Progress, but not really.

I am feeling particularly accomplished today. I watched part of Koi… Mil Gaya last night, in an attempt to see (a) how well I understand Hindi and (b) how well I can knit stockinette while reading subtitles. And the answer to both is: pretty darn well! Okay, so there is a range of “well” here, but I can do both with some level of competency. I know when somebody is talking about feelings, action in the past, present, and future, and assorted other random things one only understands by watching lots of Bollywood (pyaar, dil, etc). I have progressed to the point where I’m learning postpositions, and although it makes no logical sense, I somehow also feel that when I get to learning German, I’ll have a leg up (let me explain: English has prepositions, Hindi has postpositions, and German has both, therefore leg up, q.e.d.).

The knitting went swimmingly. I fear that I am using a cable needle that is a bit too long, so that when I pick up stitches for the sleeves they will be too loose, but I also feel that this is mostly my imagination and that things will work themselves out.

I am loving this tiny jacket. It is so cute. And pink. eeee. I’m such a girl.

(The camera cable has vanished, yet again. I will post photos of the new project when it resurfaces)

(also, why are you people searching for “butsecks” on google? one person every day finds this blog through a similar search. This makes me want to seed my blog with random words, just to see who looks for them. Like kumquat. Or hippo pants. Or something.)

So then the rest of the “but not really” part is that I am proud of where I’ve gotten, but last night I made the mistake of looking up gurmukhi on Omniglot (a friend sent me a copy of a Punjabi newspaper in the mail) and I realized that learning Hindi to gain some understanding of India is like learning Portugese to gain understanding of Europe. It’s just silly. I can’t learn all the languages (well, I could, but I’m not going to put myself under that kind of pressure), but I think I need at least two. Once I’ve gotten a relative mastery of Hindi, I’ll move on to Bengali, and then maybe Kannada or Tamil (I will also try my hand at possibly Marathi or even Panjabi). I mean, if I’ve got Italian and German (and its Swiss variant) and Portugese and Castillian Spanish on the list, then I need more Indian languages, too, to be fair.

In a knitting context, it’d be like saying that you’ve knit a scarf in stockinette, so you know how to knit everything. Why learn socks, or lace, or sweaters? Or colorwork?

I think I have a long way to go.

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I finished a knitting project!

But I can’t get flickr to work right. Here’s the link:

Socks of Eternity are done!

Today is a good day.

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Why I knit, #18

Because when I’m sitting at home, sick, on the couch, it makes me feel as though I haven’t wasted a whole day.

I didn’t feel like I’d wasted time when I was a child. I felt like it was a holiday (even though I was miserable). Now, as an adult, I feel as though I’m wasting time. I got no laundry done, no vacuuming, and I did not organize the craft room like I’d planned. I sat on the couch all day and watched my husband play video games.

However, in the process I managed to get the sleeve portion done for the tiny baby sweater, so I feel as though it wasn’t entirely a wash. I like this sweater. Compared to the other sweaters I’ve knit, it’s like I’m already done! It goes so fast! I might actually have a chance of finishing it before the child has grown out of it. I don’t even mind that it’s sort of a dusty rose color, or that it is being knit in acrylic yarn (which is actually quite nice). It’s not the Socks of Eternity, so that’s good enough for me.

And then we went to see the Chickengoddess, who made a delicious fish stew, and watched the first half of Veer Zaara, and I really hope SRK doesn’t explode in this film. Really I do.

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Aha!

Sari not so fail.

After three separate washings, the starch is not yet all out of the sari. I dried it overnight in the bath, and when I went to collect it yesterday evening, bits were stuck together with starch. I did my best to iron it, but the borders and fringe on the pallav are still very stiff.

Anyway. Thanks to the internets, I discovered many videos of people wrapping them in different ways, (all nivi-style drapes; I’m not feeling that ambitious yet), and with Sondra watching I made attempt #2. The back was not as lumpy as before, I can actually move my legs, and the pleats looked only mildly crappy. I will have to practice pleating the pallav and probably need to wash more starch out of it; I got the pleats in front to work right, but then because the bottom border was so stiff, it poofed out in a sort of bell-like fashion that did not suit me or the sari.

I swear I’ll post photos once I have (a) a real choli (t-shirts work reasonably well, but are not ideal) (b) mastered it to my satisfaction. However, I feel that for only two attempts ever, without another person’s assistance, I have done a  satisfactory job for now.

In non-sari-related news: Remember these socks?

Dunny in Warlock sock by you.

