1.20.2019

wayyy outside my comfort zone ...

i feel like i am risking ruining my carefully-curated curmudgeon character by saying this out loud, but i have been making clothes for Barbie dolls. pretty much.


you see the shocked expression on Mama Kitty's face? that is exactly how i felt when this all started.


there is a whole (long) story behind it, but i will have to save that for some other day. for now, just know that i may have officially lost what little there was left of my mind. please... send help.

on the more immediate side of life, i woke up this morning, looked out the window, and the only thing i could see was the brick wall and chimney of the building directly across the driveway from us. everything else was lost in a white haze.

it should be noted that when i talk about looking out "the window", what i mean is that i looked out the only window that is not currently frosted over with a solid sheet of ice. check out the view through the sliding glass doors. Montreal is somewhere out there... i hope.


by midday, i was super-curious as to what it looked like down at street level, so i decided to get a large pot of soup started, then take a trek out to my local yarn shop while it simmered. the yarn shop, i should point out, is literally around the corner, so it was not like i had to hitch up a team of huskies to drag me on a sled across the tundra. it is a short walk to the corner, cross a street, then walk to the middle of that block.

i even managed to talk him into going outside with me.

me: come on. we can see what the snow looks like at ground-level. and you can help me pick out colors of yarn. 

he made a face.

me: plus...plus... we can go to the bakery on the way back, and sit there sipping hot beverages while we watch the cars and people slipping around on the ice. 

he found that idea far more appealing.

then the wind began to howl again, and the snow went racing even faster sideways past the one non-frosted-over window. it was quickly decided that as i was still getting over the tail-end of a nasty cough that has been driving me bonkers for most of the past month, this may not be the best time to go venturing out into an ice storm. that almost makes sense, i guess.

he did, however, take a quick trip to the corner store to buy eggs and cat food. the eggs were needed for a bit of baking we were planning on doing later in the day, and the cat food was a sensible precaution. i am aware that my cats have me listed as an all-you-can-eat buffet in their emergency contingency plan, and i did not want them to get any ideas with this storm.

he came back in a short while later, looking completely shocked.

him: you know when you see videos on the weather channel of those really big Winter storms? the kind where the snow is blowing like a hurricane, cars are skidding all over the road, and people are slipping and falling on their butts as they try to walk? 

me: yes... ?

him: it is exactly like that outside.  

so... uhm... yeh... we are staying put for at least the next day or two.

beyond that, we live on a street that is so small and tucked out of the way that people who have lived in this area for decades usually look puzzled when we try to explain where it is. this pretty much means that it will likely be mid-week before the city remembers to come dig us out.

how am i staying sane in all of this cold, grim weather? how sweet of you to ask. i am knitting myself a sweater in a very not-me shade of orangish-yellow yarn. trust me... the photos do not fully capture the intensity of this color.


anyone who has ever met me in the flesh would know this color is wayyy outside my comfort zone. i was trying to decide between the many shades of grey in my stash. however, as it is currently the depths of Winter in a place that seems to be continuously competing to be labeled as the coldest, darkest spot on the planet, i decided to make my own sunshine.

the pattern is the Gloria sweater by Danish designer Signe Strømgaard. like i said... it is a not-me color, but i have to admit that it does look rather fetching next to my skin.


5 comments:

  1. That is a great color, btw. I should think you'd look terrific in it. Yellow is one of those colors, like orange, that needs to be approached gingerly.

    My only sanity-saver this time of year is the old 'it's almost February and February is only 28 days long..." and yes, the days are getting longer. I think the weather gods in their wisdom (or pity) planned it that way, so we'd not descend into madness and darkness by March 11th...

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    1. (i have been having trouble leaving comments on blogs, including my own, for the past few weeks, so hopefully you will see this one.)

      i thought about you and your husband during last week's crazy weather. hope you did not have to resort to burning the furniture in the attic just yet in the ongoing effort to stay warm.

      we have lots of sunshine today, which is a welcome change from the constant overcast conditions. i am trying to enjoy it while it lasts, especially with the arctic vortex that is supposed to settle into the area any minute now.

      and, yes... yellow and orange should come with warning labels in my humble opinion. i can get away with a splash of bright yellow, but i steer clear of bright orange. there is a reason why they use that color for warning signs on the road. one glance, and you know anything that color should be avoided at all cost.

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  2. I can understand your frustration on the comments: type all that lovely stuff down, and nothing happens. clickclickclickclick...If you're on WordPress, you might try contacting them, or find a trouble shooting forum there.

    Last week was standard January typical. We've had worse, far worse. The first winter we moved in here the house was totally uninsulated, the roof leaked, we had two stoves (one of which only ran for three hours before dying out totally), and no running water. The er, bathroom was a long gallop out in the shed. And almost no wood. The cats were not happy. And yet it never occurred to either of us to leave, to seek warmer quarters.

    I'm kinda glad we stuck it out. =)

    I've never seen anyone who looked good in orange, you're right, it's not a people color.

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    1. i am glad you stuck it out too. makes for great stories about your life there in that house.

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  3. Me too. I've never regretted any of it. It took my mother 30 years before she realized we really meant it, though, lol. She kept asking why we didn't move into a nice little house in town...oh, mo-ther...ick...

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