Thursday, June 10, 2010

Why We Stay

It has become my habit each year to greet the onset of Hurricane Season, and each year, I sit down at my computer with the fear that I may have run out of new things to say about it.

Somehow, that's never a problem. Sometimes I approach the season with humour; other times, with frustration or sadness. This year, as we check our emergency kits, stock up on new batteries and non-perishable foods, and consider whether or not this is the year we should finally buy a generator, I think it's time to answer the perennial question posed so often by people who do not live here:

"I don't get it. Every so often, a storm comes and wipes you guys out. Why do you stay? Why don't you move someplace safer?"

So, if you have ever wondered this about us Gulf Coast residents ... or people who live in fire or earthquake zones ... I shall atempt to answer your question.

My answer is not intended to offend anyone, but I have noticed that, more often than not, people who ask this sort of question usually do not hail from a place with a great deal of its own history, or a place with a truly unique culture -- a local culture distinct from the homogeny of McAmerica. Either that, or the unique and wonderful place where they live is fortunate enough to have unremarkable weather and stable geology.

If you live in a subdivision outside of a relatively new city, a city less than a couple of generations in age, a city that maybe wasn't a city until the interstate highway allowed the heart of town to develop around its multi-lane concrete arteries ... let's call it Anywhere, USA ... you might not understand why people can so passionately cling to a house and a patch of ground in a geographic location which routinely plays host to earthquakes, floods, brush fires, or weather that can kill you.

If you live on Anystreet in a subdivision in Anywhere, USA, your house, be it modest or grand, probably doesn't look terribly different from all the other houses on your street. I'm sure it's a very nice house, but it may be one of seven different floorplans, with a choice of five tastefully neutral exterior paint jobs: ecru, camel, cream, sage and mocha. You may have subdivision restrictions dictating what sort of fence you can build, how tall it can be, and what sort of things you can park in your driveway. If you read the fine print of your subdivision restrictions, you may learn that you can't plant a vegetable garden that's visible from the street, that your front door must be painted one of three specific colors, that your bird feeders, barbeque grill or your kids' basketball goal must not be visible from the street, and that you must have a certain sort of mailbox at the end of the drive. They may even tell you how many pets you can have, and what breeds they must be.

All of these strict requirements are often policed by a stringent homeowner's association, with the goal of a community so uniform in its neutrality that it can be decreed to be imbued with "good taste" and, hopefully, high property values. Individual self-expression is probably frowned upon if you live in such a community.

Most Americans don't have the sort of job that makes it difficult to consider living elsewhere. Perhaps you are a chemical engineer, a nurse, a computer programmer, or a math teacher. You may be a police officer, an accountant, a welder, or a mechanic. No doubt you work hard for a living, and you value the time you spend at home alone, or with your family, on the weekends. You probably love your home, and, as far as I'm concerned, there is absoltuely nothing "wrong" whatsoever with your choice of home or your way of life.

But living in a relatively new subdivision, in a relatively new city, and having a mobility-friendly job seldom comes hand-in-hand with a strong sense of place and a warm sense of community.

If you have kids, they are probably in a decent public school district, and no doubt there is a wide selection of familiar American chain restaurants, a hospital, a Home Depot, WalMart and a bank within reasonable driving distance of your home. If you are religious, a place of worship in the faith of your choice is probably not far away, along with a convenient Texaco station, Albertson's or Safeway supermarket and a CVS or Walgreen's drugstore. The local mall features a Gap, Toys R Us, Petsmart, Old Navy, Pottery Barn, Stein Mart, and Bed, Bath and Beyond, along with other similar, familiar franchise stores.

You probably know only a few of your neigbbors reasonably well, and you may have only a nodding acquaintance with the others.

If you live on Anystreet, you probably weren't born there. You may have been born in Boston, Cleveland, Detroit or Buffalo, and perhaps your parents have retired to Phoenix. Maybe you have a brother in Alexandria, Virginia and a sister in Los Angeles. If you're lucky, you see them a few times a year and you go out to eat at the Outback, Chili's or Applebee's in their neighborhood. You don't have to look at the menu. You already know what you like.

And of course, anyone who has served in the military, franchise store managers, contract nurses, and those who work in the world of corporate management or consulting ... if that sounds like you? Then you knows all about getting transplanted from Anyplace, TX to Anyplace, CA or Anyplace, FL. If you live a life where you are transferred a lot, those familiar chain stores and restaurants can provide a needed sense of familiarity and continuity to your and your family.

But you can always do it someplace else.

If you are an American and, and you have wondered why we stay here on the Gulf Coast, and what I've said so far sounds something like your life ... I'd guess that your family, while happy and content, probably has no deep roots in any one place for more than one generation. You and your siblings likely grew up and moved far away from home, and from each other. Your own children will eventually get jobs as pharmaceutical reps, or insurance agents, or restaurant managers, and they, in their turn, will move far away to New York, Sacramento, Raleigh, or Dallas, where they may purchase a house much like yours: on a street in a subdivision, with a familiar chain supermarket, bank and drugstore, with good schools nearby, and familiar franchise retailers close at hand.

