Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Family Portrait


Here is a photo of the three babies - The Muffin Man in the back, wearing white underwear and a striped sweater, Twink sitting like a princess also toward the back, and her giant brother, Squeak, in all his unwashed glory in the front.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Sexy Knitters Club Somewhat Cowl KAL!

I'm so happy to have done my first ever knit-along wth the lovely ladies at the Sexy Knitters Club. There were two patterns to choose from - the Somewhat Cowl and Orangina. I chose Somewhat Cowl because I struggle terribly with knitting a lacy pattern. I love how it turned out!

This picture is pre-blocking - so there's a bit of rippling along the neckline and the cowl ribbing is pretty bunchy. I soaked the sweater overnight and pinner her out this morning - I think that will take care of both issues.



While I loved the pattern and am super pleased with the finished item, I'm glad to now be able to move on to something else. At times it felt like I was knitting penance on the never-ending ribbing! Now I'll move on wholeheartedly to my Sister In Law's Soleil tank, which I'm only 8 rounds into but hope to zoom through in a short time. A whole bunch of baby knitting - one great niece or nephew coming up very soon, another in October, a niece or nephew and a grandbaby in late October, too. Plus my Mother In Law's Cinxia and a few other things, too. I'm hoping to join the next Sexy Knitters Club knitalong in July, too - depends on what pattern is selected, I suppose. Also, our summers are so incredibly busy from June through October, my knitting time will be pretty scarce. Oh well - for now I have the joy of a Finished Object!

Sunday, May 14, 2006

I have decided through all the experiences of the last few days that God is softening my heart so that it can more easily expand to contain Love - all the love that can exist in the world. I have also decided that I must work toward being a vessel for His love, and that it is my purpose to spill that love onto everyone and everything with whom I come into contact.

Friday, the day after the sentencing and the death of the Muffin Man, My Pilot and I were very blessed by so many people, friends and strangers alike, who touched us with compassion and tenderness and brought the comfort of love to us. I believe there are angels among us all the time, bringing messages from God to each of us. Sometimes the angels take human form, for a moment or so, touch us and remind us of the love and beauty of creation, and then slip away. We were visited by so many angels in the last few days, and we are both very blessed by their presence. I mentioned this to one of our angelic visitors, a beautiful and kind woman who came to our shop and talked of her own kitty children, including one who was in the process of dying and one who has gone missing. She left and then came to visit me in our second shop, and I shared with her my gratitude for her kindness, and my belief that she was an angelic messenger from God. Her eyes welled up, and she thanked me saying, "Not many people can see who I am." Even angels need validation and appreciation.

In our five years together, Michael and I have met many angels, and many more people whom we would characterize as perhaps inadvertent messengers and vessels for God's love. There was an angel in human form present when we met on an airplane five years ago - he had an empty seat beside him, but I passed it up to sit beside Michael. Periodically throughout the flight, he would look back at us talking and laughing and smile. He followed us off the plane, and kept reappearing periodically at the airport, as we sipped sparkling water and waited for the shuttle which would take us to our destinations. It really felt he was checking on us, making sure we would figure out that we were meant to be together.

We've had God's messages delivered by the post office right after my friend Dawn was murdered. Dawn was our mail carrier, and it was fitting that she and God could effect a very gentle and loving letter being delivered right when we needed it most. It came from a woman in Southern California, thanking us for helping her to choose something for her daughter, who was ill. She had chosen a petite pendant by one of our artists that carried the message "Be the change you wish to see in the world," by Ghandi. In her letter she explained that as her daughter opened the little box, the mother started to say the quote, and her daughter finished it. It so happened that this quote was her daughter's favorite, and one which she was living by daily, even in the throes of her illness. The woman closed her letter saying, "you do make a difference." In our hearts we believe this was Dawn letting us know that she felt our love.

We've been sent beautiful spirit communicators and clinical psychologists both carrying the same message - that our loved ones are not gone, that they are safe, in school and learning what they must to go to the next place, wherever that might be. That has brought such comfort to my aching heart. And "just normal people" have brought tender words and soft hands to hold for a brief moment.

I have a snippet of a song running through my head - "Just Like Heaven" by The Cure. The part that sticks for me is the refrain:

You, soft and only
You, lost and lonely
You, strange as angels
...Just like heaven.

It feels to have been written about the Muffin Man

And yesterday we received a sympathy card from our usual vet, not the one who cared for the Muffin Man. The verse on the front read


"Grieve not,
nor speak of me with tears,
but laugh and talk of me
as if I were beside you
I loved you so
'twas Heaven here with you."

