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Keeping the dream alive

Just a post to make sure this now defunct blog doesn't disappear.

Come visit my new blog at www.soozs.blogspot.com

I'm outta here

OK, I've done it. I'm moving house, I'm outta here, I just can't take it anymore!
 
The no leaving comments thing, the months of unresolved help enquiries, and now they have started clogging up my blog banner with ads. The chewing up bandwidth, moving distracting kind of ads. I'm over it.
 
So I'm taking the leap and I've started a new blog over at blogger. Please please please come and visit me over here. I don't want to be lonely.

Quilt finished!

I am obscenely pleased with myself. It's unseemly, I know. But I feel this quilt combines the best of the plan and buy approach to quilting with the use what you have economy approach. Let me explain.
 
When I went to the quilting expo here in Melbourne back in January I lucked upon some bundles of Japanese print offcuts. The pieces were small - about 14cm squares - but the patterns were gorgeous and the price was exceptionally good. I couldn't pass them up, so I bought 3 bundles of 10. I wasn't really clear how I would use them at the time, so they became part of the stash.
 
Over time the idea of a Japanese quilt took hold, just a small lap one. I even had a recipient for the project in mind (though that's still a secret for now). I wanted something super plain and elegant, so the fabrics themselves could really shine. So I had to buy in the backing and wadding, but I found some good quality plain indigo that was really well priced and pure cotton batting.
 
I constructed a basic grid to get maximum value from the prints and used the same indigo in the grid as I did for both the backing and the binding. It really helps the beautiful patterns to really jump out at you. I machine quilted each sqaure using different stitches, so when you look at the back there is a really interesting grid of patterns too - straight lines, spirals, stars, waves and freehand.
 
I am actually pretty amazed with the result I have to say. There is still a long way to go before I am producing the kind of pieces I admire here in the blog craft community, but I am very happy with my progress. One of the things that this project has taught me is that I am totally hopeless at colour co-ordinating. In this project all the work was done for me when I bought the bundles, but in thinking about other possible uses for the prints, and new quilt projects I am prepared to face up to what I have for years suspected to be true, I just can't create colour harmony.
 
And not just in craft. I frequently ask Dave whether I can wear certain things together, and his answer is usually no. He'll change my shoes or scarf or something to get rid of some awful clash. And not because he's a fashion guru either (his uniform of black jeans, workboots, a T-shirt and a shirt has been entirely resistant to fashion trends for the 13 years we've been together), it's not a style thing. It's absolutely that the key to combining colours into an overall pleased effect just utterly escapes me.
 
So there, I've said it. I'm out of the closet. I'll craft till the cows come home, but I am beginning to accept that the colour gene just passed me by. I'll stick to my plains and monotones, and let Dave choose all the paint colours. So given my colour disability I am doubly pleased with the quilt. I can't wait till I give it to it's new owner!

Getting the hang

I understand why people say you just learn HTML by doing it. If you spend enough time fiddling and trialing you start to see a pattern in the code. Listen to me, I sound like I know what I'm doing, no?

Truth is I'm still really unsure about my planned switch from blog to website. For a start all the technical stuff is a real stretch, and the loss of some features weighs on me. It seemed like a logical progression but I wonder if I've made the right choice going down this path, if I should have done more research before I jumped into this solution.

The thing that works best about the new web shell I've bought is the online shop - I love it! It was easy to set up and I love how smoothly it works. It makes me feel really professional and business-like, and like my blogging has been lifted from the realm of time wasting hobby to start up business. Very exciting.

But at the same time it has brought on something of a web-identity crisis for me. Am I really a blogger or a business woman - do I want to chat or sell? Can the web site really do both given it's relatively unsophisticated blogging tools? Do I want people who buy my stuff to know about the rest of my life? Will trying to combine them lead to self-censorship and banal chatter? Should I maintain separate blog and shop sites- is it a good idea and do I have the time?

A girl can go mad thinking about these things! As always I would love to hear from others about the pros and cons of the one site vs split blog and shop sites deal.

Maxette

 
I've bitten the bullet too and started building a proper website. Sheesh it's hard! I hope to be sending you all over there soon, but unless I can at least get the links working I'm still hiding it out in the closet. Can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong that my HTML code doesn't know where my link ends?