Like you, your children will probably consider themselves to be reasonably happy with their lives, and, like you, your children will have difficulty understanding those of us, in other places, who keep rebuilding after Mother Nature knocks us down.

"Why don't they move?" you may ask the television when the news features stories of people rebuilding after another hurricane, another wildfire, another Midwestern flood. "Why don't they move to another city, to a safer place?"

If you live in Anywhere, USA, and you program computers for a local bank, and your spouse is a physical therapist, it's likely that you can easily imagine mobility. It's different if you are a jazz club manager, a tour guide, a shrimper, a Creole chef, a trombonist, a costume maker, an underwater welder, or a maker of fishnets. How many places in America can a parade float builder look for work?

You may think of your childhood home, not as a city or region, but rather as the house and immediate neighborhood you grew up in, which is probably in a different city or state than the house you live in today. And I'm willing to bet that today, as an adult, if you are a resident of Anywhere, when you think of "home," you think of the house you live in, and not your general region.

If, in the unspeakable event that Anywhere, USA gets blown off the map or burnt to a pile of cinders, you can probably imagine collecting your insurance, dusting off your resume, and relocating to Reno, Denver, Miami or Bakersfield. You can get a job programming computers for another bank. Your spouse can find work at a hospital. On the weekends, you may eat dinner at an Outback or TGIFriday's, and even though it is in a different state, the food will taste the same, although you will try to find subtle differences. Your teenagers will buy their clothes in a different shopping mall, but the plastic sack they carry home will bear the same logo from the Gap or Urban Outfitters.

And so, if circumstances force you to relocate, it is not so terribly hard to imagine shopping at a different mall, programming computers for a different bank, driving through a different McDonald's, or buying your groceries at a different WalMart. It's not so difficult to imagine moving into another new (or relatively new) house or apartment, in another subdivision full of mocha-, sage- and cream-colored houses, and calling it home. And because you can easily imagine calling a new place, "home," you may not be able to understand those of us who have difficulty with that concept.

If, on the other hand, you are a person who lives an a venerable old city with a strong identity of its own, like San Francisco, New York or Chicago, in a neighborhood where family-owned businesses have been handed down for generations, you may feel a twinge of empathy with people who, like you, buy their groceries at Langenstien's, fill their prescriptions at Uptown Delivery Pharmacy, buy their lunch at Guy's Po-Boy's, and drink their beer at the Buddha Belly (where you can also eat lunch and do your laundry). You understand people who buy dog food at Ott's Pet Shop and tacos at the Flying Burrito. Yarn comes from the local yarn store, not Hobby Lobby.

If you live on a ranch with deep roots in Western history, and you worry about wildfire when the grass begins to turn brown in the summer ... or if you can glance out your window in San Francisco and gaze upon a row of turn-of-the-last-century homes, glinting in the morning sunlight in shades of mango, carnation pink and violet, and you worry that they may not survive another earthquake ... then you will understand the firm sense of place held by a New Orleanian or someone on the Florida coast.

And we, in turn, will understand your desire to cling to your home, and although we may fear earthquakes or fire a bit more than you fear tornadoes or floods, we will understand why you stay.

Likewise, if you are lucky enough to live in a small town, devoid of suburbs, malls and big box stores, or if perhaps you live on an island, in a place with a culture and rhythmn and cuisine of its very own ... or if you live in someplace outside of America, a place with a rich culture going back thousands, rather than hundreds, of years ... you will understand this possession of place with a fierce clarity.

I was born and raised in New Orleans, and although I've lived in Baton Rouge since 1979, New Orleans is my home ... but so is all of South Louisiana. My roots run deep here, even though my ancestors mostly arrived after 1880. The rhythm and spark of our culture run strong in my veins. You don't need to live here very long to feel it. You just need to reach down, touch the ground and take its pulse.

I don't stay here because I like the weather. And even though I bemoan the onset of our beastly summers, and complain mightily about the heat, and threaten to retire to the Pacific Northwest or Ireland any second now ...

...somehow, I'm still here.

And it's not because I like the suffocating summer heat and humidty. It's not because I think hurricanes are exciting or because the occasional tornado or toppled 100-foot tree adds a little pizzazz to my day. It's not because I like cockroaches the size of a grown man's thumb who can fly. It's not because I like worrying about the spring floods overtopping the levees, or because I like stupid politicians who play on people's fears instead of inspiring their dreams.

I stay because South Louisiana isn't Anyplace (although I see the tendrils of Anyplace taking firm root in newer parts of Baton Rouge). I suppose I could wax poetic about live oak trees, gumbo, zydeco music, the primal scent of a cypress bayou, traditional New Orleans music, jambalaya ... but I won't, because I'll give you some credit for already knowing about those things, and for understanding that those very things are precisely what make this entire region distinctly and magnificently different from Anywhere, USA.

