To life, and for the next on the way
Wednesday April 15th 2026, 9:24 pm
Filed under:
Family,
Life
With a few edits on the names, this is what I wrote tonight for my expecting niece after being asked to write a memory of her late mom to include her in with the coming of the new baby. Our niece was the other baby who was on the way at the time.
—
When we found out we were expecting our first, I sewed a bunch of cute little baby outfits in great anticipation–and then miscarried at 12 weeks.
I gave everything away. It was too painful.
There was a family party, I think it was the next day, and I found myself going to the basement of your mom’s house to get away from it because everybody was being joyful and didn’t they know?! People were acting like it hadn’t happened. Turns out Grandma H had told them not to say anything, thinking with the best of intentions that it would give me a break not to have to think about it.
Uncle Duane followed me down those steps a moment later because he knew exactly what I was going through. He heard me out. He then told me about the baby they’d lost at six months along that I had known nothing about, and twenty-something years later here he was crying quietly as he told me and heard me and was there for me.
When we were expecting again later, I wanted to prepare for my baby, but I couldn’t. I just couldn’t. Eventually we were getting close and I had essentially nothing and knew that was stupid and knew I had to get going but the what-ifs kept stumbling me.
And in that context the local aunts and uncles on Richard’s side decided to throw me a baby shower because this time it was a celebration that we could all freely celebrate (and I needed that kick in the pants to believe that I really was going to get to have this baby. She was almost here!)
So we came, and your mom was there, and I assumed the whole time that it was a shower for the both of us because our due dates were only about a week apart, and yeah it was my first and her third but still.
So after the food and the talking and the preliminaries they started handing me presents.
I kept expecting them to hand some to her, too. It kept not happening.
I finally blurted out, But what about Cheryl?!
Well now there was an awkward moment.
But the reason I tell the story is because I was in awe of how she handled it. She totally deflected anything about herself and said Well but this is your first! She’d been in on the planning of it for me and that was what it was about as far as she was concerned.
She was gracious, she was loving, she was inspiring, she understood exactly where they were coming from and where I was coming from and it left me wanting to be a lot more like her when I grew up.
Love,
Aunt Alison
Throw in what you have
The big Costco-box strawberries were good but had been in there since Thursday. Cooking them would definitely extend their shelf life.
So I blenderized them with a quarter cup sugar and about 2/3 a teaspoon of King Arthur Instant Clearjel, ie very processed (corn?) starch for, y’know, sour cherry pies and the like. Nuked it twelve minutes and poured it over sliced mangoes with leftover sauce for tomorrow.
And that was going to be the end of that.
Until he looked at the ice cream maker.
Can you put corn anything in ice cream? I asked, knowing that of course you can if you want to, it just sounded so strange.
Why don’t we try it?
So: 3/4 c. strawberry sauce, cream to fill it to two cups, two more tablespoons of sugar after a taste test and into the machine it went.
A few minutes later while doing a puzzle.
Him: I think we should check it to see if it’s done.
Me: It just started!
Him: I think we should check.
Me: If we check every three minutes we’ll run out before it’s done!
Him with a grin: Is this a problem?
Turns out the machine wasn’t turning so it’s a good thing we did check. Fixed that. We let it finish its business in peace.
And the verdict is, next time I think I’ll go half sauce/half cream because that was super rich. The sweetness level was not too much, just right.
It was very very good. Ten stars.
Someone is going to be coming home to this every day
Monday April 13th 2026, 8:27 pm
Filed under:
Life
The picture opened up and I laughed.
Blue House is judging you.
And we’re judging it right back. Really, now. Did it think anybody would think those eyelashes are real?
Ready for everything now
After ten years of trying there was some serious celebrating to do. Saturday morning was the baby shower. Lots of friends, lots of good food, lots of baby gifts.
I found myself sitting next to a woman who introduced herself as the other grandma and she was delighted when I said, You’re S.’s mom!
Yes!
I knew that meant she had flown in for this. This is to be her first grandchild. So excited.
The friend handing the mother-to-be the presents picked mine up almost at the end.
G. opened the card and read who it was from and instantly realized why the wrapping paper was the size and squishiness it was. Her eyes went huge and straight over to mine, as if to ask, Is it?! Is it!?! while absolutely bursting with love.
My eyes loved her right back and I gave her a little nod. Yes!
Her mom’s a knitter. Her sister’s a knitter. She knows.
She leaped to her feet with the Rios baby blanket held nose to knees, wanting everyone to be as thrilled as she was. “It’s so soft!”
Fillory Yarns in San Jose had held a sale-by-mail during Covid lockdown. I knew that yarn would be *the* yarn for–something, that it would tell me what, when. And it did. It instantly did when my friend told me her daughter was expecting and that it was a girl. Even for Rios it was particularly soft. And washable. And a color she wears a lot. That yarn.
I said to the other grandma, I’ve known G. since she was born. When she was three she told us she was going to grow up and marry our John, six months older, and I wanted to hold her to it, but, no (said with a grin.)
