Tag: Percival

Endnotes and Asides to “Your Moments”

This is a “part two” post. If you have not read “part one,” none of this is going to make any sense. You can find the original post here.

I worked on that last post for a week, and I have all this content that just did not fit. Like a good writer, I tried to edit it down and just include what was most relevant (now that I have attended library school I keep thinking of that as “weeding”). So here I present you all the leftover things I kind of wanted to tell you, in endnote form. It seems self-indulgent to do so, but, hey, that’s what blogs are for, right?

When I was sixteen, a boy made me a mix tape.
There is something about that sentence that fixes me in time and culture.

caption=”View from Dalkey Castle”
These photographs of Dublin were taken by my husband or me in the summer of 2000.

I heard it first about a year ago on Brenda Dayne’s podcast Cast On.
Cast On is a podcast for knitters. I am not a knitter, so you may think it is strange that I listen to it, but some of the content is not knitting-related and I do not mind that which is. Knitting is not all that different from quilting and other crafts, after all. Brenda has a soothing voice and an intimate style. Hers is one of the first podcasts I found and remains my favorite. I think knitting and podcasts go together well—it might just be (one of) my corner(s) of the internet, but I think knitters were some of the first to jump on the scene with podcasts and the crafty presence in podcasting is still strong and growing. I love it. I have about forty-five podcasts I subscribe to in iTunes (hard to tell whether a couple have quit or are just taking a while between episodes, so my number is inexact), and—I just counted—nine of them are produced by knitters.

(Actually about knitting in large part: Cast On, CraftLit, and The Knitting Librarian. Mostly about quilting, but the podcasters also knit: Hip to Be a Square, Patchwork and Pacifiers, Quilted Cupcake, and Sew, Stitch, Create. About crafting in general, and the podcasters knit: CraftSanity and Creative Mom. [And not about crafts at all, but the podcaster crochets and talks about it on Cast On: QN Podcast.])

Brenda played it again recently, so when I had some free Amazon mp3 credits to use, I remembered it and downloaded it.
I prefer to buy my music on CDs for multiple reasons (and then import it to iTunes too), but I can’t pass up free gifts. I’m sure you’re dying to know what else I downloaded. Okay, I got Jonatha Brooke‘s “Linger” and Kate Voegele‘s version of the Leonard Cohen “Hallelujah.” I was going to get the Rufus Wainwright version, but after I searched by song title and came up with a page of hits, I just clicked on “sample all” and chose her partly because I wanted to support and try someone I hadn’t heard of and partly because I could sing along with her well.

I think it had me with the piano, and then it had me again when I heard the word “book.”
I have not played the piano regularly for more than twice as many years as I played the piano regularly. But I still think of the piano as my instrument and am drawn to it.

I have been reading The Man Who Lied to His Laptop, which is about human-computer interaction. The author, Clifford Nass, talks about research showing that we are much more likely to respond positively to people (and machines, it turns out) who reflect ourselves, who share traits and similarities, both physical and otherwise.

So am I drawn to piano-playing mezzo-sopranos because that’s how I identify myself? Do I like piano in my songs because I grew to love the piano through playing for many years or do I just appreciate the effort and skill that goes into piano playing? Or is there something in a person that leads her to wanting to play the piano and both these musicians and I have it? (Not that I would compare my childhood piano “career” to anything a professional does with the instrument.) Ah, the classic nature/nurture/it’s more complicated conundrum.

It was one of those songs that made me stop what I was doing in the kitchen so I could concentrate on listening.
And then I was very proud of myself for actually going and finding my cute little Moleskine book and writing down the name of the artist and song. However, although I am good at collecting, I am not so good at the doing something with the things I collect, and so a year later when I heard the song again, I still hadn’t gotten the information out of the notebook and done anything about it.

A quick search confirmed that the words are by William Butler Yeats.
Katy Wehr comments briefly on this in an article in Image (about a third of the way down). She likens writing the music to someone else’s words to a conversation. I like that. Also, she reveals that she is a quilter.

old scrappy quilt

I love using leftover fabric from an older quilt project in a new one—it creates a continuing story between projects.


