, which is about 3 miles. One more loop on Friday or Saturday, then I begin week 1 of training next week. What do you say? Are you in? C25K

Tomorrow I'll be on the news! Fox 25 is holding their Zip Trip broadcast here in Malden, and they interviewed some of us last week about Malden Arts. I made Simon a little Malden Arts onsie, and they took some footage of it, so hopefully that will make the final cut. The city made these zip code t-shirts for us to wear--I've been wanting a shirt like this for awhile now, so I'm really happy to have one!

Monday, August 22, 2011

Hello Again!


Hello All!

Well, it has been a long time. Something pretty big happened--I had a baby! I know! I grew a whole baby since I last wrote here. Amazing. He's 9 weeks old. Here's a picture (many more to come, I'm sure!):



Anyway, the reason I'm starting back up here is that I'm planning to run in the FOOGI 5K Haunt Jaunt on October 30th, and I'm going to document my training and stuff here. So far I have the following training partners:
Patrick--lives with me, so we'll be training together.
John--lives nearby, perhaps we'll have the occasional training session together.
Amanda--lives in Philly, is thinking about it.
Elaine--lives even farther away, is thinking about it.

In other news:
I'm now a stay-at-home mom.
I'm very bored.
I'm looking for mommy-friends.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Moonlight Plantings


So Patrick read last year that the traditional time to plant peas is by the moonlight of St. Patrick's Day. I'm not sure why--good luck? Faster harvest? Sweeter peas? In any case, we went for it with a flashlight in hand.


This is our third or fourth year planting peas, and I'm in love with them. Fresh peas are just so wonderful. And little Fisher loves them too, so we plant extras for him.



Wednesday, January 06, 2010

First Week

Well, it's Humpday. I haven't had to worry about that in over a year, but now I remember what it is like!

The job is a bit overwhelming, as all new jobs are, I suppose. Lots of people to meet, offices to locate. Software to learn. Procedures to get down. The hospital's campus is pretty big, so it will take me awhile to figure out, I think. I spent most of today wrestling with a dictation machine--who knew that people still dictate into micro-cassettes anymore?! My boss does, and typing up the letters is one of my jobs. The machine has little foot pedals for rewind and stuff, which cause my legs to cramp up. Everyone is nice and helpful, though I don't know all their names yet.

My commute isn't too bad--Patrick drops me off at the train in the morning, I take it to my stop (about 30 minutes), and then take a bus to the front door of my office (usually 10 minutes, including waiting around for the bus). On the way home I don't bother with the bus--I just walk the mile to the train. Then take the train home, then a bus to the bottom of my street, and then walk up my hill. Actually, now that I've typed it out it sounds like a major pain. I predict that it will get old fast.

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Insinkerator!

My Christmas present is now installed! Patrick finished it in about 2.5 hours--I'm very proud of him.

Here's a pic of after he cut out the existing pipes with the sawsall (the black thing on the floor is the disposal):

Here's a pic with the disposal installed and all new piping:

Friday, January 01, 2010

New Year's Day!

Happy 2010! Did you have a fun New Year's Eve? Patrick and I had a good time with Traci and Fisher, eating really good pizza and playing Lincoln Logs.


And how are you celebrating New Year's Day? We had Brian and Amanda over for lunch and the Penn State game. Menu: Avocado Dip, Pozole (Mexican pork soup), Cornbread and Lemon Ricotta Cookies.



Thursday, December 31, 2009

New Year's Resolutions, 2010

Remember my resolutions for 2009? Yeah, none of them really happened. I mean, we (Patrick) worked on the bathroom, and it is truly about 90% done. But not fully finished. I didn't see friends every week, and in fact was something of a shut-in, what with not working and all. And I can't truly say I cooked more soup than normal.

Should we just give up on resolutions? They make me feel good for about a week or so, and then I forget about them. So I guess they don't hurt, which means they're not bad. So I'll do them again.

1. Finish the bathroom (again).
2. Cook dinner 1x per week (Patrick does all the cooking).
3. See friends at least 1x per week (again).

I'll let you know how it goes.

