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  • WIP-a-Day, Day 6 – Piper’s Journey Shawl

    Today’s WIP is a newer project. It’s a Piper’s Journey shawl that I’ve been using as parking lot knitting. My 13yo has a decent number of classes/lessons/rehearsals and some of them are only 45 minutes long, so it isn’t worth driving home. I usually have a pair of socks on the needles at any time, but it’s nice to have a second project in the car that’s a little more interesting.

    At this point in the shawl, I’m working on the applied border. I don’t have it entirely memorized, but I only have to glance at the pattern once or twice and then I remember it. The body of the shawl is just garter stitch with increases, so I didn’t need a pattern at all for that part.

    Piper’s Journey was designed by Paula Emons-Fuessle. I enjoyed Paula’s podcast and I have been wanting to knit this shawl in her memory. Paula’s posts as she dealt with cancer reminded me so much of my mom’s journey, so it was really hard for me to read/listen. I honestly felt really guilty about it, but I guess that’s how unhealed grief goes sometimes. (Is grief ever completely healed? I’m not there yet, if so.)

    For today’s run, I listened to a podcast that was actually quite boring, lol. I did, however, also start Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow on Audible the other day and it’s good so far. I have seen a few spoilers, but nothing too intense. It was a Book of the Month selection a while back and I was very tempted to get it then.

    Alright, back to work on my yoga teacher training assignment. I’m literally dreaming of yoga at this point, lol.

  • WIP-a-Day, Day 5 – Parallelolamb

    Today’s WIP is the Parallelolamb by Stephen West. This is another pattern that I assumed was pretty popular. I tagged it on Instagram and realized that is actually had very few tags. There also aren’t that many projects for it on Ravelry. It’s interesting to see what takes off and what doesn’t.

    I used a bunch of scraps to make this shawl, so it has sat in time out a few times while I waited for scraps. The shawl is knit on 4 long circular needles at once, so you don’t have to pick up stitches. It does make it a bit like fighting a jellyfish, though. I’m often getting poked by a random needle tip or having this strange thing happen where one of the needles stabs through the fabric and kind of ties the shawl in a knot. It has definitely gotten better as the shawl has grown, because the needles are a bit more stretched out.

    The nice thing about this pattern is that you’re just increasing on one side and decreasing on the other, and it’s all in garter stitch. As long as you remember which side to work on next (there’s a handy chart in the pattern too), then you can just knit and knit without thinking. My rows are pretty long now, so it is requiring larger and larger scraps. It’s also getting pretty warm to work on, so I think I’ll probably finish it in the fall. That’s fine, since I’m not going to be wearing this beast when it’s 90+ degrees out anyways.

    For today’s run I had some harder intervals, so I thought I’d like something engaging to listen to. I picked the latest episode of Moonbeaming, where Sarah discussed shady practices within the New Age community. Her guest, Katya Weiss-Andersson, is someone that I feel like I must know, based on where she lives and what she has done. All of the alternative health/wellness circles are small enough that you tend to bump into the same people.

    Overall, I loved the whole discussion. I’m very aware of the way that religious retreats and communities manipulate emotions. A lot of New Age teachers have borrowed some of these unhealthy practices too. It’s good to step back and see the many influences on each movement and the ways that it shapes the community. Even though people like to think that they’re above the influences of patriarchy, capitalism, white supremacy, transphobia, etc… the people with power in society still end up being the same people in power in subcultures. That means a lot of the same problems exist in both places.

    The episode gave me lots of food for thought and made my V02Max intervals go by quickly, so it’s a win-win. I still have about 15 minutes left, which I think I might listen to while my son is getting his teeth cleaned this morning. The sounds at the dentist office aren’t my favorite, so it’ll be a good distraction.

  • WIP-a-Day, Day 4 – Selbu Socks

    Hey, look! A project that isn’t a rainbow, lol.