A sad tale

This post is WAY long, and contains some icky bits. Don't read it if you don't want. And I know this MSN site makes it really hard to leave comments - please email them to me and I will post them later.

Disclosure

I've never really subscribed to the idea that you shouldn't tell. Like most things in life I think sharing makes things valuable. I'm not superstitious and I always thought that if I miscarried I'd want people there to support me, I'd want people to know I had experienced this, and to understand that experience was now a part of me.

My partner isn't the same. He subscribes to both the superstition and the privacy thing. Seems more common for blokes, maybe because they aren't chained to the very physical reality of pregnancy from the moment of conception. They don't have nausea and inexplicable exhaustion to hide, they aren't on the hormone rollercoaster that fills them with hope and then drops them in irrational despair. Seems more reasonable for them to wait. To contemplate the abstraction of conception in an internalised way. I respect his view even if I don't share it (and I thank him deeply for respecting mine in letting me post this stuff here).

When we conceived Amy we told. I could see no reason not to tell family - how could we not tell family?! - and after that friends and others seemed to somehow fall in too. There wasn't any way I could hide that I was hit so hard and so quick by morning sickness. At work I had to explain why I'd stopped coming to work at 7.30 bright eyed and bushy tailed and hanging around after work for a drink. Why I wanted to sleep at my desk and constantly nibble and complain about feeling green.

When it happened this time we were more cautious. Although I was pretty sure I knew about 5 hours after we conceived, we didn't get a positive test for two weeks. We let our immediate family know and a few people guessed or were told because of circumstances. And despite our temptations, we said nothing to everyone else. But one of the reasons I hate secrets so much is that no matter how genuinely people promise not to tell, someone always does. So a few others found out and the less said about that the better because it just makes me all the more sad.

When I started to bleed at nine weeks I didn't want to talk about it with anyone. I wanted to crawl into a cacoon and sleep until it was all over. Little did I know then just how long it would take before it would be all over. I didn't want to hear anyone say how sorry they were, or how sad it was or hear their voices catch in sympathy. I didn't want hugs or rational thinking or anything.

And I certainly didn't want to hear anyone tell me how much worse it could have been - if I had been further along, if I didn't already have Amy, if it had happened the week before or the week after or at a less convenient time. I just didn't want to deal with it. Not because I didn't think their concern was genuine, or that they didn't meant well, or were not themselves upset by such a sad loss. Not even because I wished they didn't know. I just didn't want to be at the coalface of the horror for a second longer than I absolutely had to.

And I feared that someone would say the wrong thing, like the horror stories I had heard from friends. I worried that if someone did this I might explode. Even though I know for sure I have said awful and insensitive things myself in the past and I knew it was no one's fault they didn't understand I worried it might provide me a tiny window of opportunity to unload the grief and anger and frustration I was feeling. Perhaps I was worried they might tap into something going on under my rational understanding, like a sense of guilt at waiting too long to have another child, or giving up hope too quickly, or my inability to have another, or perhaps even my reluctance to go through the whole thing again. I might do irreparable damage to a relationship because they weren't able to leave me alone when I was hurting. For just a little while I wanted it all to be about me, me and Dave, me and Amy.

But despite how I felt in the thick of it I still believe the cultural silence on miscarriage is poison. I hate that so many women go through it alone, and worse are so hopelessly ill-informed about how common miscarriage is and how under prepared they are for what happens. It is not a small thing emotionally or physically and it seems crazy that in the millions of books that teach you about every step of the pregnancy and birth process, miscarriage rates barely a mention.

I can't believe how many times I have told a women about my miscarriage only to be told straight back that it happened to them. And how many of them had this same experience of sharing their story and finding themselves members of this secret club. I understand much better now why people don't want to talk about it, and why I didn't either, but the collective silence also diminishes our ability to grieve for the children who are lost and for our hopes and expectations that are lost with them.

And if we shared more we might make some progress on how people can respond better to our experience. People might learn to never ever tell you how it might be worse, or how you can get over it, or why you should try and have another child. People might learn that even if you couldn't keep the secret of your own pregnancy, they should never break your confidence by passing on the news. People might learn that sometimes simply acknowledging the sadness of the situation is enough to make it hurt all the more. They might give up one feeling like somehow they should be able to ease your suffering and accept that there isn't a single good thing to say to someone so deeply in pain.