Well, I have not gotten anywhere at all on the socks (big surprise, I know), and since I hate 2×2 rib even more now than I did before I started these. In the interest of keeping me more or less sane, I’m ripping them out this very evening and making them Jaywalker socks, because those are fast and awesome with self-striping yarn (though I will do a cursory Ravelry search to see if there’s another pattern I can use – I don’t want to be boring).

Ripping out a frustrating project is so cathartic. I can’t wait.

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Sari fail.

In which I experience more of Indian culture without actual reference other than the internet, and embarass myself voluntarily on the internet.

I bought my first sari on Friday. I had debated over various styles and had visited numerous sari shops locally, and finally decided on one I found on the internet (because I don’t have to talk to anybody when I shop there). It is lovely. It is Bengali. It is green. It is cotton. I completely missed the fact that it came to me starched.

I did not get any pictures of my first sari wrapping attempt, as it was abysmal (not as bad as I’d imagined, but pretty awful). I have since hand-washed the sari and it is hanging to dry over the shower curtain rod. I think it still has starch in it. It should be easier to work with now (previously it was like trying to clothe myself in wrapping paper – I couldn’t get the pleats to lay right and the back was all bunchy and it was crinkly and itchy and weird).

Other thing accomplished this weekend: ordered pani puri with little to no embarassment, though I’ve been obsessing over my non-existent line-jumping since then. And also? Pani puri is awesome, if impossible to eat in a moving vehicle.

(Extra also? It feels weird to be announcing these things to the general internet, when I expect that the things I am doing are altogether mundane. How weird must it be to stumble on this? Do people in other countries write similar things about America? I overthing everything, of course. But it still feels weird to announce, “Pani Puri is awesome.” I didn’t Twitter it, at least.)

Enough of that.

Socks of Eternity are still eternal. I have not had to put them back on the needles in some time, though. The ChickenGoddess has started an excellent lace shawl that I would also like to knit at some point. She offered to help me with it, but I declined in favor of finishing the lace shawl I did two rows on way back when (*ahem* last year). As she has since discovered that the pattern is confusing and has had to rip out her work, I am glad I waited. It’s gorgeous, but I have a short attention span when it comes to lace (except for socks and hats), and I think it might have made me cry. Or throw things.

And so in lieu of knitting, I give you this (when I was 13, I so would have had a crush on this guy):

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Finally in posession

Of that “way cool” dress, I went with a friend and partyed 80s prom-style. Oh, my dress was heinous. Did it make me look like a blobby tube? Yes. Did I care? Not really. Sondra, on the other hand, looked hot. And the ladies from work (hi, ladies from work!) also rocked it in a major way.

Like, totally rad.

See?

n4912077_47262729_2541819

(well, that’s me, at least. All my accessories were either yellow or black. If you look at other photos of me, you’ll notice that I wear neither a. yellow nor b. electric blue. Also, I kept getting told I looked like Katy Perry)

Sondra did the Flashdance thing:

n4912077_47262721_4013869

[Photos kinda-courtesy of Katy, who was the host and is included in the work ladies]

So, yeah. My actual prom really sucked, and this made up for it. When I was a kid I coveted an unnaturally-hued, poofy dress and big teased hair. I think I can check this off my list.

The husband wasn’t photographed, but he was awesome, too. He wore my Jackyl shirt and a trenchcoat with the sleeves cut off (plus some studded fingerless gloves and ripped jeans and cowboy boots). I was liking the Judd Nelson in Sixteen Candles thing. I wish I’d taken his picture.

And then yesterday we stayed in all day and I introduced Sondra to Bollywood (more than she’d seen, at least). She was suitably appreciative (we watched Om Shanti Om and Dhoom 2 – I’m easing her in).

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I suppose

I am making up for the lack of post yesterday.

And also, I am a huge dork. One nerdy thing is good, but combining two nerdy things is better (three is nerd overload, like Ghostbusters crossing the streams). Here are two examples:

Deep Font Challenge

[Fonts + Video Games. Awesome. I predict I will be so-so at this game. I talk big, but in reality, I probably won’t know the difference.]

Malabar

[Type design + India = me getting stupidly excited about Devanagari versions of typefaces. Well, to my credit, it’s a beautiful design. The little rounded details! Oh! I might have to buy this one.]

Thanks for playing.

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Oh, ghee…

Where have you been all my life? To think that I would’ve eaten squash more often if I’d only known of your deliciousness (and kudos to the husband for hiding the squash in the dal; it started out weird but I came to like it by the time I’d finished eating).