    Today’s WIP is a pair of Selbu socks that I started several years ago. The actual knitting on these socks is very enjoyable, but the pattern requires a lot of clicking on links and being at my computer. That means I only work on it when I have dedicated time.

    Since I’m knitting them two-at-a-time, they should go pretty quickly once I turn the heels. I’m not in a huge rush, because I have a lot of socks and these are more of a process knit for me.

    In non-knitting news, I got feedback from my latest assignment for my yoga teacher training and it was so nice! I have one section left of assignments and then my final. They were really encouraging about my teaching style, my sequencing and my cueing. That felt very good. I’ve been practicing yoga for most of my life, but I still wasn’t sure how that would transfer to teaching.

    On my run this morning, I listened to an old episode of the Why I Knit podcast. Today’s episode talked a bit about how Instagram might make it seem like knitting projects just fly by and how people should maybe consider sharing more WIP photos. Perfect! LOL. It’s true, though. As someone with a lot of WIPs, I can show a lot of FOs in a short amount of time. That’s not exactly reflective of how quickly a project goes from start-to-finish, though. Some of my WIPs have been on the needles for years, with stitches added in hundreds of tiny sessions.

    I hope you’re having a great start to your week and the weather isn’t too crazy for you. I just let the sheep out and it smelled like smoke, so I’m off to see what that’s about… Climate change is super fun, y’all.

  • WIP-a-Day, Day 3 – Temperature Blanket

    Woohoo! We’ve made it to Day 3. This project is very different from my first two. Not only is it crochet, but it’s a WIP that can’t be finished before the year is done.

    I loved the idea of temperature blankets (where you knit a row for each day of the year), but I didn’t really love the thought of having to knit an entire blanket stripe every day. I came up with this option instead. Each round represents one day, and each color represents a 10-degree range. Depending on where I am in the square, a day can be a relatively small number of stitches, but I will have a really good-sized blanket at the end.

    When I did all of the math, I needed 6 more squares for it to be even. Luckily, we have 6 people in our family, so I added a rainbow square in for each of our birthdays. Our year is kind of front-loaded with birthdays, but I feel like the rainbows melt right in anyways.

    In other news, I am nearing the end of my 200 Hour Yoga Teacher Training and my brain is feeling quite mushy. I’ve been doing a lot of simple knitting and crocheting while watching lectures and reading books. Truth be told, I absolutely love learning and having a project, so I’ll probably be a bit sad when I get to the end. Because I have a few other fitness certifications, I’m lucky that I can double-dip, and any new certifications count as CEUs for my existing ones.

    I’m not exactly sure how I want to implement yoga teaching into my schedule. I attended a lecture on “yoga for athletes” and I was very drawn to the idea of including custom yoga sequences for my run coaching clients. I think that would be really useful. I also miss teaching in-person fitness classes, so I might pursue that. Either way, I’m having a blast and learning lots of new things.

  • WIP-a-Day #2 – Frankenfingers Mitts

    Hey, hey! I’m back for my second day!

    I decided to pull WIPs based on which one is the closest (physically) to me. Today’s winner is this pair of rainbow Frankenfingers. They’re being made out of Knit Picks Felici and I’m knitting them TAAT on magic loop.

    It felt to me like this pattern was super popular a decade ago and then it suddenly disappeared. Now that I’m looking at the Ravelry page, there really aren’t that many projects on there. It must’ve just been popular in my very small circle, and I imagined that it was popular everywhere.

    I feel like what makes the Frankenfingers extra cute is that each finger is done with a different color of yarn. It requires a bit of yarn waste, but the stripes aren’t that big in Felici anyways and it’s well worth it. You can always use the scraps for stitch markers or whatever. (Is that just me?)

    Since the entire pattern is ribbed, plus it’s long, and I’m making them TAAT, this will take me forever to finish. I tend to bring them when my 13yo is performing in shows, because I don’t have to look down and it helps to have other entertainment while knitting these. People always comment on the yarn, but they probably think, “Wow, this lady takes a long time to finish a project”, since I’ve literally been bringing them to shows for more than a year, lol.