Oh, and I turned on word verification for comments because I'm getting lots of Viagra spam.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

New Post

Patrick has challenged me to write a new post. I spend so much time on Google Reader, catching up on more prolific bloggers, which of course he thinks is a waste of time. I mean, I'm not saving the world or anything while reading about someone's pancake project, but he spends his time following the NFL draft, and I spend my time reading feminist analysis of pop culture. Whatever.

So, after a year of trying, I finally got a job! It's an Administrative Coordinator position in the Pediatrics Department of a local hospital. My boss and supervisor, with whom I interviewed, seem really cool, and there's a real social justice angle to the department, which I think I'll like a lot. I start in mid-January, so I still have some time to set up the DVR to tape Oprah.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Rhinebeck

This weekend is the NY Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck, NY. This is a really big event, with vendors, food, sheep dog trials, author signings, and more. I went last year with a woman from my knitting group, and this year we're going again with a third member. I'm not planning on doing much shopping this time ( ! ), but we'll see...

Sunday, October 04, 2009

Baktus Scarf


Hello! I'm back! I didn't knit a single stitch the whole summer, which partly explains why I abandoned this blog. But now that the cool weather is here (I've put our early-winter quilt on the bed), my needles are clicking and I have a project.
I've done some secret present knitting that I can't tell you about yet. This Baktus scarf is for me, though. I'm using some Noro Kureyon Sock yarn, as I've decided that I'm probably never going to knit a pair of socks out of it. And a good decision, that--this stuff is so thin in some places, it's like wire. And tons of knots. Who wants socks made out of knot-filled wire?
But this scarf is pretty cool. Light-weight, garter stitch, triangle. I've used 17g of the 100g ball, so I'm thinking it's going to be pretty long.
Here are the instructions.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Some Gifts

Here's the sweater in action:



And for the Birthday Girl, a Beaufort hat:




I've made the Beaufort before, as a Christmas gift for little A. Good stitch definition, the swirl adds interest. Overall, a nice hat.






Saturday, May 02, 2009

Giraffe in the Grass Sweater



Just in time for summer (heh), I present the completed Giraffe in the Grass Sweater. In its last appearance on this blog, it was still in pieces. Well, it's taken me all this time to piece it together, knit the I-cords, and attach the ties.

The neck, sleeves and bottom edge all have a garter-stitch detail. The neck:



I-cord ties:
Rotated pic of the inside with tie closure.

Here are some things I learned:
  • I-cords really aren't that bad to make. Not sure why I psych myself out with them. Probably because I had to make a million of them for that centipede scarf.
  • Next time I'll figure out how to do the body in the round, so as to avoid all the piecework.
  • I'll have to check in with the mom to see how practical all of these ties are. I suspect they're not.






Thursday, April 16, 2009

Newport, RI


The in-laws are in town, so we have a few days of fun activities planned. Today we went to check out the mansions in Newport, RI. Specifically, The Breakers and The Elms. I'm always kind of torn about touring opulence, but just let it go for the day and enjoyed myself. I think it would be boring for kids, what with the hour-long audio tour, but is a nice day for a group of adults.

Right in the midst of the mansions is Salve Regina University. I'd never heard of it before, but man, what a beautiful campus--right on the ocean, housed in old mansions.

I always enjoy photographing Patrick with statuary.


Friday, March 27, 2009

ROLCats


Do you know this site? Like LOLCats, but the idea is that all of the animals are trapped in Communist Russia. As you know, I love those crazy LOLCats, so this is an obvious fav. Check it out: http://rolcats.com/

Thanks to Savage Minds for the link.

Monday, March 09, 2009

I Wanna Get Drunk Fast!


We recently got cable, for the first time in about 3 years. It comes with a DVR (digital video recorder), which has been really fun.


But Patrick has been filling up the DVR with all kinds of crap man-shows. About low-rider cars. And this trivia show called Manswers. Narrated by a nearly-shouting, gravel-y throated 20-something, it investigates all of the pressing questions today's Man has: how can I know if the prostitute I am approaching on the street corner is really an undercover cop? Or: How big do boobs have to be to crush a beer can?


How's this for a quote: "If you wanna get drunk fast, stick it up your ass!"