That's why I'm posting this. Not for your sympathy (I'm sure I have it), or kind words, or even because I want to talk about it. I'm posting it because I think it's important.

Waiting

I always thought miscarriages were relatively quick. You'd start to bleed and then it would all be over in a matter of hours of perhaps a day. I understood you usually had a curette afterwards and that this was a fairly unfun if routine procedure. I assumed there would be pain, and a fair bit of blood. But like most things that haven't happened to me I hadn't thought through all that might happen between the first signs of trouble and the last. I hadn't imagined ambiguity or confusion, I'd never assumed there would be waiting.

But like most tragedies my miscarriage began quietly, so quietly I wasn't even sure there was a problem. Was that a little streak of pink I saw there? Last thing at night before I went to bed it was indistinct enough that I didn't even bother saying anything to Dave. I'd had cramps since conception, so I didn't think too much about that either. I was concerned enough to be on high alert, but I was also able to still rationalise it all away.

By mid morning the next day the streak of pink was a streak of red and I was on the phone to the obstetrician. It no longer seemed indistinct, and an ultrasound scan confirmed that things didn't look right. Despite a healthy heartbeat, the baby was too small and there wasn't enough amniotic fluid. The radiographer hedged his bets that while it didn't look good it was still too early to be sure. He had seen some crazy things before with dates and conception and sizes. He wanted me to have hope.

It was hours until I could speak to the obstetrician again and I had filled in the time working on my thesis which was due to be submitted in four days time. I knew enough about what lay ahead to know I had to get it done now, so I was still in the lab at uni when the call came at 6pm. She said pretty much the same as the radiographer. She said I would probably miscarry and it could happen any time but I should book the extra scan for next week. She was sympathetic about the waiting and how hard it was, but said we had to be sure.

I felt pretty sure from the start. There were moments over the following days when my mind would wander, when I would recalculate dates and try to imagine that conception had happened much later than we thought, but the hope never lasted. I was sure about when I conceived, and with hindsight I began to see all kinds of portents in my experience of the early part of the pregnancy. Despite the times when the morning sickness hit me like a brick, I never felt quite like I had when I was carrying Amy.

But the waiting was awful. I didn't know what to say to people - it hadn't happened yet, but we were in the grip of grief nonetheless, free falling through despair over our lost baby. Amy didn't have her usual sleep over with her grandparents, so I had a boisterous three year old to amuse in between bouts of crying, nausea and labour like cramps. I spent each moment expecting and checking, constantly playing out scenarios about going to the hospital in a hurry, getting Amy cared for, mentally writing checklists and making plans. And each day passed with a slow trickle of dodged phone calls and cut off conversations. The bleeding didn't get more dramatic, but it didn't stop either. The days seemed like weeks and all I wanted to do was sleep.

And then the bleeding really started and still we had to wait. Even when the repeat scan confirmed that the baby was dead, and the pain was so intense I thought I might pass out, still it wasn't over. The whole sac had disengaged and was just sitting on my cervix waiting to be expelled. My obstetrician offered a curette anytime I couldn't wait any more, but I didn't want to do that. For some reason I couldn't make that choice, I couldn't believe it could go on much longer. Despite the week already passed I couldn't give up on the idea that it might be over any minute without the bright lights of the operating theatre.

It was two more days before I 'passed the tissue'. Two days of pain and heavy bleeding, two more days of dodging phone calls and being withdrawn from the world. I felt a truly bizarre sense of elation when it happened, something probably linked to the same hormones that make you happy after giving birth. I felt like I had accomplished something. While I continued to bleed (in fact I bled a lot heavier for a while) I felt much better. I began to imagine life again and the unbearable sadness receded.

Technology

I consider myself a pretty rational person and I'm more a scientific thinker than an emotional or romantic one. I love technology, I love working things out, I love knowing why and how. I'm not someone who sees the olden days as a yardstick for everything that's good and proper, despite the many and varied problems progress has wrought. When people say we don't need so much medical intervention in birth I say you've never had a three-day labour followed by a distressed baby. Yes, for many generations women have successfully given birth in the fields or on their living room floors without a doctor in sight. But yes, many women have died in the process, or ended their lives as social outcasts when their bowels and bladders have leaked from the tears of difficult births. I'm not against natural birth, away from hospitals and the interventions of doctors, but I'm thankful to my obstetrician everyday when I look at my daughter who just couldn't make it through my birth canal.