    For today’s run entertainment, I decided to listen to Buddha’s Brain. It was the book club pick a few months ago for my Yoga Teacher Training and it sounded interesting. I find meditation to be particularly helpful and I am a science nerd, so I’m hoping it’ll be a fun read. I only ran for 45 minutes this morning, so I think I listened to a preface, the intro and then chapter 1…. so it’s still building. Hopefully it’ll get going soon and I’ll have more info to share.

  • A WIP a day…. until October?!

    I run pretty much every day and I love listening to podcasts while I run. Podcasts kind of make me feel like I’m running with a friend… except I don’t have to work around anyone else’s schedule and I can just run straight out of my front door. 😛

    This morning I was listening to the Pardon My Stash podcast. They were discussing the number of WIPs that each person has and whether or not they’re monogamous knitters.

    First, for anyone who doesn’t know, I am NOT a monogamous knitter. Far from it, I often have 30+ WIPs at a time. I know this number realllllly stresses some people out, but it feels pretty great to me. For my first 10 or so years of knitting, I felt guilty for having so many projects, and I’d work really hard to reduce the total number. As soon as I’d get down to single digits, I’d hate it! I love variety and I love having lots of options to choose from. I also don’t particularly like casting on (although that might not seem very believable with the number of projects that I have.)

    One thing that I’m learning in my 40s is to lean into the natural flow of my life/brain and not fight it so much. For one thing, fighting it never really works… the only real difference is whether my internal chatter is accepting and appreciates the way I work or if my internal chatter is telling me that I’m wrong.

    OK, so back to the title: I was running and listening to the podcast and thinking about how no one on the show had nearly the number of WIPs that I do. It was interesting to hear their individual takes on everything. I love hearing how brains work and I love how fiber arts are so flexible and can be approached in so many different ways.

    This afternoon, I was knitting on my couch and my beautiful pit bull, Layla, was working on a bone beside me. (BTW, Layla has at least 30+ WIPs going at any time too. There’s a reason we’re best buds.) I realized that if I photographed one WIP a day, I think I could make it until October. For some reason, this really cracked me up. I thought it might be fun to write a little more about each one and share why it’s a WIP, because there are a lot of projects that I have NO intention of finishing anytime soon. A lot of them are scrappy and the scraps just don’t exist yet. Plenty of others use funny techniques that I like working on sometimes but also don’t want to do all of the time. Some just get forgotten for a bit or make me bored and then I pick them back up later.

    Today’s WIP that I’ve been focusing on is a Sockhead Hat made out of a beautiful sock blank from Gale’s Art. I let it sit in my stash for way too long. I had started to use this yarn for a pair of socks in this year’s Sock Madness, but they ended up too tight and I liked the yarn too much to waste it. I frogged the socks and decided to make a hat instead. I was actually going to make a Musselburgh Hat (my bajillionth), but my 13yo and I were heading to see Theater Camp in the movie theater earlier this week and I didn’t want to do increases in the dark. I’m pretty good at reading knits and purls by feel, so I figured the ribbed brim would be easier to work on than the crown of the Musselburgh.

    Sure enough, I feel like I’m flying through this one. I mostly just worked on it in the theater and then for a little bit today. It’s fun to watch the color develop and I think it’ll make a really happy hat. It’ll probably be knit night/purse knitting for a few weeks, because I’m almost to the stockinette section and then it’s entirely mindless.

    I’m going to try to photograph and talk about a WIP a day until I get through all of them. I’m not too stressed about being perfect, so I’m ok if I miss a day here or there. I really like seeing older projects from other people, because there are often really good patterns in there that I’ve forgotten about. It’s easy to get swept up in the latest-and-greatest on social media and forget about other gems that are out there. If you want to follow along, I’ll be posting them on Instagram too.

    If you want to share any info about your number of WIPs or your philosophy on WIPs, I’d love to hear it! Feel free to comment, DM or post and tag me. Like I said, I think it’s fascinating to see how brains work.

