Category Archives: Travel

Breaking Up is Actually Easy to Do

I’ve been frustrated with WordPress for a long time but things got even worse. Something as simple as changing a font or color must now be paid for.  While I respect their business model I also respect my right to change hosts.  I’ve gone ahead and migrated all of these posts to  a new blog which, while needing some tweaking, is going to work out well.

I did this over the past few days while trying to sort out my thoughts about the Boston Marathon.  Please visit the new Major Thoughts Blog as this one will no longer be updated.  I’ll get back to sewing and quilting and all good things over there.

Thanks – I hope you come along and continue the ride.

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Filed under Aging, Amish, Applique, Bridezilla, Craft, Design Wall Monday, Family, Friday Night Sew-In, Gloucester, Massachusetts, Paper Piecing, Quilting, Quilts, Rants, Sashiko, Sewing and Needlework, Travel, Wool felt

I Think I’m Turning Japanese

I really think so.

(Okay, it’s an old song by the group The Vapors, but for me it’s for realsies.)

I’ve had a love affair with all things Japanese since I visited there back in 2004. We were there because Joe had been made president of the local Rotary chapter that year and one of his “duties” was to attend the world conference. Duty? Hell yeah! The club picked up his tab so our only expense (besides meals and incidentals) was my plane ticket and a big boost to our hotel allowance. (I’ve got a “good hotel” thing and I’m willing to pay for it, dammit.)

The trip was epic – Rotary gave all attendees a beautiful tote bag filled with rail passes, bus passes and all kinds of maps and information.  We traveled all over by ourselves, got lost a few times, ate all kinds of food we had NO idea about but loved every bite.  The temples in Nara were breathtaking.  Our suitcases came back jammed with elegant, diminutive Japanese sake flasks, kitchen utensils, and FABRIC.

Bag FrontI’ve hoarded the fabric, doling it out in bits and pieces for worthy things. I added to the stash when I worked at The New England Quilt Museum. I was fortunate enough to enjoy an employee discount on the uber-gorgeous Japanese taupes and imports – resistance was futile. My Japanese stash occupies its own very select storage box.

Oh SNAP-in pocket with an exterior pocket.

Oh SNAP-in pocket with dragonfly snap closure & an exterior pocket

Just after Christmas I started looking at my very tired purse and decided it was TIME to bust out some really good fabric and treat myself for a change.  Since reading bag patterns is my kryptonite I decided to just take what I know and sew. It hasn’t been pretty.  I’ve added at least 3 new variations on old swear phrases to my vocabulary. I’m not finished yet but I kind of like where it is going, even though the finished height was supposed to be the width and the finished width…well, you get it.  I started paper piecing the hexagons just after Christmas – I love hand sewing and I love how Japanese fabrics go together.  I’m working on making

Bag interior with oh SNAPS!

Bag interior with oh SNAPS!

different snap-in attachments that can vary  with # of pockets and depth. Sometimes I like to tote my iPad places and it will fit very comfortably in the finished purse.  I still need to finish a few things, cover a thin slice of foam core with fabric so it has a nice, flat bottom, and make the straps.  I’m enjoying this enormously, even thought it has meant a lot of re-doing and re-engineering things as I go along.  Why not?  There is no deadline and it’s just for me.  For ME.

PS – Happy New Year – I can’t believe it’s been so long! I noticed that the powers-that-be are sticking ads on my blog posts. GAAUGH.  I am not responsible for their appearance or their content. Turn your nose up disdainfully at them.

PPSS – I feel like a drug dealer but….want to (beautifully) burn a few hours of your life? Love trees? Love all things Japanese?  Click here.  You’re welcome.

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Filed under Quilting, Quilts, Sashiko, Travel

Autumn, 2001

Watching the coverage of the 10th anniversary of 9/11 has derailed me.  I felt something coming on all week but today the whole thing crystallized for me. Everything in our lives changed that day, but what went on to happen in the next two months almost crushed me.

The September 11th attacks were surreal. I kept thinking we’d find it was just a few rogue idiots – wishful thinking, it turned out.  When in the following days it became clear the scope and source of the attacks amounted to an act of war  I was bewildered. This was something that happened to other generations (WW II, etc.). I did not think I would live to see something of that scope happen in my lifetime. Throw in the weeks of coverage and struggling to get a grip on it all, I needed to go away and regroup.

Luckily, I was booked to fly out of Boston to Jackson Hole just a few weeks later to spend a week with my sister and her twins in Yellowstone.  It was an annual trip and I always loved going out there, but when I woke up the morning of my departure I had such a knot in my stomach I was almost physically sick.  Flying out of the Boston airport was suddenly very scary.  I had no idea how the security and processing methods had changed, or even if it was safe.  Copycat hijackings were on my mind as Joe dropped me off at Logan Airport. We have not before or since had such a tender farewell.

Just after I returned from Yellowstone we got word (on October 23, 2001) that my 69-year-old mother had pancreatic cancer.  I remember the date because it was my wedding anniversary and Joe had given me a necklace with a gold heart and a little ruby (my birthstone) in the crest.  I made him take it back because when I looked at it all I could see was a broken, bleeding heart.  My mother, diagnosed with cancer?  She was the healthiest person I knew. Three weeks later she was dead.

Ten years later I feel it all very keenly.  Calling 9/11 it a “life changing” event is an understatement of epic proportions.  Watching the coverage this morning, I kept thinking, “10 years ago right now, everything was fine…..10 years ago right now, everything was fine.” Then 8:45AM came, the time the first plane hit, and I felt like I had stepped over a line.  Everything  was no longer fine.  Ten years later our country struggles with the far-reaching impacts of that day, including our current economic storm.  I struggle to find  the “new normal” but nothing seems stable. We live on the shifting sands of economic threats, challenges of aging and everyday unknowns.  Maybe it’s because I’m 10 years older and see things differently from the perspective of my fifties. Maybe it’s because I lost my much-loved dad just 5 months ago and now I feel both their absences so intensely.

Maybe there is no “new normal” because there is no “normal”.  This could all just be a rite of passage into becoming a wise elder, but I don’t feel grown up enough to be a wise elder. I remember with great nostalgia being able to effortlessly jump on a plane and fly home by myself to visit my mom and dad.  Dad was usually watching golf, football or baseball. I’d be stretched out on the couch watching the game, reading or (usually) snoozing. I did not have to make a decision or be responsible for anything.  Mom would bustle around and inevitably say, “Did you fly halfway across the country just to sleep?” and I would always smile and say, “Yes, Mom, I did.”

I liked that era of my life, of America’s life.  I will never stop missing that “normal”, nor stop wishing to find a new one for myself and for all of us.

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Filed under Family, Rants, Travel