The Sock of Eternity is this much longer now:

_____

|

|

|

_____

(approx. 1.5 inches)

I’m torn. Do I keep procrastinating, because I’ve now the socks are “of Eternity?” or do I keep knitting, because nobody likes a procrastinator?

For reference, here’s the history of the socks:

1. Started socks, was very excited about them. Learned a toe-up cast-on.

2. Ripped out cast-on. Started again.

3. Cursed. Ripped out cast-on, started again.

4. Success! Knit foot of sock to heel.

5. Called ChickenGoddess from Memphis airport in a panic, knit heel.

6. Ripped heel out as foot was too long.

7. Knit heel again.

8. Ripped it out, knit it again.

9. Foot still a little too long. Decided I didn’t care, knit a portion of the leg.

10. Got really ambitious, cast on toe #2.

11. Ripped out toe #2.

12. Knit toe #2 another three times.

13. Knit foot of sock #2.

14. Repeated sock #1 heel process, minus one rip/reknit cycle.

15. Knit the leg of sock #1, then stuck it in the bag.

16. Got distracted by several other projects, stuffed socks to bottom of stash drawer.

17. Noticed upon reorganizing stash drawer that needles had pulled out of socks.Put needles back on socks, re-stashed.

18. Repeated #17 every two months.

19. Forced self to hibernate all other projects (minus Christmas knitting) until socks are finished.

20. Stuck socks in projects bag, blogged about socks incessantly instead of actually finishing them.

21. (last night) Finished another three rows and discovered that – lo and behold – I am two inches away from being finished! Take that, you dull and horrid 2×2 rib. I cannot enjoy you but I also cannot knit on you while reading subtitles. You plague me.

[Note: I didn’t date this list because it’s been so long that I don’t remember when this stuff happened. Not even close.]

So this is where I am. With any luck, they’ll be done and I can move on to other Socks of Not Quite Eternity But of Pretty Long Duration (of which I have a couple of pairs).

And the bruise has finally shown up on my hand. It was a big bump for three days. No wonder it’s so tender…

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I’m such a klutz.

I counted this morning and I have five mysterious bruises, all of which are on extremities, and all of which involved me running into furniture at some point. The most irritating one is on the back of my hand, which I got dancing like a moron in my dining room on Sunday with the Chicken Goddess (beer + internet radio = bruises, apparently), when I did the usual arm flailing thing that happens when I dance (I am a goth. This is how I roll.) and hit the edge of the table. The beer is the reason I didn’t notice the injury until this morning. The others are on my legs and feet, and came from attempting to make my way to the kitchen and bathroom in the dark (I must also divulge that I am a slob, too, and have brought this upon myself, completely).

And I keep poking the one on my hand, like you do when you’re a little kid.

I didn’t get any knitting done yesterday, either. I took it with me in my bag o’ stuff, expecting to have all day to sit and work on it, but after the informative video on what it means to do your civic duty and sit in a room with 200 other potential jurors, I got a headache and spent the rest of the time watching Let the Right One In on my iPod (so here’s a funny thing – demons? creepy. ghosts? creepy. vampires doing the same thing as the previous two beasties? not creepy. I don’t know why.), until they called my name and let me and about 50 other people go home.

My first socks may actually be my last socks, also. I’ll be on my deathbed, unable to pass on until I’ve woven in that final end (like, when I’m 90 – it’ll take me that long).

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Pourquoi d’Inde?

Pourquoi, indeed. Fellow blogger and kind soul Vaibhav posed me a question in a comment to a previous post that I had originally intended to answer as another comment, but have realized in the process of formulating said answer that it is too detailed for that space. And I have also come to the conclusion that knitters may be wondering where the fiber went (it’s in my craft room,  hibernating while I finish the Socks of Eternity).

Why am I learning Hindi so earnestly?

The short answer is that I feel that if I am going to do something, I’m not doing myself any favors by doing it halfway. “Oh, sure. That’s okay. I’ll only get a half of the tattoo. I really don’t need the whole thing. Wouldn’t want to commit too much to it, you know.”

The long answer is quite long, and will partially take the form of a comparison (though not immediately).