This hurricane season, those of us living on the Gulf Coast of the United States of America are facing the worst oil spill in U.S. history in the opening weeks of what is expected to be a fierce hurricane season. We are entering hurricane season with a growing catastrophe already on our hands, because getting some measure of control over the spewing well is just the beginning of a long, hard road -- exactly in the same way that the disaster was only beginning when Hurricane Katrina's winds died down.

There is already an unimaginable amount of oil out there in the Gulf just waiting to make its slimy and suffocating way onto shore and into the marshes, just waiting for the turn of the tide ... oil that will be pushed even further into our delicate marshes and wetlands when storms start marching across the Gulf this summer.

Even without any assistance from hurricanes, the disaster is just beginning to unfold.

How you can help: ABC news has posted some good links to assistance agencies here ....

Please click the link and see what you can do to help.

I will continue to post contacts for helping agencies as this disaster continues to unfold.

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Dear Readers:

In an attempt to minimize expenses I am now accepting small advertisements form the Google network on my blog. I hope no one finds these offensive, as I picked the least obtrusive format available.

Onward, through the fog...


Monday, April 19, 2010

Aloha, everyone!

This is Lisa Louie, posting from Maui, with supply list and homework for the upcoming classes. As Dez mentioned, Gauge Games during regular Knit Night is a fundraiser for the Battered Women's Shelter. Cost for Hot Stuff and Putting More Art in Your Craft is $25 each class, or $45 for both for early bird registration. Later registration is $35 each or $65 for both.

Gauge Games:

bring:

tape measure or ruler
pen/pencil
paper if desired
calculator if desired
a few straight or "lollipop" pins
about 50-100 yards of relatively smooth, medium or light colored worsted weight yarn- same as you used for your homework
appropriate sized needle ( or crochet hook if crocheter)

Homework:

Cast on 26 stitches in above yarn and needle. Work about 6 rows of garter stitch, then work 2 stitches garter, 20 stitches stockinette, 3 stitches garter. Work until piece is about 3 or 4 inches long. Leave on needle, bring to class.

Putting More Art in Your Craft

Bring:

3 or more different colors, textures, fibers of a fairly small amount of yarns. Leftover skeins work well. You will need somewhere in the neighborhood of 100 yards for this project.

A selection of assorted size dpns or short circular needles or if you are a crocheter, a selection of crochet hooks

stitch markers
pen/pencil
notebook/ paper
beads and other embellishments if desired

an open mind and willingness to explore

Homework:

You will be creating a small hand made bag during this class. Please create the bottom before you come. Work either a square or a circle about 3-4 inches across before you come. Bind off.


Hot Stuff:

Bring:

Bring a pattern or patterns that you would like to adapt to warm weather wearin' with you. Pen/ pencil and something to write on will also be necessary.

This is a discussion/ question and answer type of class instead of a hands on learn a new technique kind of class. Yes, you can knit in class as we won't be working on a specific project.

If you've got questions, let me know. I hope this covers everything.

Aloha and mahalo,

Lisa Louie
Kahului, Maui, Hawaii

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Aloha, Baton Rouge!


Fiber artist, designer and knitting instructor Lisa Louie of Maui, Hawaii (who is also my dear friend and occasional guest-blogger) will be on the mainland during the last week in April with featured work in the “Art Healing Lives” art exhibition at the Minnesota Textile Center, and during the first week of May, teaching classes at the Knitting Asylum here in Baton Rouge.

When Lisa is not teaching knitting and creating fiber art, she teaches at an educational support center on Maui for kids struggling with learning disabilities and for adults working on getting their GED.

She will be making a stop in Baton Rouge for a few days to visit and teach classes at the Knitting Asylum.

Classes to be offered are:

Gauge Games: Unveiling The Mysteries of Gauge

Gauge Games will be taught informally on Thursday, May 6 at the regular Knit Night activities from 6:30 till 8:30 at the Knitting Asylum. There is no set fee for this class. Instead, Lisa requests that attendees make a donation in the most generous amount they can afford (be it $5 or $500) for the Battered Women’s Program. There will be an alternate location if too many people sign up to fit comfortably in the shop. “Gauge Games” is a fun, highly interactive class. Bring yarn and appropriate-sized needles, and a notepad and pen. Details for a small “homework” swatch to bring to the class will follow soon.