When I was pregnant the first time around I loved having the ultrasounds. I have copies of them on tapes I have watched many times and I still remember the fascination of seeing our baby kick and swoop. I found it hard to imagine what pregnancy must have been like when it was just so completely unknown.

When we went for this scan at 9 weeks how different the experience was. My heart leapt to see the heartbeat on screen - for some reason I thought this meant everything was all right. I knew of others who had bled whilst pregnant and gone on to give birth to perfectly health little babies. I squeezed Dave's hand and wanted to cry with relief. I felt more emotional than I ever did the first time around. And then the radiographer started on the problems and bit by bit my elation faded away and the knowledge that the baby wasn't going to live took over.

But the real seal came when he held up the pictures he had taken - did we want to keep them? In a split second I had to choose between running away from what we'd seen and embracing it. Instinctively I said yes and reached for the pictures, but just as quickly the grief hit me full force. All I could see was that beating heart, that little creature trying to survive, photos of my not quite baby, doomed.

Afterwards we talked about whether we would rather not have seen it, whether it would have all been easier if I'd bled out in ignorance. That image is burned into my brain in a way that will never let me forget, that will haunt me, that can bring tears to my eyes at the drop of a hat when it snaps into focus in my mind's eye. No doubt too that it has changed the experience for me, though of course I'll never know exactly how.

Perhaps I would have been better off not seeing it. Perhaps I would have been better off relying on my intellectual capacity to understand, conceptualise and rationalise. I fully understand that making babies is an incredibly complex and fragile process, I understand there are about a million ways it can go wrong, and it seems like something of a miracle that it goes right as often as it does. I have always understood this, and was always pretty amazed that we got from woaw to go with Amy as easily as we did. I always suspected we'd hit a bump in the road somewhere, that it wouldn't be our fault, that the odds just work that way. I might have been able to say it's sad and hard but it's for the best for it to end if things have gone wrong. My sadness might have stood measured against this understanding.

But that little beating heart spoke a different language and nothing can buffer the depth of sadness it's voice brought.

Hope and giving up

I remember when I had Amy there was a battle going on between my focus on myself and my focus on my baby. The baby was a theoretical imaginary being for so long, whereas I was real. During morning sickness I remember the shock from other people when I described the baby as a parasite. But that was how it felt. My lifeblood was being sucked out of me in exchange for an idea of a baby. My hopes and dreams of motherhood didn't stand a chance against the grim reality of nausea, exhaustion and the discomforts of physical occupation. As the pregnancy wore on the reality of her existence grew, but still my own discomfort was uppermost in my mind.

I distinctly remember being handed a hastily bundled baby as I lay on the operating table and feeling terribly un-maternal that I was more concerned about my own gaping wound than my baby. I looked at the nurses and doctors and wanted to ask them what they thought I could possibly do with a baby in my present position.

It didn't take long for things to change. I have no doubt these days that if it came down to the wire there isn't much I wouldn't do to protect my girl, despite the consequences to myself. Now that I am a mother I feel very differently about the trade-off between my own well-being and that of my offspring.

Living in the limbo between pregnancy and miscarriage I oscillate between being a protective mother who wants her child to battle the odds to live and a regular person who wants her own suffering to end. I can't quite return to that person I was before I became a mother, thinking only of getting my life back, of things returning to normal. The reality of that image on the ultrasound screen hits me differently. I see that beating heart as the beginning of a life, as Amy's sibling, as our younger child. I see the life that might have come from it in three dimensions, with photos and a soundtrack of laughter and tears. I grieve for that life, with a terrible sadness that it will never be.

At the same time I want to scream from the torture of waiting. I so want the experience to be over that I want them to do something to speed it up, even at the beginning when we have no confirmation that it's a losing battle. I feel shocked at how easily I can give up hope that things will turn out differently, that things will be all right after all. I can't bear the morning sickness for another second, I can't stomach the crazy pregnant hunger I have to feed a life that has no future. I am utterly outraged that I can feel first trimester morning sickness and labour pains all at once - the two worst parts of pregnancy and with no joy awaiting me at the end of my trial.

Life goes on

In a previous life - a life before Amy - I would have dealt with the miscarriage with lots of time on the couch, lots of holding hands with Dave and generally letting the world stop. I would have called in sick to work (because I would still have been a full-time worker right?) and taken the phone off the hook. And when it was all over I would have slowly re-entered the world and tried to get on with it.