(That quilt was made by my great-grandmother. And didn’t she match my color scheme well?)

When you are old and grey and full of sleep,
I haven’t want to spoil the poem/song any by reading interpretations or criticism of it, but when I was searching for a source to copy the words from, those little snatches of pages in Google kept catching my eye. It’s a wedding poem, a Valentine’s Day poem, but a classic “dark” poem. The speaker is a former lover, or it’s about unrequited love, or it’s written for a beloved. Huh. Seems like the authors of those free essays on the internet don’t quite agree with each other! We’ll have to think for ourselves.

I sat at my computer and listened to the song on my iPod nano with the earbuds in, reading the words while I did.
This confused the cats. They came and looked at me because they knew no one else was home and they couldn’t hear the music I was singing to. Percy in particular was very interested. He climbed up on the desk and stuck his face inches from my face. He has this look that he gets when he can’t figure out what you are doing but he is trying so very hard to understand.

cat in window looking at camera

What is going on, Pretty Lady?


caption=”Dublin Writers Museum”
I think the most eyeopening and culture-shocky thing about visiting Dublin was the way it celebrates its strong literary tradition. There are tributes to writers and literary figures throughout the city. Writers! A statue of James Joyce just hanging out on a busy street. A monument to Samuel Beckett, clearly a tourist attraction. Plaques in their parks and signs on their buildings, everywhere, mentioning writers and books. The most fascinating thing about the Dublin Writers Museum to me was that it existed, a whole museum dedicated to people like me.

I wasn’t sure what the “mention in the news of the world” line was, but after I looked it up on a lyrics site, I was able to learn the rest of the words by listening to the song on repeat.
Are there any sites more annoying than lyrics ones? I really tried to choose the least irritating ones to link to, but I’m sure you will encounter some fun pop-ups and flashy crap anyway, and for that I am sorry.

It surprises me that this method works for me, because I think of myself as a visual learner. It may only work if I’ve seen the lyrics and can picture them as necessary. One of my college roommates was a music major and singer. She learned the words to her songs by writing them over and over when she was supposed to be taking notes in her other classes. She’d write as much as she could, look at the lyrics, and then start over, writing as much as she could again. I don’t think I’ve ever tried that.

Every other day, on the way to the community college six miles away and back home again, on repeat—by the end of the week, I knew every word.
And then the next week I printed out the lyrics for my composition class and played them the song. They were writing personal essays, and I was trying to show them how collages worked. It occured to me that “Red Dirt Girl” was a collage essay in song form. You learn about Lillian through these little snapshots of her life given by the speaker. I’m not sure whether they appreciated it or not. They were a hard class to read. But if you teach writing, you may steal that idea from me.

girl pushing boy in wheelbarrow

Loves her brother—I remember back when.


When we’d buy CDs without them, my roommate and I would have to sit with our heads near the speakers and ask, “Okay, there, what is she saying about the moon? Rewind it.”
Yeah, I know, we’re talking about CDs, not tapes, so there’s no rewinding, but some of us are probably going to be rewinding discs and dialing cell phone numbers until we die. Or until those brain implants they’re going to invent any day now make discs and phones obsolete.

I had—or, my family had—one of those old boomboxes with only one side, and I would keep a blank tape in it and hit “record” when something I liked came over KKNG FM 92.5.
And I felt lucky to have such an advanced recorder! This was a step up from my clock radio, which had melted under the light of my bed lamp so that the alarm switch was permanently set to “on.”

I found pages from this notebook recently: a weird embarrassing mix of Air Supply and Dan Fogelberg from the radio, Xeroxed hymns and Amy Grant from church choir, and lots of John Denver handcopied from sheet music books checked out of the library.
One of the joys of moving is running across collections like that. I seem to have a lot of them (as I said above, I’m good at the collecting). I keep throwing things away (weeding), but then more surface. Oh, you want to see? Okay.

handwritten song lyrics

Are you more amazed at how things change or how they stay the same?