Hot Stuff: Knitwear for Steamy Climates --
10:30 - 2:30 Saturday, May 8

Ever laugh your head off (or look enviously at) the long-sleeved cotton “summer sweaters” designed for people who live in climates where it actually cools off in the evening? We Southerners all know that the only real use for a worsted cotton garment in our beastly summer climate is on the back of your desk chair in an overly refrigerated office. Lisa will teach you to substitute cotton, soy, bamboo, linen and other warm-weather fibers to their best advantage for your own spring and summer designs, and to adapt or modify existing patterns for realistic use in our beastly summers -- for example, a worsted cotton cardigan modeled on a beach in Maine can be converted to a highly wearable shell top for office or casual wear. Bring a pattern or two that you’d like to adapt for hot-weather wear, and a pen and notebook. Class fee will probably be $25. A yarn sample pack for swatching will be available for under $10.

Art Knitting: How to get Art in your Craft --
2:00 - 4:00 Saturday, May 8.

Lisa will guide students through creative exercises designed to infuse your own designs with your unique style. Class description details and fee will follow. Fee will probably be $25.
Expanded class description and materials description will follow soon.

Please sign up by replying to this post with your name and the name of the class that you are interested in.

This post will be edited periodically to provide additional details as soon as they are known.

I hope you all consider participating in this unique opportunity!

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Still Here; No Pictures.

I say it every year:

I do not mind paying our taxes. Everybody needs to pay their fair share; I think we can all agree on that. And I am not the least bit interested in all the grossly misinformed anti-tax politics flapping around out there on Faux News these days. The simple fact is that the overwhelming majority of regular people in America simply do not pay excessive taxes, and we all need things like roads, schools, courts, law enforcement, public universities, scientific research, a military to defend us, health care, social security, and other things that help keep us civilized ... although perhaps not quite as civilized as Canada, France, or Amsterdam...which is another topic altogether. There may be hope for us yet.

But what I do mind is doing tax. It's like still having to do math homework after all these decades. Even though I am forty-eleven years old, working on tax makes me feel like Mrs. Hernandez is still leaning over my shoulder with her beehive hairdo and her little black reading glasses pushed down on her nose, admonishing me for "not showing my work," even when I get the right answer. Forty years after fifth grade, math homework still gives me a stomachache.

Because my husband and I are both self-employed, it's not like we can just staple our W-2s and the receipts for our doctors' appointments and our annual donations to National Public Radio, the local humane society and Doctors Without Borders to our 1040 and wave bye-bye to it. We have to hire somebody to do it for us, mainly so I don't try to do it all myself and end up stealing a barrel full of Valium from our neighborhood pharmacy and hiding out in a climate-controlled self-storage unit until October.

This "somebody to do it for us" is St. Peter of the Paperwork, who goes by the street name "Peter Barrios, APAC, CPA" and if you live in the Baton Rouge-y neighborhood and you need a super-nice man with a briefcase, a superhero cape and superhero hair to keep you from losing your mind and eating your solar calculator, I strongly recommend that you look him up in the Yellow Pages, or Google the Innerwebs, or just call him (225-924-3031) and get him to do what he's good at, so you can you do something that you're good at instead.

In order to spare Peter the annual ordeal of rummaging through our Volkswagen-sized Rubbermaid tub full of receipts, bank statements pennies, paperclips and a few slightly dusty breath mints, I put everything in supersized expanding files, with the addition of professional, businessy labels: "Stuff I Am Pretty Sure Is Deductible," "Crap From The Bank," "Stuff That Might Be Deductible," "Way Too Many Pharmacy and Doctor Bills," "Stuff That Looks Important," "Bills and Invoices From The Shop," "Sales Receipts From The Shop" and a really fat file labeled, "Lots of Itty Bitty Receipts: Do These Things Count As Business Expenses?"

I didn't go to business school. I can count, and add things up, and get people to buy stuff if I am lucky, but really? That's about it as far as my seat-of-the-pants MBA goes. My head is full of biology, humane laws, wildlife management skills, dog training, cat psychology, snake handling, writing, knitting, spinning, weaving and dyeing. There is also a little room left over for reading, ghost hunting, history and hiking. I am just not a businessy sort of person. I even look weird in a suit.

So today is my last day of highlighting items on our credit card bills and putting big red marks by them so Peter will see that they are deductions for things like business and medical travel ... my last day of stapling tiny, crumpled receipts for tape and notepads to a bigger piece of paper listing what they are for ... my last day of putting bank statements in piles and cussing at the stapler and the calculator ... and then I can bring the box with all seventeen pounds of this crap over to Peter's office, knock on his door, and run like hell.

Then I can come back to the shop and play with yarn. This month, I am rearranging the shop and checking in new spring and summer yarn, especially lots of Tahki bamboo and cotton and Tofutsies and other fun stuff. While I am doing this, Tahki Loop-d-Loop Quartz, Tahki Ceylon Silk, Brown Sheep Cotton Fine and Cotton Fleece, and all plant-based spinning fibers and plant blends are 20% off for the duration of April.

And?