  • Book Review – Long Way Down

    I decided to pick up Long Way Down on a whim. I saw that the Knitters Book Club had selected it as their book for March, and it sounded interesting. It was available through my library for free, so I downloaded it right away.

    The premise of this book is that a young man’s brother has been shot and killed, and now he is going for revenge. The book takes place over the course of 60 seconds in an elevator. At each floor another character enters, and more of the backstory is told.

    I don’t even have words for how beautifully this book is written. I was listening to the audio version and I had NO IDEA that it was written in prose. The narration is flawless. If you get the audiobook, I highly recommend that you also listen to the interview with the author at the end. It is excellent.

    I noticed that many people recommend pairing this book with The Hate U Give. I agree that the books have certain parallels, but this book can easily stand on it’s own. I’m looking forward to hearing my teenagers’ thoughts on this book, and if they feel that the books should be read together.

    I rated this book 5/5 without hesitation, and I really encourage you to pick it up. The audio version is less than 2 hours long and flies by. If you’re like me, you’ll be sad when it’s over.

  • Book Review – Too Fat, Too Slutty, Too Loud

    Anytime I walk into the library, I have to check the “new releases” shelf before I go anywhere else. A lot of times I find new-to-me authors and books that I wouldn’t have otherwise sought out.

    I had never heard of Anne Helen Peterson before picking up this book. I’ll admit that I didn’t even realize that Buzzfeed had serious authors… so I guess I went into this book with some preconceived notions. I was really wrong. This book is concise, engaging, and it really challenged me in ways that I didn’t expect.

    The book is broken up into 10 chapters, each focusing on an unruly celebrity who is viewed as being “too much” in at least one area of their life. The first chapter, “Too Strong” is about Serena Williams and is an excellent way to open the book. Anne Helen Peterson covers how Williams’ gender affected the way that she was treated and how her race was used against her. Both the chapter on Williams and the chapter on Nicki Minaj address the fact that women of color are treated differently and held to different standards than white women in the same field. After reading the first chapter, I knew I’d definitely finish this book.

    Some of the women in the book will be known to all (like Hilary Clinton and Madonna) and others might not be (Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson were new to me.) I don’t think this makes the book any less insightful. I still enjoyed every chapter and each one left me thinking for days and noticing the subtle ways that society judges these women and other women like them.

    I’d definitely recommend checking out this book. Even when I didn’t necessarily agree 100% with the author, I still found myself challenged and seeing new perspectives. I also loved that the format of the book made it easy to read a chapter, take a break, ponder it for a while, and then return to the book.

  • Easy, healthy (and plant-based) breakfasts for families

    Winter is upon us, and we’ve been craving warm, hearty breakfasts. Our mornings can be pretty busy, so I’ve found that the key for me is having a few go-to recipes that everyone in our family enjoys. Here are a few of our current favorites. I’d love to hear some of yours too!

    Banana-Oat Chocolate Chip Pancakes

    https://www.forksoverknives.com/recipes/banana-oat-chocolate-chip-pancakes/

    OK, chocolate chip pancakes don’t sound particularly healthy, lol… but hear me out! This recipe is filled with whole grains and it happens to be vegan if you’re into that. If not, you can easily use cow’s milk in place of the plant milk. I use a cast iron griddle and they come out PERFECT. My griddle gets so much use and is so well-seasoned that I don’t even need to use any oil in it. It’s my favorite pan in the whole house. 

    Even though pancakes definitely take some time in the morning, I’ve found that this recipes reheats wonderfully. That means that I can make a big batch and we can eat off of them for a few days, which is pretty perfect.

    Old-fashioned Oatmeal

    The meal that we probably eat the most during the week is just a big ol’ pot of oatmeal. After finding out the startling numbers for how much Round Up is in our oats, I have been trying to buy ones that are organic (or at least aren’t Quaker!) I know we can’t completely avoid these environmental toxins, but I would at least rather have 10 parts-per-billion instead of 1300. 