I’ve forgotten lots of things, but I can’t forget these words that I took the time to learn so thoroughly. I know them now, and they’re part of me.
So now they are in my head and I can sing them out loud when no one is home but me and the cats. And perhaps sometimes I pick up Tristan and make him dance with me.

cat in window looking with love

He fills up my senses.

Where I’m Writing From and Other Stories

This is the condensed version. I may expand on some of this in future posts. I’m fairly confident that anyone who currently reads this knows what I’ve been up for the last few months, but for the sake of posterity and as a way of easing back into writing more often, I’ll summarize.

At the end of May, we happened into a litter of kittens and their adolescent mama. We took them all to the vet and then brought them inside and cared for them.

mama cat and three kittens

In early June, I started teaching a summer class. Graduate-level class + summer school + never taught it before + other job duties = a lot of work.

By late June, we had found a home for two of the kittens. It became apparent that the little black one, however, had moved in for good. His name is Hamlet and he is delightful.

cat and kitten in cardboard box

At the end of June, I flew to Washington, DC, to attend ALA. It was overwhelming but exciting. I’d been home less than 24 hours before I left again for a short campus visit and job interview.

crowded room of people watching presentation

In July, I finished teaching my summer course. In August, I helped my superviser prepare for the start of classes. I am neither teacher nor student this fall, but working for a university meant I was involved in various back-to-school activities.

In late August, the husband and I decided to move 1234 miles west. I flew out to meet a friend in our new city, chose a house on September 1st, and returned home to pack everything up.

We donated several hundred books to a library book sale, threw the wedding china and too many unfinished craft projects in a moving truck, and filled the backseat of the car with cat carriers. By September 15th, we were standing on the porch of our new residence.

cat carriers in backseat of car

kitten sitting in hallway of empty house

I skipped over some things, but that’s the gist. We like it here in our new place. We aren’t quite settled in yet, but so far October’s shaping up to be a good month and the fresh mountain air and sunshine makes us happy.

cat looking out window at sky

Flannel Rag Quilt for Cat

I realize this sounds a bit weird, but I made a quilt for my cat.

kitten in cat bed with new quilt

I had been thinking about making a rag quilt and so I decided I’d experiment with that method. I made this before I dove into the denim and pink one.

I used two pairs of old pajama pants that had ripped at the seams.  I saved the first pair because they had a cute kitty pattern and I thought I might use the fabric for patching jeans or something.  Oh, I don’t know, I’m a packrat, okay?  But I’m trying to either get rid of or use up the things I have saved, so when the second pair became unwearable, I decided to combine the two and make a little kitty quilt.

I don’t know why I thought a kitty needed a quilt.  I guess it goes back to when we first got Percy and I brought home a cat bed for him.  I bought him one that had a blanket and mouse with it (because I like things that come with bonus stuff).  I remember saying, “I don’t know why a cat needs a blanket!”  Then it turned out that Percy loved his blanket.

kitten in cat bed under blanket

Especially when it was held by one corner and dangled over him.

kitten pulling on corner of blanket

And then I thought, hey, if cats like blankets, then I have another potential class of recipients for quilts I make.  But I wasn’t going to use high quality materials.  So when I happened to have two pairs of pajama pants that matched (one even with cats and cat things on it) and part of a ripped up flannel sheet that complemented them, it made sense to make a kitty quilt.  And since the materials were all pink, I decided this quilt was for Vivienne (I know, I’m a feminist, they are cats and they don’t have a lot of social baggage about colors, I shouldn’t care if my boy cats have pink quilts, etc., but sometimes you just get tired of fighting the system, you know, and I’d already bought her the pink bed [not pictured–the red bed in the photos is Tristan’s]).

Anyway.  I cut the fabric into 5 1/2 inch squares to make five rows of five, or a final size of about 2 feet by 2 feet.  I lay out the squares and let Percy lie on top of them for quality control testing.

Percy lying on quilt blocks

The stripey squares are a regular cotton, the white kitty squares are flannel, and the back squares are a slightly thicker flannel, but it all played nice together.