I hear tell that Koigu has roving. I am trying to get some.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Prizes and Patience

I know it has been a long time since I promised to announce results and dole out prizes for those of you who donated to Doctors Without Borders. I'm afraid I was a bit overwhelmed with family duties these past several weeks, and I apologize if I caused anyone any inconvenience or excessive knitterly anxiety because of my delay.

However, I am glad to report that, including those who posted to participate in the drawing, and those who contacted me by email but did not wish to receive a prize, we raised $1,090 through the Knitting Asylum blog.

I want you all to know that I consider a prize drawing to be serious business, and I believe that the individuals in charge of selecting winners should be completely impartial and unbiased.

This is why I do not even draw names at random from a hat myself. Instead, I defer that duty to the Prize Selection and Disbursement Committee here at the Knitting Asylum, who take their jobs very seriously, and who strive for absolute fairness.

Process: The name of each participant is written on a piece of paper. The piece of paper is then folded into a neat little square, and deposited into an enticing-looking cardboard box. The box is given a good shaking up before it is presented to the Prize Selection Committee. Members of the Committee take turns drawing names from the box, without consulting each other, unfolding the pieces of paper, or reading the names of those chosen, although in one instance of enthusiasm, two Committee members did briefly squabble over possession of a folded piece of paper. The still-folded pieces of paper are collected by me, and prizes awarded in the order the names were drawn from the box.

Here is a member of the Prize Selection Committee just after drawing a folded square from the box.




And the winners are:

Two Skeins of Wool in the Woods Spring Frost: Marina McIntire

One Skein of "Mardi Gras" Handspun: "triedandtrue" on Ravelry

Necklace Stitch Markers and one box of chocolate-covered Macadamia Nuts: pdxknitterati/Michele B

One Skein "Driftwood" Handspun and one box of chocolate-covered Macadamia Nuts: Emmy

One "Good to Go" small project tote bag: janeyknitting AT yahoo DOT ca

Please reveiw the blog two entries back to see a picture of your prize!

In addition to the prizes above, the Knitting Asylum has also included a few promotional goodies (tape measure and pens) from the shop.

Thanks so much to everyone who donated to Doctors Without Borders.

Now I am going to go back through the emails to contact everyone so I can get your physical mailing address and get these in the mail as soon as possible. If you read this before I contact you, please email me at: dezcrawford AT gmail DOT com.

Again, thank you for your patience. I will get the prizes in the mail as soon as I have contacted each winner.

Again, we raised $1,090 US for Doctors Without Borders. Good job, readers, and thank you so very much both for your donations and for your patience in hearing the contest results.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Haitian Relief Giveaway:

Thanks to those of you who posted in the comments and participated in the giveaway.  I'm afraid that I am running several days behind schedule, partly because we had to travel to Memphis to see Dave's oncologist for a follow-up visit (with happily unremarkable results).  

Winners' names will be drawn over the weekend by an impartial committee, and I shall announce the winners early next week.

Every donation counts, and the need will be ongoing for a long, long time as the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere recovers from one of the most enormous disasters in history.  

Thank you for your patience.  More next week!

Thursday, January 14, 2010



RELIEF FOR HAITI

As one who experienced the generosity of the entire world in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, I would like to do something, in my own small way, to help raise funds for Doctors Without Borders, who are faced with a seemingly insurmountable challenge in the aftermath of the earthquake in Haiti.

Here are the rules:

Go to Doctors Without Borders and make a donation in any amount you can afford.  Be sure to click on the option for emergency relief, so that your donation is immediately available for relief in Haiti.

Then come back here, and leave a comment stating that you donated and listing the amount (the amount will be used only for me to report how much money was raised through this informal fundraiser).

Please make your donation between now and midnight on January 31st.

On February first, as my way of saying "Thank you," I will write each donor's name on a slip of paper, and draw at random five names for five different prizes.   

Whether you donate $5 or $5000, the amount you donate will have no effect on your chance of winning.

Prizes:

Two 200-yard skeins of handpainted Wool In The Woods "Cyclone" yarn in the "Spring Fest" colorway.

One skein of the Knitting Asylum's handspun mixed-wool blend, "Driftwood" in natural sheep colors, 160 yards.

One skein of the Knitting Asylum's handspun silk/merino blend in violet, teal and gold, 172 yards.

These prizes shown below:




And:

One stitch marker necklace from the delightful Shannon, made from shells and Czech glass beads.

One "Good to Go" nylon project tote.

These are shown below:



Not pictured:  two boxes of chocolate covered macadamia nuts donated by Lisa Louie.

I will try to improve the photo quality tomorrow.

Please donate.  Thank you.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Done.