Isla Paschal Richardson

The Muffin Man was so deeply, demonstrably appreciative of all the comforts, care and contact we had with him. The nests of hot laundry fresh from the dyer into which he would disappear for an entire day, only the tips of his ears visible over the edge of the nest. The paw massages, which is really how my husband was able to tame this three quarters wild little man when we first found him. He'd stretch out his paws, and his fingers would seem as long as mine. When one little paw had had enough rubbing, he'd slowly pull it back and extend another arm or a leg, and so it would go until all four paws and all sixteen toes had been duly caressed. The little treats of sardines or rare steak, sometimes bacon. Warmth - he was such a cold little guy when we found him in December, when the temperatures were 20 below zero. He'd find a patch of sunlight coming in through the window and settle in to recharge his batteries - he definitely was a solar kitty. All of it he appreciated, and he told us so in so many ways. I can hear him saying "'twas heaven here with you."

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Catching up on knitting

Wow - so incredibly much has happened in the last thirty days, it's unbelievable. Some of it really beautiful and good and exciting. (Opened a second gallery, completely redid the kitchen from the subflooring and studs up.) Other stuff really, horribly sad and hard. See the previous post for a short summary. Between the good and the sad, there was really precious little time for knitting much at all, so my Sexy Knitters Club knit-along on the Somewhat Cowl has been languishing, although I have only to pick up stitches around the neck and knit the cowl itself. I will be finished in the next few days if at all possible.

Also languishing is my sister-in-law's Soleil tank. I was nearly done with the three repeats of the lace pattern at the hem - lace is oddly difficult for me. Not unpleasant, just challenging, even though this particular pattern is about as straight forward as one could be. Anyway, I was nearly through with it, down the second to last row of the last pattern, and I ended up with one fewer stitch than necessary. I tried and tried to frog back and correct it, but I couldn't make it work out to my satisfaction. So I ripped it all out, recast on and started again. I did a left-handed long tail cast on, so I would have a nice even knit row to begin, and then realized that since I need to immediately join in the round, the purl side would be showing. So remove it all from the needles and cast on again. Third time's the charm, I hope - I've completed one 8 row repeat and feel very solid about the stitch now. I hope to really get rocking on it and send it off to New York by June 1, though. I think I can do it - it looks like a pretty quick knit.

I still have yet to sew in the sleeves on my coppery wrap front vintagey sweater from VK summer '05, and then I'll need to add the crochet edging. I've been holding off on that while working on the SWC, as it's still cool enough for SWC and too cool for the cotton short sleeve sweater. But not for much longer. Also, since she's been hanging in the closet, I'm hoping the length will have grown a little bit from the weight of hanging. Even though I measured very carefully, it was still a little shorter than I really like. Guess I really need to make a little dress form - the sort where you where a snug t-shirt and then have someone duct tape you from neck to groin, then cut you loose. I think having the 3-D model of my own lumpy bod will really help with perfecting the fit of my creations.

I had signed up for Project Spectrum Post Card Swap a while back and am really excited to have just "met" my swapping partner. Lady Arliss from Bakersfield CA will soon be receiving a green themed art card from me. I'm excited and scared, since I've never done this before. And I think the last time I made a card I must have been about six, and it was probably a crayon drawing on contstruction paper reading "happy moths day" or something. I hope she'll like my humble offering.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Packets of Loss

The human heart has many chambers, one of them in particular devoted to the safe keeping of the packets of loss we seem to acquire over the course of a life. Losses large and small, some long lasting, some slightly more fleeting, felt sharply or deeply, cutting, wincing, throbbing losses of all types. The experience of moving from a childhood home gets cataloged and filed there, as does the end of one's first love relationship, and divorces, deaths of grandparents, parents, friends, being fired, losing a pet. When harm comes to those whom you love, even when they are not mortally wounded, that counts as loss, as well. Loss of your innocence, loss of your trust in the goodness of the world, they get placed in little packets and tucked into that special chamber, too.

When the losses are spread out over manageable lengths of time, and when the gravity of each is perhaps measured on a different scale, then it is much easier for the soul to organize them all, place the packets into the appropriate color coded folders - black for the gravest of losses such as the death of a close family member, perhaps a medium gray for something lesser like moving to a new city of one's own accord, and so on. Colors of indigo for those losses you sensed coming and could prepare for, even just a little bit. Perhaps over time, and with proper storage and care, the little file folders develop a sweet and beautiful luster, and as you remove them from the chamber in your heart and hold them to the light, you see that instead of a black folder, the packet now shines and gleams with bits of diamonds and pearls, as the good, sweet memories have risen to the surface to be more fully seen and appreciated. The grey packets gleam like silver, pewter and platinum as you recognize the value of the experience to your soul's growth. And those indigo packets, the ones containing the losses you were able to prepare for, sparkle like sapphires, like a night sky pricked by the light of countless stars, glow like twilight, that most precious of moments. The packets themselves are beautiful and precious, and the memories they hold are even more so.

But when the losses come to quickly and too heavily, the soul cannot keep up with the organization system it has created. Packets get tucked together willy nilly, set upon shelves, stacked flat on the floor of the chamber, propped against the walls, obscuring the windows and blocking the doors. Just like that overstuffed hall closet, there comes a time when opening the door, even just a crack, results in an avalanche. All the losses, even those already burnished by time, come tumbling out, piling at your feet, tripping you, making you fall, and ultimately burying you under a mountain of black, grey and indigo file folders.