Given that her son is the one who did marry her, it took her a split second and then she laughed and laughed at how we were rivals in mother-in-lawing and she’d won.
She was so grateful over that baby blanket.
It and the shower were a message that in this town where she didn’t know anyone except immediate family, she belongs, too.
Great times.
Taxing
Saturday April 11th 2026, 10:31 pm
Filed under:
Politics
One of the great things President Biden did was to roll out a pilot program for greatly simplifying doing taxes, with the intention of its being applicable to everyone in short order. There was no reason to extract the extra millions of hours out of us that we could be putting to our own uses.
I guess we’ll have to wait till the next Democrat wins the office.
I am not happy with Turbo Tax right now, but, looking at all the utter indecipherables on the forms it printed out, it could be worse.
Go! Rain! Go! Rain! Rain! Rain!
Friday April 10th 2026, 8:26 pm
Filed under:
Family,
Life
My sour cherry was impersonating cheerleaders as it waved its pompoms in the wind.
What I was trying to capture with the camera, though, was how the sky had suddenly turned a strong yellow. Yes it had started to rain and yes sunset was ten minutes away, but it was at the speed of a light dimmer and I’d really love to sit down with a meteorologist or physicist and ask, How do the particles do that? Why don’t they turn the sky pink, or even purple, since you get those at sunsets? Why just yellow?
And why does it sharpen all the colors and make them brighter when cataracts also do a yellow overlay and make everything duller and fuzzier?
I can just hear my mom chuckling and going, You were the kid who followed me around asking, Whyyyyy? after every explanation in answer to that question. Nonstop.
Of all the nerve
Thursday April 09th 2026, 7:57 pm
Filed under:
Family,
Life
If you heard that squeal just now, I came around the corner to explain to him, I went to smash an ant on the wall, it fell, I didn’t see where it went but I felt it land on my foot and suddenly found myself kicking real hard and jumping back and, yeah, it got noisy there for a second.
His face! He was still back at the wait wait wait WHAT?! He exclaimed, You can’t. Feel. An ANT! Land on your FOOT!
I laughed because I had–and I knew exactly where he was coming from. What the nerves no longer transmit, you gradually forget they used to be able to do. I studied harmonics in a physics of acoustics class in college so I know what they are in theory and they must sound divine, the pure math of sound and all that (anyone else remember the Harmonic Convergence group in the news? Was that related to the start of Burning Man? I digress.) But asking me to report on hearing them in our experiments in the lab? It was already ten years too late for that.
That is the one specific class grade I remember from university. A-. Never was quite sure about that one.
Puttering along
I decided to start a ninth repeat because why not. So the baby blanket isn’t done, but the progress picture is stalled out in the ether. 179 stitches on size 5s and past 40″ square unblocked in 18 days.
Meantime, the next mom-to-be is getting her finished baby afghan on Saturday and I can’t wait.
Switch back to something knitted
Tuesday April 07th 2026, 10:08 pm
Filed under:
Life
Don’t use phone apps for directions, she told me, they’re a mess, use this other one.
Sure! I even printed it out.
I have idly wondered from time to time how, when you’re driving on the freeway and you look up at those steep hills to the west covered in houses, you can’t even see any roads except the biggest ones, but the views from up there must be amazing.
They are.
And I learned today that if you look down at them from your car for longer than a fast blink you will land on someone’s roof.
Years ago I learned how to be comfortable driving the narrow switchbacks in the mountains to Richard’s aunt’s house. I figured I was only good for the one total freak-out where I gave up and walked back to her door and asked her to drive my car to the top of her drive because I just just couldn’t. (Someone else later tumbled his car on a switchback there. New driver. He was fine.)
I came home and said, Your aunt’s road is a piece of cake. This one seemed to be less than a single lane wide, a little rough and the edges a little frayed at times, no barrier, and it was straight down from there. Tight, tight, constant turns. At one switchback it looked like recent construction above and there was just loose dirt going close to straight up, a landslide waiting to be come Friday’s rain.
She wasn’t going to be home, so I was to take them out of her mailbox and leave my own box by it.
The whole time I was thinking, What if someone comes around the next bend? You can’t back up around the bend behind you. You don’t have an inch to go around. What if this road just dead-ends? How do people pull into those driveways without disemboweling their cars? How did this county approve building up here where no fire truck could ever possibly go, heck, not even an Amazon box truck? And for the love of geography, why aren’t the house numbers visible?
I finally simply put the car in park in the roadway to go looking for one. Wave hi towards the concept if not actuality of a Ring camera?
The road–it needs a better description–continued forward and no other traffic happened (I mean, why would it) and at last it let out onto another that was steep and curvy but not so much on the terrifying.
So it was a loop and I could loop around again and get a better look for that house number, now that I knew what to expect. But you’d have to come to a full stop at every house to look.
I tried to talk myself into it.
Nopenopenopenopenope.