Well, almost.  I am still looking for a good tenant to rent my mother's house in New Orleans, but aside from that, in the past two months the following things have been accomplished:

Mom was discharged from the physical therapy hospital, decided to move to Baton Rouge to be closer to us, and went back to her home for a few weeks to begin packing.  Dave and I went to Memphis for a follow-up visit with his oncologist, and he came away with a very optimistic report.  We returned to Baton Rouge, and I began the process of packing my mother's things, taking Mom apartment hunting in Baton Rouge, signing leases, renting a moving-and-storage unit, boarding Mom's two cats at her vet's until after the move was complete, arranging to move the fully packed storage unit to Baton Rouge, getting Mom unpacked, and moving the kitties into their new home.  There was also a whole separate trip with a friend who owns a truck with a utility trailer to get all of Mom's potted plants. Then, finally, Mom got to meet her new neighbors in the little retirement community she chose to move into.  

All this was followed by getting Mom's house in "rentable" condition.  The major part of this last was easy, as the house had been updated, repaired and repainted after Hurricane Katrina.  

The more difficult part of getting a house into "rentable" condition is depersonalizing it.   Should we leave the white curtains in the spare bedroom or not?  They go with the room nicely, and there's no place for them in Mom's one-bedroom apartment.  Will the new tenants want the organizer shelf and the coathanger rack in the utility room?  Will they think it's as clever and useful as we did, or would they prefer that space to be empty?  Should we repaint the bedrooms to a more neutral color?  Will they use the toiletry shelves on the bathroom wall, or will they think of it as clutter?  Should I replace the functional and quaint (but slightly tricky) antique doorknobs in the bedrooms?  Are they charming or annoying?

Mom's house has never been rented out before.  It was built almost 100 years ago and three generations of our family have lived there.  It has always been full of people, pets, furniture, books, granny's china, and Heaven knows what, all in a flurry of the usual family clutter and treasures.  It hasn't been completely empty in almost a century.  Even during the post-Katrina repairs, we only moved most of Mom's belongings into the storage unit parked in the front yard, and shuffled the essential furniture around as needed to allow for rewiring, plaster repair, painting, and so forth.

Right now, the house is completely empty, sparkling clean everywhere, waxed and polished.  All of the little holes where Mom's pictures were hung have been puttied and touched up with paint, and all the little nicks  and scratches that seem quaint to a family have been smoothed, sanded and painted: the corner of a closet door where a long-ago puppy decided to teethe when no one was looking ... the worn spot on the bathroom doorframe where the door, which was slightly out of true, rubbed against the frame ... the tiny notches in the kitchen doorframe to keep track of how much I'd grown between school years.  All of those things had to be covered, painted, and polished out of existence.

It looks strange, and kind of sad, all empty and shiny like that, with the sun streaming in through the windows.  It looks much bigger than it really is, and my feet echo when I walk across the wooden floors.  

I realize that the house is waiting: waiting for new people to place their beds and couches in the rooms, for new dogs to run in the yard, for new people to hang pictures and cook meals, for a new cat to snooze on the front porch.  

I hope one of them is a knitter.



 




Thursday, November 12, 2009

Thanks!   Really.

To Lisa Louie for keeping y'all posted during these last few crazy months.

and

To my customers for your ongoing patience with my erratic hours while I got my mother's belongings downsized, packed, and moved to Baton Rouge.

I hope to resume normal hours effective Friday, November 27 -- the day after Thanksgiving.

In the meantime, I will be open from 10am - 6pm Thursday through Saturday.

On Thursday, November 12 (today) the shop will be closed at 3pm so I can go to a doctor's appointment.  My student worker's school schedule doesn't allow for her to staff the shop today, so I apologize for any inconvenience.


New Stuff!

Lots of new Opal Sock Yarn, including self-striping colorways in LSU purple and gold and Southern University blue and gold

New yarns from Tahki including Ceylon Silk, Natur, and Palma Organic Cotton!

New rovings in Blue-Faced Leicester and new sock yarn from Morandia.

New scarves and other garments hand-knit by Lisa Louie in Maui.

New hand-dyed sock yarn by me!

More Malabrigo coming soon!

And more.  Please keep an eye on the blog while I try to catch up with myself.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Keep your fingers crossed that it's not an on-coming train...


Aloha again. This is Lisa, with a quick update. Dez has almost got her mom moved in and settled, there's just one last load of odds n ends to go. Clare is busy unpacking and meeting her new neighbors. Dez will hopefully be back to post soon. The light at the end of the tunnel seems to be a completed move, and many fewer hassles for the moment. We just hope the trouble train isn't showing up again.

In the meantime, she's asked me to remind you that donations of hats, scarves and similar warm items are being accepted and very welcomed as part of Warm Up New Orleans. Yes, people are still living in draft trailers and unrepaired houses after Hurricane Katrina. Covenant House, which helps homeless teens will be the primary recipient of these items.

Dez will provide specifics soon, but this post goes out as a reminder and request for your ongoing help.

Aloha,

Lisa Louie
Kahului, Maui, Hawaii

Monday, October 19, 2009

We interrupt Dez's regularly scheduled life....

to get her mom moved safely to Baton Rouge.