That's where I am today. Just buried under the weight of the many losses we have experienced in the last few years, all of them made fresh and new by the events of the past several weeks.

Two and a half years ago, my then-15 year old daughter was sexually assaulted by two men at a house party. Subsequently, the two county attorneys involved would not prosecute. We waged battle for two full years trying to achieve justice for my girl, and ultimately justice never was delivered through the judicial system, but rather through the media. This culminated in a NBC News Dateline story on our experiences that ran a few weeks ago. (The transcript appears here .)The airing of the piece, while an important part of the closure and healing for our family, also reopened all the wounds suffered throughout that time period.

On August 27, 2005, my best friend Dawn was shot in the back by her husband. She was murdered in her own home while three of her five children slept in their beds. The murder trial took place in early April, and thankfully ended with a jury conviction of deliberate homicide and use of a firearm to commit a crime. Sentencing was yesterday, May 11. I testified, along with the defendant's eldest daughter, two of his previous wives, and other family members. Lawrence Roedel was senteced to 80 years in state prison plus another 10 for the firearms charge. He will eligible for parole in about 40 years. He is 67 years old, and not in good health. He will die in prison, and for that we are imminently grateful to the justice system, the very same one, manned by the very same people, who so miserably failed my daughter. The sentencing hearing reopened all the grief and rage we feel for Dawn's murder as well as the heartbreak and disappointment and grief and rage over the way my daughter's case was mishandled, and the cruel manner in which we were all treated.

Also yesterday, shortly after 5:30 pm, our youngest cat died. The Muffin Man was just three years old, a healthy indoors-only little man. The sweetest and most lovingly devoted creature I have ever known. He was fine on Wednesday, and started acting sick Wednesday evening. Around 4 am on Thursday morning I heard him throwing up. At 7 am he was really in a bad way. By 10 he was at the vet's and they were trying to figure out what was wrong. IVs, glucose, antibiotics were administered - was it an infection? A diabetic reaction? Liver failure? A brain tumor? Poisoning? Around 3:30, as the sentence was being read, he suffered a seizure. Valium was administered. He went through another series of seizures while we were at the vet's office after court, shortly before 4 pm. And he died shortly after that. I love all my animals - the other two cats whom I hand raised from the time they were four days old, our two dogs. I have always felt them to be precious souls, sweet children entrusted to my care. They are a source of comfort and joy to me, and even my husband and I spend the day relaying stories about what Piper did, or how cute Twink was while sleeping earlier, or how clever Suzz is, or can you believe the way Squeak stands on his hind legs like a little dog when he wants to be picked up. And with the Muffin Man, it was always about how incredibly devoted he was to me. He followed me from room to room, sat on my lap while I knit or read or watched TV or worked on the computer. He was the only cat I have ever known to sleep the entire night through, and he was always polite and never bothersome or pushy. Not even once did he bite or scratch us, not even at the vet or when my husband would trim his claws or bathe him. And this sweetest of souls was taken suddenly, without warning and so very much before his time. Certainly far before I even could have imagined him being taken.

We are bereft, grieving not only for the loss of pet, which certainly would be enough, but also for the many losses we have experienced, the many heartbreaks and hardships of the soul we have suffered in recent times. Certainly we are not the first or only people to suffer in this way, and so certainly others suffer far more greatly than I. This I know, and I understand and believe with my heart. And still, I am so disappointed in God right now, although I know I am not alone. Was the death of my kitty punishment for something I have done? I try so very hard to walk gently and carry compassion for the entire world in my heart. I speak the truth and take very seriously the matter of Right Speech according to the Eightfold Path - don't speak untruths, don't speak harm even if true about sums it up. We carefully remove wayward spiders and mice from our home and reinstall them into the outdoors, and I even share my garden with a rabbit and at least one vole, who last year ate the inside of every single beet I had planted, leaving nothing but red papery shells in the ground. My husband and I work so very hard, not only at our two galleries, but also cleaning two commercial building complexes seven days a week. We do these things cheerfully and with happy hearts, for through our galleries we are able to support the dreams of more than 150 artists and craftspeople in this country, people making beautiful and functional things with their own two hands. Such a rarity anymore. I clean toilets and mop floors with my husband, because to do so provides a pleasant environment for the people living and working in the buildings, and also for the many thousands of nice visitors who come through our little burg each year. To meet a person's physical need for food, clothing, shelter, and sometimes even more importantly a clean bathroom, is a sacred service indeed. And still I am subject to what sometimes feels to be insurmountable pain, in spite of my good acts and thoughts and moment by moments prayers of thanks and gratitude for all the good and abundance that exists in this world. My biggest and most fervent prayer is always that those suffering might find peace and contentment and safety and happiness.

And so, today, I wonder where my own peace might be. The Muffin Man was a sweet and gentle soul, and really liked things to be the same - the same schedule, the same food, the same routines. I want things to be the same, too. And they can't be.

And that makes me feel despair.


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