But the presence of a child in my life changes everything, both big and small. Before heading off for a scan I knew might lead to hospital, I made dinner and put it in the fridge. I left instructions on how to heat it up on the bench. I did this because although I know Dave is perfectly capable of cooking dinner, I know the most important thing is making things OK for Amy, and me taking dinner preparations out of the picture will help him be able to spend time playing with her instead of figuring out what the hell to give her to eat.

I no longer feel comfortable leaving the phone off the hook when there is a childcare centre looking after my child, so I end up dealing with calls I would otherwise have never had to have. As I pace around through the pain of my contractions and bleeding I empty the dishwasher and hang out the washing. I know it isn't important to keep house, and believe me I let plenty slide, but I know these days the stuff you don't do just piles up and there's never enough time to catch up.

We didn't get any free rides in the ten or so days all this was going on. The day after the first scan, the head gasket and radiator went on the car, leaving us car-less and requiring Dave to spend lots of time in a far off suburb working hard with his cousin to fix it. I also had to hand in my thesis. This was quite achievable in theory, but it wasn't till Sunday afternoon that I realised I had forgotten to sign the declarations attached to each copy before I had left it with my supervisor on the Friday. This required me, during what turned out to be the peak of my pain to go back in to Uni and walk across campus to sign them off. I'm sure I could have postponed this, but to be honest I just couldn't be bothered dealing with the extensive bureaucratic requirements and paying the extra enrolment fees to delay it all. I was firmly stuck in the life goes on mentality.

My brother's birthday passed and for the first time in sixteen years I didn't call to sing happy birthday to him. (The last time I missed birthday wishes I was in India and even then I tried hard to send a telegram.) I just couldn't face it. I went to his birthday brunch and moved zombie like between conversations I couldn't really comprehend or remember. Dave and I had our thirteenth anniversary, but aside from a kiss and a happy anniversary it slipped by without ceremony. No presents, no champagne, no dinner at a fancy restaurant. Dave got bitten by ants and spent three days with a violent itch. Amy had some virus that made her vomit almost continuously for 24 hours. The oven AND the VCR stopped working.

It was easy to feel that rather than stopping out of respect for our grief the world had decided to shit on us from a great height, to teach us that life keeps on going and things can always get worse. To make sure we never take anything for granted ever again. I'm trying to learn this lesson, not like a mantra on a card I tell myself while I'm brushing my teeth, but in my skin. Trying to find space for the grief I am sure I will feel for a long time yet to sit alongside all the things I am so grateful for, and the countless ways I am so fortunate.

Use what you have on Flickr

Told you I was sick for it! If you like the idea jump on over to Flickr and join the group http://www.flickr.com/groups/usewhatyouhave/

Use what I have month

Yesterday's post really got me thinking. It got me thinking about how maybe Australia is a bit of a make do kind of culture, you know the bush frontier and all that. It got me thinking about the crafting of the past generations of my family, and it got me thinking about the role of craft as an alternative to buying stuff.
 
All day I've been thinking about how my 'make do' thing is really ingrained. But not in a bad way. In fact I am really quite proud of the way in which I can turn scraps into something useful. I'm not saying I don't buy stuff, I'm not on a soap box because buying fabric in particular and craft supplies in general is my one hedonistic consumerist obsession, but my idea of craft most definitely comes from making the things you can't afford to buy.
 
Whether it's baking a cake, sewing a skirt, threading a necklace or making a quilt I have inherited my drive for economy from the generations of my family who couldn't have had beautiful (or delicious) things if they couldn't make them out of what they had. When it stops being cheaper to make it than buy it, it starts to get harder to maintain my inspiration. Not completely, since robbing your average corporate chain store of an extra buck gives me great delight, but in the main I feel especially good about my craft when I think my grandma would approve. I love it if it involved recycling, reusing and not consuming more - making do with what you have.
 
So all day I've been thinking this and then I read simplesparrow's post on using what you have http://simplesparrow.typepad.com/simple_sparrow/2006/03/use_what_i_have.html#comment-15071361
 
What a fantastic idea! For the month of April I will not buy new stuff, but choose instead feed my creativity solely from the mountains of stuff I already have. So who is going to join us? How about we set up a Flickr group for the things we make using what we have? I think I'm getting stupidly excited about this...
 