Aloha, all. This is Lisa, again posting for Dez. Her mom is recovering well (yeah!!!) from her summer's adventure of broken bones, and she has decided it is time to move closer to Dez and Dave. As you may expect, Dez has joined the "schlepper's union" and is helping her mom pack and begin moving.

For the next several weeks, shop hours at The Knitting Asylum have been changed temporarily so Dez can schlep boxes, furniture and bric-a-brac. Store hours will be: Thursdays- Saturdays only from 10-6:30.

Dez anticipates resuming regular hours by Thanksgiving.

Thanks for your patience and understanding.

Aloha,

Lisa


Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Enough Already.


Can who or whatever is in charge of the universe, please make a note? Note is: enough already. Dez has once again been sidelined from the blog by a blast from the proverbial outfield.

Just after her mom was released from the care facility, and temporarily moved in with Dez and Dave, Dez came down with the semi-occasional, fairly virulent and really annoying sinus infection and laryngitis. She has spent several days more or less flat on her back, with tea and Guinness (this is a feline, not a beverage) for company. Pharmaceuticals have been employed to knock out said infection, but recovery will be a few more days.

She will be back as soon as possible. And in the meantime, please tell the universe: Enough already. This year, for Dez and family, is starting to sound like a soap opera plot.

Aloha and mahalo,

Lisa Louie
Kahului, Maui, Hawaii


Saturday, August 29, 2009

The Dog Ate My Blog.

Don't believe that?  

Okay ... um ... my little brother flushed the blog down the toilet?

No?  

Okay ... I set the blog on top of the car while I unlocked it, and I was in a big hurry so I forgot it was there, and I drove off with the blog sliding around on top of the car, and now the blog is smashed up on the dotted line somewhere along the Interstate ...?

That last?  It's not too far from the truth.

The further away you get from a thing, the longer it takes to get back.  And the longer you stay away from the blog, the harder it is to start writing again.  It's not for a lack of something to say.  It's the lack of energy to write it down -- that's what does you in.

And that's why I've been away from the blog.  Huge thanks to Lisa Louie for keeping everyone posted on the reason for my absence.  Now I need to get behind the wheel again and fill in the blanks.

At the end of June, my mother's brother, Armand Steger, died after a long battle with prostate cancer, leaving my mother as the last survivor of her siblings.  The maternal side of my family is very close, and Uncle Armand was more of an Emergency Backup Dad than an uncle to me. He was also the father of my cousin Pam, who we lost to lung  cancer last summer, and he left this world almost exactly a year after his daughter.  I know Pam was waiting patiently for her dad -- and probably knitting something spectacular to pass the time.

That in itself -- losing a beloved relative, planning and attending a funeral -- is reason enough to leave anyone too dispirited to blog for a week or two, but the kicker is that as we all turned away from the graveside after the funeral service and headed back toward the cars,  picking our way through the jumbled maze of ancient tombs one finds in a typical New Orleans cemetery ... my mother fell and broke her hip.  

In retrospect, the fall surprised me more than the broken hip.  My mother, although an octogenarian, is anything but frail.  She is spry, active and sure footed.  She walks every day, runs her own errands and tends her garden.  She's also a very careful person, as cautious as a cat  -- she watches her step, holds handrails, and pays attention to trip hazards.   We still don't know exactly how she fell, but down she went, just like that, faster than I could blink.  I simply couldn't turn around fast enough to catch her.  And, in fact, she didn't realize that something was seriously wrong until she tried to stand up.

Fortunately, we have lots of nurses and other first-responder people in my family, so we quickly decided that in light of the fact that the actual temperature that day was a hundred and two and the ambulance attendants would have a piece of work wiggling between the tombs, it would be better for Mom if we stabilized and transported her ourselves, rather than risk shock and heatstroke while she waited in the blaring sun for an ambulance.  Two of my younger cousins are former military medics, so she was expertly whooshed out of there faster than you can say, "go to the hospital."

Fortunately, it turned out that Mom has remarkably good bone density, so her hip didn't shatter.  The break was nice and clean and only required four screws to set it in place.  The doctor also found a hairline fracture on her kneecap, and said that she landed on her knee first, so that probably took some of the force out of the fall and spared her a worse break.

So, Mom spent the end of June and the Fourth of July weekend in the hospital after her hip repair  surgery.   Believe it or not, it was the first time she'd ever had anesthesia, and the only other broken bone she had ever experienced was a broken finger from a teenaged volleyball incident.

Her room, on an upper floor, faced downtown, so she had a wonderful view of the Fourth of July fireworks display.  Physical therapy started 48 hours after surgery, and my mom didn't blink once, setting her jaw to get through it every day, even if she was squeezing out tears.   She was determined to get better, and improved quickly enough to be moved to an inpatient rehab hospital to complete her recovery.  