    I usually make my oats very much like Sadia describes on the Pick Up Limes blog. I cook my oats either in water or whatever milk I have on hand, using twice as much liquid as oats. Then I cut up a banana or two and let it cook in the liquid with the oats. This makes the banana all caramelized and yummy. I throw in some goji berries and let them plump up while it cooks, too. Once the oats are done cooking, I add nuts/nut butter and berries to the top of each bowl.

    Skillet Granola

    We love granola of all sorts, but skillet granola is a special, magical thing. It is ready in just a few minutes and it is so easy to customize. It’s perfect for using up bits-and-bobs of nuts/seeds/dried fruit and it is delicious over milk/plant milk/yogurt.

    Also, I know the name is “Skillet Granola”, but we make ours up in our dutch oven and it’s fabulous. There’s enough oil in the recipe so nothing really sticks and I feel like the cast iron helps it to really brown nicely.

    Whole Wheat Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Muffins (with or without the chocolate chips)

    This recipe has been an old standby for years. Much like the pancakes, these muffins store beautifully and can be eaten over a few days. If you don’t have whole wheat flour (or just prefer white flour) you can sub it out and it works just fine. My kids REALLY love if I make them into mini muffins.

    Sweet Potato/Apple Crumble

    This recipe is one that I got off of a parenting board back in 2005. That seems like a lifetime ago! It’s basically a normal crumble, but it includes sweet potatoes with the apples. You dice them both up and cook for a bit, then you add the oat mixture on top and let it crisp up. I love topping mine with cashew cream and my kids are a bit obsessed with our Whip It, so they tend to put whipped cream on there.

    Pinterest is always my friend

    For some extra ideas, I tend to keep my food boards on Pinterest quite full. I have them separated by meal, but my breakfast one is what I use the most. I made sure that each of these recipes was pinned on there and I am always adding more.

    During the summer, eggs feature much more heavily on our menu because our chickens are laying then. We don’t supplement our chickens with light, because we want their bodies to have a natural break. That means that winter is focused on lots of whole grains. If you check out my pin board, you’ll see the difference in seasons as I pin a bunch of egg recipes vs a bunch of grain ones. 😛 

    I’d love to hear about some of your favorites. I am always trying new things and the best way to find them is through personal recommendations!

  • Making my own “mystery” knitting club

    Oh man… it’s that time of year again. The time when I see all of the beautiful new knitting club subscriptions open up and I start to drool. 😛 It’s so fun to receive new yarns and patterns every few months and I’m just a sucker for a good subscription club.

    My secret plan all year was that I’d finish my year of Cold Sheeping and then reward myself with a club (or two) to help freshen up my stash. In the past I’ve done clubs by Ysolda, Martina Behm and A Verb for Keeping Warm… and I’d honestly love to do any of them again. I was thinking that it’d be really fun to be in Sincere Sheep’s “Made Here!” club and that might be my big splurge.

    But then, the responsible part of my brain took over. 😛 I started thinking about all of the amazing club projects that I still haven’t even cast on from previous years. I decided I’d gather them up and see if I have enough to make my own personal club. I’ve heard of people on Ravelry who have done something similar.

    Lo and Behold! In an embarrassingly short amount of time, I gathered the yarn and patterns for 12 projects. I put each project in a bag and threw them all inside of a big bin. Now I can tell my kids to grab a project for me each month and I can work through my backlog. I figure that once I’m done with these 12, maybe I’ll sign up for a club to replenish what I’ve used.

    The yarn and patterns that are ready to go are:

    1. Fraxinus
    2. Plum Leaf
    3. River Wrap
    4. Lacustrine
    5. Leftie
    6. Bellarose
    7. Alyva
    8. Sprial Escape
    9. Morning Trail
    10. Lightning
    11. Smooth Sailor
    12. Toranja

    So, for now, the responsible part of my brain has won. The real trick will be getting through one of these projects each month. I’m looking forward to the challenge, though!

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