* Update - told you I was sick for this idea! If you like the idea jump on over to Flickr and join the new group http://www.flickr.com/groups/usewhatyouhave/

Something of substance

It's been such a long time since I wrote anything of substance here. I have excellent excuses, believe me, but still. Reading Lynn http://yarnstorm.blogs.com/knitblog/ and Liesl http://disdressed.blogspot.com/ post on quilting and Denyse Schmidt has inspired me to add my two cents.
 
I'll start by saying I adore the DS quilts - though my viewing has been limited to the online adventures of others since I can't even get a hold of any of her books down here in Oz. Back ordered months ago to no avail. I'm sure I'd adore her fabrics if I ever laid eyes on them, but I'm not holding my breath I ever will in my home town. Despite living in the second largest city on this continent, we are still a backwater in many crafting ways. Just this morning I spent hours trawling for a supplier for Staedler Mastercarve Artist Carving Block so I could make myself some stamps like every other online crafter does at the drop of a hat. Unless I want to pay more than twice the cost of the product to get it shipped to me then the stamp venture is just a dream. But I digress.
 
I have always felt kind of out of the loop when I read the posts of crafters, and quilters in particular, about fabric ranges and designers. Despite a lifetime of fabric purchasing and sewing I have never known the names of fabric designers (with the exception of the outrageous Ken Done who was the object of great nationalistic pride in the 80's for making distinctly Australian stuff). I have always shopped by visiting a range of stores and fishing through large amounts of random stock in the hopes of finding good stuff. And despite some excellent finds over the years, compared to my experiences in other countries the textile market here is limited and haphazard at best, poor qaulity and overpriced at worst.
 
I've never really made a quilt in the pattern, plan, shop mode. I started quilting because I couldn't stand the wasteage that came from my dressmaking. I couldn't bear to throw away the chunks of gorgeous and expensive wool suiting, the scraps from silk shirts that were too big to give up but too small for a scarf. As the years rolled on I accumulated more and more and like generations of thrifty women before me I searched for uses for them. It was something of a relief when my friends started having babies and I could find a home for a small play mat or cot quilt.
 
My quilting and patchworking aspirations grew in size to doona coveres and lap rugs, but they didn't get more complex - I still was stuck in the economy mindset. I used simple (SIMPLE!) geometric designs that allowed me maximum fabric value with minimum sewing. If I wanted something a bit more decorative I appliqued on something simple. The only time I ever purchase purpose specific fabric is for backing - and even then only reluctantly. I've even been known to use old fabric for batting, something I am sure a real quilter would gasp at. I bought my first ever quilt specific fabric in Thailand and I am so unfamiliar with the process from here that I am paralysed by indecision.
 
So it has been interesting for me to see what others do. I am in awe of the work they produce, the thought they put in and choices they make over fabrics and shapes and piecing and quilting stitches. Check out just a few on my recent favourites - http://steph.sicore.org/archives/2006/03/studio_friday_e.html#comments, http://weewonderfuls.typepad.com/wee_wonderfuls/2006/03/i_speak_for_the.html#comments, http://smallhand.blogspot.com/2006_02_01_smallhand_archive.html#113927145172827443 . I aspire to do something as wonderfully interesting and creative, but like Liesl I still see quilts as the product of other things - found and recycled fabrics, left overs and hand me downs, designs based on getting the bits you have to fit together - of the instinct to make do. So while I aspire to do more and emulate my quilting heroes I think my pragmatic spirit will always win out. I think I'm just destined to be a make do kind of crafter, feeding my stashes and tools with chance finds and thoughtful gifts and lots of reading about other people's more structured forays....perhaps this is just another facet of being a dabbler (http://peasoupoftheday.blogspot.com/2006/03/what-am-i-where-am-i.html)?

Lurid cupcakes

Finally used my icing pastes. I'm sure these colours can't be good for you, but gee they look wild!

Too weird

A mum's group for women who have all had their children by the same anonymous sperm donor. Does that make them siblings? My head is kind of spinning.

A quick note

I'm in the last wek of thesis frenzy, so I'm just passing by even though I've got a couple of things I've been thinking about and dying to post on in depth. I'll get to that next week. For now it's a hi and bye thing.
 
Here's a new necklace I made - I really love this one and think it might have to be mine.
 