My parents are solidly American. I love them dearly, and would not trade them for any others (except that my 13-year-old self would probably trade a few experiences for cooler ones, but you can’t please teenagers, anyway). My mom is one of my best friends, and my dad has given me a love for learning that has proven invaluable on numerous occasions. They were sorta-kinda-hippies in the 70s. I ate a lot of homegrown, homemade, and organic food. I didn’t eat sugar growing up. I didn’t wear new clothes. I hate peanuts because that was the sole snack food in our house, aside from the delicious and wondrous Little Debbie Cakes we got in our lunches (my brother would eat his all in one go, but I rationed mine out, which I still do with cookies, for months on end, until my husband gets frustrated and asks to finish them off himself). We went to see the symphony, spoke a smattering of Spanish, and celebrated holidays Just So. This is my culture.

My culture is also a Swiss-German family who emigrated to Texas in the 1850s to homestead and raise cattle. My culture dealt with marauding bands of Apaches, baked bread outdoors in big ovens, and broke horses. My culture was a butcher who loved his wife but almost married an Indian woman in WWII when he was stationed in Delhi (though this did not work out, I have some lovely carved ivory elephants and a beautiful silk handbag that was my “something old” when I got married). My culture was an irascible old German woman who only liked her eldest granddaughter. My culture has spectacular parties for funerals, and always serves butter mints. My culture is a nearly unbroken line of Anglican priests who moved around the East coast until one of their daughters married a hobo (seriously!) and moved to Texas. I am the daughter of an ex-nun and a priest’s grandson.

I think this is what it means to be American. Through all these people, I am an amalgamation of French, German, Swiss, English, and Scottish cultures. And at the same time, I am none of these. I don’t know what it means to be any of these things. I know what it means to grow up watching Alf and Punky Brewster, eating Froot Loops and Pop Tarts, wearing Nikes and Jordache jeans, reading Tiger Beat and listening to Michael Jackson. I know what it means to go to the roller rink every weekend, and to have had an after-school job at the  mall and to drive a beat-up car to school and secretly (or openly) despise kids with better cars. I know about having pizza for breakfast, Chinese takeout for lunch, and Ethiopian for dinner.

But I don’t know if this is really American. This America is different from my parents’ America, which is different from their parents’ America, which is drastically different from the place my ancestors came to when the pilgrims’ ships landed.

To be fair, the England, Scotland, France, Germany (er… Prussia?) and Switzerland of that time were drastically different from what they are today. India is probably not the same country it was 50, 100, or 500 years ago. But I only have my own experience to go on.

And here is where the real answer happens:

As a child, I had a friend whose parents grew up in India. We went to their house frequently enough that I have vivid memories of what it looked like inside, what it smelled like, and how incredibly spicy the food was (I was eight. It was very spicy). When I was 13, Jay’s mom dressed me in a sari and jewelry for our school’s cultural day. I’ve since lost touch with them over the years (my parents still visit on occasion; I’m told Jay has grown up into a nice young man), but the fascination has stuck. And can you blame me?

Would you rather have this

https://i0.wp.com/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cc/Phillips_Tea_Party.jpg/200px-Phillips_Tea_Party.jpg

or this

https://i0.wp.com/www.craftsinindia.com/newcraftsimages/miniature_painting_ragini_gunakali.jpg

This

https://i0.wp.com/www.patchworkcabin.com/images/RJR_Sm.Tulip_Flower_Rose_Print.JPG

or this?

https://i0.wp.com/farm3.static.flickr.com/2021/2272080748_52619cf189.jpg

[Keep in mind that I am a designer and an artist; color is very important to me]

This

https://i0.wp.com/agympie.net/sitebuilder/images/Shop_Party_2008_065-600x455.jpg

or this?

Holi Feest 2008 by FaceMePLS.

[from FaceMePLS’ photostream]

[and I realize that again, I’m oversimplifying it, but I’m attempting to make a point]

I started this with Bollywood, but I can’t stop there. India isn’t just its films, and it’s not just the Panjab, and it’s not just the Hindi language (not at all; I haven’t tackled Tamil or Bengali yet, or Marathi or, well, you get the idea).

It’s vibrant and colorful and alien and ancient and I’ve fallen in love with it.

And I plan on knowing at least 10 languages before I’m 50. I know English and French and a little Spanish, and I hadn’t tackled a non-Romance language yet. Hindi seemed like a no-brainer.

[Something else my parents gave me was a fascination with and appreciation for other cultures. My mom had a dream at one point of opening a pan-cultural restaurant that served different dishes every day, all from different cultures. She makes a mean lentil soup. In the 70s she worked for the Minority Affairs department at the University of Kansas, and has really wonderful stories about people from West Africa, people from South America, and lots of Native American friends. I know Spanish because my Swiss-German-English-Texan mother spoke it at home. So I truly come by it all honestly.]

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