In the meantime, of course, I have been flying back and forth like a badminton shuttlecock, bopping back and forth between the yarn shop, our own home, Mom's house and the hospital, so I've had very little time to do anything besides drive, mind the shop, drive some more, visit Mom, drive some more, do household chores, and drive some more.  And when I am in that sort of situation, blogging is unfortunately the first thing to go.
 
But I'm back.  My sincere thanks to everyone who responded to Lisa's posts with thoughts and prayers for my Mom, and thanks also to those of you who sent cards as well.  My mother was quite touched that total strangers who read my knitting ramblings would send such warm wishes to someone they'd never even met, but she wasn't all that surprised.  

You are knitters, after all.  That's what knitters do, and she knows that.

Now that I can catch my breath, I can finally catch up with the blog a bit.  There are new things at the shop, and finished objects to boast about, and as soon as I can get them all in the same room with a camera -- hopefully within the next few days -- I'll upload some photos so you have something to look at for a change.

Thanks for your patience.  I do hope I can blog consistently this fall and beyond, and I fervently hope for a very boring fall and winter. 

One more thing before I sign off:  today is the fourth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's double-whammy landfall in New Orleans and on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Please hold in your thoughts those expatriated New Orleanians scattered far and wide who are still unable to return home, whether it's because their financial circumstances do not allow it yet, or because their insurance companies betrayed them, or because the infrastructure in their neighborhood isn't back yet.  About 40% of the city's residents have yet to come home.  

Hold also in your thoughts the more than 1500 people who died in the storm simply because they didn't have transportation to get out of harm's way.

See you all soon.  Photos and good cheer to follow soon.

Best,

Dez


Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Light at the End of the Tunnel....

is hopefully not an on-coming train


Aloha, all.

This is Lisa again stunt-blogging from Maui. Dez has been exceedingly busy trying to 1. make sure her mom is getting everything she needs 2. making sure Dave has everything he needs, including regular on-going wound care after his eye surgery this spring 3. keeping the Knitting Asylum up and thriving 4. driving back and forth between Baton Rouge and New Orleans trying to keep up with numbers 1, 2, and 3. Also, she is trying to do silly things like eat and sleep and take care of herself.

Clare, Dez's mom, is doing much better! She has been moved from the hospital to a skilled nursing facility, where she is expected to spend the next several weeks. Her hip has been surgically repaired and is healing well. Her broken knee is healing on its own, and with a little time and care is likely to heal without surgery. Clare is having much less pain, and feeling all right. Her doctor's prognosis is that she is extremely likely to have a high level of recovery from her injuries, which means that with some time and some rehab she is probably going to be able to function just fine.

Several secret missions (shhh, don't tell her) have been mounted involving a new Ipod type device and some amusements to keep her occupied during convalescence. Should you care to offer support and best wishes, you can leave notes in the comment section. If anyone would like to send cards or letters, they can be sent to the shop. Clare Rabeneck C/O The Knitting Asylum 8231 Summa Avenue #B Baton Rouge, LA 70809.

Dez will be back to post when she can. Her life has been complicated by this and a few other "curveballs" recently, and she has been spending large amounts of time and energy trying to deal with them. In the interim, I hope to have a knitting related blog post for you in the next week or so.

Be well.

Aloha,

Lisa Louie
Kahului, Maui, Hawaii




Monday, June 29, 2009

Good news.

I spoke with Dez earlier this morning, and her mom is out of surgery and doing well. Surgery was simpler and shorter than they thought and her mom had the hip repaired rather than replaced.

Keep your fingers crossed in hopes things continue to go well.

More later as it is available.

Aloha,

Lisa Louie
Kahului, Maui, Hawaii

Sunday, June 28, 2009

ANYBODY GOT AN UMBRELLA?

Under the heading of "It never rains, but it pours..."

This is Lisa, stunt blogging from Maui. Dez has not been deliberately neglecting the blog, but again the complications and problems of life have significantly interfered with her ability to get much done besides "put out fires." Unfortunately, the pouring rain does not have seem to have done anything to offset said fires.

Dez has asked that I notify y'all that her mother is hospitalized with a broken hip and injured knee, and will be having surgery presumably tomorrow. Dez's Uncle Armand died this week, and while leaving the cemetery Saturday after the funeral, her mom caught her foot on a step and fell, breaking her hip and injuring her knee. Her hip surgery will be sometime tomorrow, and her knee will be dealt with later. Her hip is broken, not shattered and should be reasonably easy to repair as hip surgeries go. After surgery, she will at some point spend several weeks in an in-patient rehab facility. I will post more as I know more.

Dez also asked me to let Knitting Asylum customers know that the shop will be open as scheduled unless you hear otherwise.

In addition, I'd like to add that Dez's husband, Dave has had several good reports from his doctor in his own recovery from cancer surgery. That's one rainstorm that may be clearing up.

More to follow as it becomes available.

Aloha,

Lisa Louie
Kahului, Maui, Hawaii