And also some light wheat loaves Amy and I made. We had the mum's group kids here this morning and they each made their own pizzas for lunch from the left over dough. Everyone was happy so I was too.

Happy birthday present

I love pearls, not the regular string of with twin set thing, but more contemporary looks. Ever since I was pregnant with Amy, I have always thought of pearls as the ultimate symbol of motherhood - you get this little thing inside you that irritates and hurts, and you try to form a smoothness around it and then this magical perfect thing is born from all that friction. You know they are the only jewels to be produced by a living organism?
 
So I try and make jewellery with them that has some symbolic or metaphoric relation with motherhood, or parenthood. For example I have a simple necklace of two perfect shiny pearls, with a tiny unpolished seed pearl in between and when I made it I always thought of Dave and me flanking a tiny Amy, as yet unworn by life.
 
I've been meaning to make a necklace for my friend Maria for years now, and I know she loves these black river pearls. Lucky she went and had a birthday to jog me into action. Happy birthday dear friend, here's to you and your two little girls and all the inspiration and friendship you've given me on my journey into motherhood.
 

5 Things I did on the weekend

After Kath's challenge (http://redcurrent.blogspot.com/2006/02/what-did-you-do-on-weekend.html#comments) here are 5 things I did this weekend:
  1. Went to the zoo and saw the new red pandas and the tiger and seals and a whole stack of other amazing creatures. The best bit was seeing Amy run from place to place shrieking about what to see next. She was so excited and happy and engaged. Great fun.
  2. Got struck by lightening (the house not me), got stuck inside while the street flooded and we all got crabby with each other. That bit wasn't so fun.
  3. Sat with Amy while she made her first full-on collage on funky red hessian at Bunnings. Despite the hideously commercial nature of this superstore, their craft sessions for kids are really pretty good. I got some adhesive magnetic tape (how cool is that?) Dave got advice abgout how to paint our oiled floors black and some new string for the whipper snipper, and we all had a sausage in a roll with BBQ onions on the way home. Everyone was happy.
  4. Amy and I made passionfruit biscuits as part of our ongoing effort to lighten the vines. Sometimes they are just so-so, but this batch is perfect - the biscuit soft and cakey, the icing mouthwateringly tangy. She loves cooking almost as much as me.
  5. I repotted a few of our deck plants as part of our effort to clean the place up. I'm hoping the gardenia bloody well flowers now after years of dropping buds and the flamingo lilly has some more flowers. Dave painted all the spirit houses with oil too, so expect some revamped deck pictures soon.

Lightening strikes

So there I was happily napping away my precious childfree time yesterday afternoon whilst Amy snored away in her bed when I was woken by growls of thunder. After a few very hot days a spectacular storm was not unexpected - as is the whim of Melbourne summer weather. So I got out of bed to make sure the washing was in and so on, when halfway across the room the loudest clap of thunder and brightest bolt of lightening happened similatneously, seemingly right in our livingroom.
 
All the fuses blew and the phone went dead (dave was mid-sentence at the time) and Amy woke up crying in fear. Not a great start to an afternoon caged inside. So we stared out the window for a while as the rain got heavier and heavier and the street became a river and Amy (with memories of the Chiang Mai wet season still fresh in her mind) declared the flooding had started. We never worry too much about stroms, our house is high off the ground and pretty watertight, so usually I enjoy just watching them unfold (though I never get any photos because I'm too absorbed in it). But we slowly came back to earth and started to assess the damage. The cordless phone was fried, as was the amplifier on the stereo. But it took a while before we realised the real problem - the hot water.
 
We have the instant gas kind - which is wonderfully energy efficient and inexpensive to run and last year we were given these fantastic gadgets that allow you to set the temperature of the water as it comes out of the tap. We have one keypad in the kitchen and one in the bathroom, which means my washing up water is always piping hot, but my daughter's bath can never burn and my shower never requires fiddling between the mix of hot and cold (I like it at 40o C if you are interested). But when the keypads get fried, the hot water won't work. So right now I'm waiting on the electrician who, bless his cotton socks, is making a housecall on a Sunday to get us back up and running. Thank goodness for nice electricians - thanks Paul.