The Watchmen


I’m a fan of graphic novels. I started getting into them about three years ago, and like anything I take a shine to, my involvement has been methodical and meticulous. I’ve researched which titles are considered classics, ruled out any that are likely to be offensive to my sensibilities (read: meant for boy’s eyes only), and read. One of my first was The Watchmen, by Alan Moore.


The Watchmen as a graphic novel is everything I had hoped the medium would do with its particular story-telling capabilities: use text and images to tell multiple storylines in each frame, and carry themes throughout the book in ways that are graceful and not hitting you over the head. I went to my local comic book guy and asked for more books that do this, and he wistfully replied that there aren’t any. (If you disagree with him, let me know your suggestions in the comments.)


So, I’ve been waiting for this movie. In part because I hoped it would be a good, true adaptation of the book. But also because I feared that it wouldn’t. And if there’s one thing I love to do, it’s de-construct a movie.


And the chances that I’d have a lot to de-construct with this movie were high, given that the director, Zack Snyder, also directed the movie 300. 300 is my least favorite movie of all time. It is the most sexist, racist, and homophobic film I have ever seen. And while I haven’t been able to bring myself to read the graphic novel from which it was adapted, friends who have read it have told me that the director made some serious changes to the source material—changes that resulted in the film being the hot mess it is.


So, I spent the last week re-reading The Watchmen, so as to be on top of my movie-reviewing game. It really is good.


Patrick and I went to see the movie last night. My impressions (there are some spoilers in here):
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Loved the opening credit sequence. Dylan’s “Times, They Are A’Changing” was a perfect match. I loved the look of the first generation heroes, with their home-made costumes. Loved the photographic-look of the cinematography in this part.

The film was much more violent than I’d imagined it would be. Granted, when I read the book, I didn’t really pay much attention to the fighting. But in the director’s hands, the action was loud, bloody and graphic. I’ve looked back at the artwork in the book, and some of the movie’s scenes went way beyond what Gibbons had done (Rorschach attacking the child kidnapper, the arm scene in the jailhouse). Some people love that stuff, so I’m not really faulting the decision to go so gory in the movie.

I actually thought the treatment of the women in the movie was very balanced and true to the book. With one exception, though minor: in the movie, when Nite Owl and Rorschach re-team and go to the bar to shake down hoodlums for info on Adrian’s attempted assassination, Janey Slater (Dr. Manhattan’s ex-girlfriend) is named as an employee of Pyramid and as handing off the payment. This is not in the book at all, and I really can’t figure out why they would do this in the movie. I should say that I am very sensitive to this plot device, and one of my major beefs with 300 is that it starts out with what’s-his-face’s wife giving a nodded approval to throw that guy down the well, thus starting the war. Why get Janey tangled up in this?

I hated 80% of the soundtrack choices. They didn’t make any sense, and just seemed like cool songs that someone liked so much that they had to go in the movie. And the choice of that Leonard Cohen song for the love scene—the audience at my screeening laughed the whole scene.

They did have to cut out the whole space alien plot, which was fine. I wasn’t very upset that they had to pin it on Manhattan. In the end, the theme is the same—there is no black-and-white, moral compromises must be made, Rorschach can’t live in such a world.

Excellent job finding actors who looked like the comic characters.

I thought Dr. Manhattan was done well. Billy Crudup played it cool, aloof, which isn’t how I’d read it in the book but now that I think of it, I think is the right way to go. The guys sitting in front of me couldn’t get over his junk. It was pretty distracting!

As an over-narration, the journal entries were pretty heavy and hard to focus on.

The movie did feel long, with the scenes on Mars and Antarctica dragging forever.

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Have you read the book? Seen the movie? What did you think?

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Secret Sweater


I do knit. Really, I do. It's just that almost everything I make is for other people, so I can't post the surprise here. But in this case, I decided that I'm sure that my brother and sister-in-law don't read this, so I'm posting about the sweater I'm making for their new baby. As you can see, he's shaped like a starfish.


No, not really. In the end, I don't like this pattern because it comes in five pieces, which I now have to sew together. Total bummer. On Monday I got myself to suck it up and dive in. I attached the shoulders. No problem. Then the hard part--I attached the right sleeve and closed up the right side. Great! Only, gah! I attached the sleeve inside-out. I have now ripped all of that out, and the sweater is in time-out. Just looking at it makes me feel a bit sick.