So the lady who bought a lot of the wrong size hearing aid batteries–my size–and whom I was bringing homegrown Meyer lemons to will get together with me next week at a store safely downhill from there. The post office won’t let her mail them and it won’t let me mail my produce. So we’ll just have to do it ourselves.
Since I’m making her make all that extra effort it seems like I should do extra, too.
Gee. I wonder what else I could possibly offer. Right? (And if she googles my name and finds this, I hope she tells me her favorite color.)
Yay for Zoom knitting
Monday April 06th 2026, 9:35 pm
Filed under:
Friends
I have a growing collection of small things knitted during Zoom meetings.
It was about 70 degrees yesterday evening but the sun was nearly gone and the cold comes on fast around here as the night fog rolls in, so when we headed out the door I had on a a vest and a cowl that were maybe just a bit much. But it seemed the right thing to do.
There was a teenage girl there. Her family has moved a lot and it’s got to be hard.
She complimented my cowl and said the color was so pretty. I took it off and handed it to her and she exclaimed over how soft it was. And over the color again.
Did you knit this?
I did! I told her I’d been trying to figure out the right color for her and that if she liked that one it was hers.
NO! she exclaimed in disbelief while clearly hoping I meant it.
And that’s why I had needed to double up on that extra bit of warmth. The vest did me just fine for the rest of the evening.
Her cousin was visiting her and her favorite color is blue.
Every teen needs someone outside of their family who thinks the world of them just because they are.
I can do something about that.
Connected
Sunday April 05th 2026, 8:46 pm
Filed under:
Friends,
Life
Friends dropped by this afternoon and surprised us with roses to wish us a happy Easter. Made me wish all the more that I’d remembered in my quick note last night to wish one for all of you who celebrate, and I hope all who do–and who don’t–had a wonderful day today.
There was a walk around the church tonight with each of us holding a mini light. There were readings at intervals along our Road to Emmaus and a gathering together on chairs set out on the lawn for the final triumphant reading of our risen Lord.
There were more people than chairs, though, and I saw a couple I didn’t recognize standing a little behind us so I motioned them to come sit by us where there was room.
Turns out they’re in the middle of moving here and are house hunting.
When she said where they were moving from, I asked if they knew Grant and Colleen?
Absolutely! Love them!
He’s my cousin.
She couldn’t wait to tell him she’d met us. And then she told us her husband was the brother of…
Camille?! I love her!
So now I get to hope they find something right around here where they have instant friends.
The ones who dropped the roses by?
The husband said tonight, I didn’t know you lived there! We almost bought the house next door to you when we moved out here.
I said to Richard on the way home, and he thoroughly agreed, That would have been so cool. But then we would never have met the family that did.
Clovers
This was the first two cones of cashmere/cotton 50/50; I’ve started on the third.
One oddity of this pattern is that you basically knit it upside down.
I’m puzzled
A quick question, prompted by a conversation where two of us mentioned using a spatula to lift assembled puzzle pieces over the established edge and into the center once you know where they go and a third person marveling that she’d never heard nor thought of doing that and she could not fathom how she had not.
So.
Do you ever spatula your pieces?
I recounted the bit to Richard, who thinks my puzzle techniques are sacrilege, and he said with a suppressed guffaw betraying his mock indignation, *I* do it right!
From a kernel
Thursday April 02nd 2026, 9:09 pm
Filed under:
Garden
Eighteen days.
I’ve gone from looking down at it to starting to look up. I go outside every day to see the new difference. The one branch that grew at the end of last summer towered over the rest in the first picture (embiggen for details) and now some of the others are taller than it.
This was a plant in a pot. Now it gets to really be the tree it was meant to be and I am looking forward to apricots next year.

A shade of blue like this
How often, when you ask a man what his wife’s favorite color is, can he tell you right away without squirming because he feels like he should be able to tell you but he suddenly realizes he has no idea.
But he did know, with certainty. Cool. I went stash diving and–oh, yes, that one exactly.
So. Doctor’s waiting room for a routine check. I pulled out the just-begun carry-around project and marveled at how finely spun baby alpaca yarn can be as jumpy on the needles as a happy toddler in an ice cream shop, especially old stash from when some mills were new at working with the stuff. But it makes such a soft fabric. (Why did I put needles that big in the bag? Stuck with them now.)
A woman was checking in and as she walked past me, she stopped and introduced herself as a fellow knitter.
Cool! Loved her scarf! I asked her about how she’d gotten started.
Her mom and grandmother were knitters; How about you?
I told her my family had traveled coast to coast and back when I was a kid and my mom had taught me how to knit to keep me from killing my little sister in the back seat. She laughed and asked if it had worked and I said yes, while thinking in my mom’s direction, I think so–I don’t remember any arguments after that. Mom, if you want to chime in?
I told her, Six kids and a camping trailer and she winced a little and yeah I don’t know how my folks did it either but they did it. Mom was knitting my sister an Aran sweater I seriously coveted so I wanted to learn to make my own.
We didn’t have a lot of time to delve in deep but we both would have loved to and I told her the name of my blog. So to her, if you’re reading this, welcome! And hi!