For everyone who's ever been worried about teflon

Reading this (http://turkeyfeathers.typepad.com/turkey_feathers/2006/02/teflon_dawn.html#comment-14267994) made me want to jump out of my seat and throw away the only teflon coated non-stick frypan I have left (even though I hardly ever use it). Time to save up for a new scan pan...

Garden of earthly delights

I've been meaning to post for a while about the bounty our garden has been providing. After our tiny rooftop terrace in Chiang Mai, our garden is positively a mini farm and I have been really loving being in it. I'm specially conscious of it now that we're getting to the end of most of the summer fare. After weeks of delicious poached and fresh plums each night after dinner and luscious plum cakes by day the plums are sadly all gone. Now we are moving on to the figs our generous neighbours have been sharing with us, and finding ever more uses for the passionfruit.
 
So last night I made a favourite - sautern figs. Bring sautern or other dessert wine to simmer point (about half a cup per person) then slip in figs and turn off the heat. I use 3-4 figs per person, depending on fruit size. Let the fruit go cold in the wine, then remove and bring the liquid back up to the boil and reduce to a syrup. You can go to all sorts of trouble to garnish serve, but I am completely happy with a dollop of cream all floaty in the juice. Absolutely the taste of summer, and quick and easy enough that you don't need to spend any more time indoors than absolutely neccessary.

A rose by any other name

Ain't I lucky? The postie brought me one of Rose's (http://craftymcgee.typepad.com/) gocco patches. As my daughter was born in the year of the horse, I'm guessing this will only temporarily be mine. I'll enjoy it while it lasts and make sure I let you in on the details of its final destination.
 
Also a little itty bitty needle felted pumpkin. Such a great colour.
 
I seem to nothing but dash in and out of this blog at the moment, always in a hurry. But oh so very soon things will change. In 3 weeks time the thesis will be in (IT WILL BE IN!), and then I'll be able to think again.

Sunday funday

My sister in law Cath came over for a craft session on Sunday. Very please with Terrier Max - made from felted wool jumpers, and a new pair of multi multi coloured leggings for Amy. They sure will go with anything you care to pull out of the wardrobe. I really like crafting with someone - so much more fun than crafting alone. I think Cath's input on noses and and collar details made all the difference to the final product. I am getting very excited about our craft weekend away in May!

Don't think about it

A study done at the University of Amsterdam has found that when it comes to making big decisions in life, you are better off not thinking too hard about it. The reason is that our conscious minds are really only good at juggling a couple of factors in weighing up a deicison, whereas our unconscious minds are much better at dealing with complex situations. Simple decisions are therefore the opposite - our conscious mind is very good with decisions where there are ony a couple of issues at play.
 
I read about this today and it made me smile. Is this just a more sophisticated way of saying we should trust our gut instincts? Our intutition? I think hard about which brand of milk to buy, or whether to walk or catch the tram, but when it comes to starting a job or going overseas, in the end I know I need to go with the one that feels right, even if I can't explain why in a rational sense. This all seems entirely logical and sensible to me, and I suspect this is traditionally a gendered way of doing things. I am sure many women reading the findings of this study feel vindicated about how they make decisions.
 
But at the same time it presents a few problems. How do people negotiate around joint decisions? If what feels right to one person doesn't feel right to another, how can compromise be reached? Whether you are talking about business (can you imagine intuitive budget setting for example?) or family life (parents deciding which school to send their child to for example), if you want to get past a black and white, you or me, win or lose mentaility you have to be able to work through the decision making process.
 
The win-win model of negotiation is based on finding common interests. It doesn't eliminate compromise, but it does aim to uncover and meet each persons most important aims and priorities. The premise here is that sometimes the end we are pursuing is not the only way our underlying needs can be met, and by looking at what lies beneith we might find a new path that better incorporates the needs of others. With the unconscious rules model we don't really know what is at the heart of the matter since our 'knowing' mind is by definition conscious, so our conscious minds are only privy to the outcome. This makes it pretty hard to work backwards with someone else to find another path to mutual if not satisfaction then at least acceptance.
 
So I'm kind of heartened to know there's a sound basis to following your gut, to listening to your intuition and for ignoring the chattering voices that lead you round in circles when you face a big decision. I'm glad that drawing up a list of pros and cons is finally being revealed for the simplistic clap trap it is, AND that people are being encouraged to think a little more about the small decisions they blindly make without thought. But now I want to see the study that explains how to turn this internalised, self-oriented process into something that includes others.