I used turquoise thread, which maybe wasn’t a brilliant idea because it sure is a contrast color, but I was thinking of this project as a quirky kind of thing and it matched the kitty fabric. Also, I have about six spools of it because it was given to me as someone else’s discards, so it fit the “no new materials and use up what I have” theme I had going.

I used the drawstring and elastic from one pair of pants and the fly from the other pair to create pockets (I layered each over a plain square).

catnip mouse in quilt pocket

cat toys in quilt pocket

This is what it looked like before washing. You can see that the clipped edges have not frayed yet.

flannel cat quilt before washing

Here’s the back.

back of flannel cat quilt

And the full front, after washing. I’ve since washed it three or four more times and it has held up fine and ragged up nicely.

front of flannel cat quilt

And now Vivi has a place to keep her sparkle poufs.

Flannel and Denim Rag Quilt

flannel and denim quilt hanging

When I lived in Nebraska, I did a fair amount of quilting.  I went on two or three “shop hops” to independent quilting fabric stores with women from my church.  The quilting world has trends like fashion and other designed things do, and one trend that was big were rag baby quilts.

Like this:

bright flower quilt

That one is unusually bright, however.  They were more often pastels, with squares all the same size.  Usually they were flannel on one side and either chenille or this soft fabric with little raised bumps on the back.

Minkie, very close up

I liked them a lot, but I didn’t have a baby in my life to make one for and the quality fabrics were expensive, so I just mentally added it to my “someday” list and moved on.

Another kind of quilt I always intended to make was a denim quilt out of my old jeans.  I had been saving ripped and holey and too-small-but-not-worth-dontating and too-small-but-I-love-these-pockets jeans.  In Nebraska, we had a huge basement of storage space, so I just threw a bunch of giant Rubbermaid tubs down there and filled them up with random crap (I don’t recommend this).  When we were getting ready to move, I had to sort through these tubs and donate or repack the contents.  I decided that I should cut up all the jeans before I moved to save space.  I cut and cut and cut, making a huge pile of squares and throwing all the interesting pockets and trim into a shoebox.  Then my husband saw what I was doing and, in the clearing-out mood himself, started handing me his old denim.  Soon I had many, many squares, far more than one quilt’s worth.  I packed them up and moved them across country.

So last fall, thinking I had extra denim squares to “use up,” I bought a bunch of pink flannel on sale to pair with it.  I like the combination of pink and blue-jean blue and I decided I didn’t care if I made something that looked like it was for a preschool girl.  I could justify it as practice quilting or just making good use of scraps, and besides, I am too old to worry about what people think any more.

I used the Denim Rag Quilt instructions from Patchwork-and-Quilting.com.

I lay out the squares the way I wanted them, and then I labeled them with tape on the backs so I could recreate the order later. I called the fabrics ABCDE, so the first row had A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 A2 B2 and the second row started with C2. I saw this method somewhere described as an “ABC” quilt, but when I tried to Google instructions for you, I didn’t find any (just lots of alphabet quilt patterns). It’s pretty self-explanatory, though, I think.

Percy on pink flannel squares

Percy helped, of course.

close up of flannel side of quilt

I think I actually like the denim side better. The darkness of the green and yellow stripes stick out a little too much I think.

denim side of quilt

The flannel is rougher than I expected. Maybe because it was cheap and not the nice quilt store stuff.

close up of flannel and denim quilt

It’s also heavier than I thought it would be. I’m not sure why that surprises me. I guess I just expected the raggy-ness of it and the repeated washings (I’ve washed and dried it three times now) to make it softer and fluffier.

But I still like it.

full view of flannel side of quilt

Update (January 12, 2011): I see that the link to Patchwork-and-Quilting.com now points to a page offering a pattern for sale. To be clear, I didn’t buy it, and I don’t think you need to either. This is a really standard and easy method that’s out in the public consciousness and has been for a long time. I think if you have experience with quilting you can figure out from my pictures (and the ones in this entry) how to do it. Or, I’m sure there are other instructions online. If you have a specific question, email me!