Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

Spooky poem October 31, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:30 pm
Tags: , ,

An oldie- but a goodie!

A Hallowe’en poem for you! To be read in a very spooky voice….

 

making it yourself October 29, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 3:21 pm
Tags: , , , ,

I’ve been knitting socks the last couple of days. It takes me about 8 hours to knit one sock, so 16 hours for a pair. This is not exactly a cost effective way to purchase socks. Good heavy duty socks can be had for about $10. With the yarn at something like $5 a ball, I’m getting little more than 25c an hour value out of my time. However, the satisfaction is in the making. I will have another sturdy pair of warm socks, something I am always thankful of in winter, with my chronically cold feet. I will have bright, pretty socks, and I will have socks I made with my own two hands and four needles…

There’s a sense of power in knowing that you can make things yourself, be they socks. sweaters. clothes, furniture or whatever. Self-sufficiency is a reward.  I like spending my time making something that lasts, as opposed to doing housework which never ends, for example.

I’ve used Paton’s Jr Jacquard yard (90% acrylic. 10% nylon) in “Big Deal Teal.”  The pattern is from Knitty.com I actually stumbled upon it quite accidentally when looking up a precise definition of the word “Widdershins.” In this case, most socks are knit knee down, and these are knit toes up. I had been interested in someday finding a toe up pattern, and since this one fell into my lap, I was happy to try it. You can find the pattern here.  I love such serendipity.

This is my result- one sock complete, and the toe started on the twin as you can see on the right.

 

Widdershins socks in Paton's Jr Jacquard

As you can see from the ball, the yarn ends in lime, which suggests to me that my mate sock is going to end up about 1/2 shorter than the first one.  I will live with that!  I probably should have unwound the ball and divided it equally in half so I could have exactly the same amount of yarn.  I wish there was an easy way to do that, come to think of it.

What do you make that gives you small satisfaction of ‘doing it yourself?’

 

know what you’re looking for October 27, 2011

Filed under: Pondering — Shawn L. Bird @ 5:25 pm
Tags: , , ,

“The more I know of the world, the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love. I require so much!”
-Jane Austen

Oh my. Poor Jane. I feel so sorry for her, writing these romantic books, setting herself up for trouble. What 18 or 19th century man could hope to live up to her unrealistic expectations. I wonder where she was looking, and what exactly was she looking for?

When I was a teen, I made a list of the characteristics and qualities that I thought were important in a husband. I wrote them down in my diary around the time I was fourteen, and promptly forgot them.

I didn’t have the diary for a few years, and when I got it back, it was a decade later, and I was married with two children. I remember finding that section and being stunned to be reading a very precise description of my husand.

Completely unconsciously I’d sought and found what I’d looked for. And here we are, years later, still happily married, and all those qualities that I valued, prove of even greater value as the years go by.

Poor Jane.

 

Fictional voices October 26, 2011

Filed under: Poetry,Reading,Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 11:02 am
Tags: , , , ,

Fictional voices

I understand the call of the other world
The voices beckoning
“Stay!”
Sometimes it’s hard to leave them,
To return to a world of responsibility
Of real hurt
Of real anguish
Of real love.
The world between the pages
Invades dreams
Fills days,
Creates a longing
That is only fulfilled
By words.

26.10.2011

 

be October 24, 2011

Filed under: Poetry,Rotary invocations — Shawn L. Bird @ 10:41 pm
Tags: , , ,

Be who you are

Be what you are

Be when you are

Be where you are

Be why you are

Be how you are

Yourself

a valuable, unique person

existing in the now

celebrating your place in the world

just because you are

you

 

meatloaf October 22, 2011

Filed under: Recipes — Shawn L. Bird @ 6:41 pm
Tags: , ,

I made the best meatloaf I’d ever made and so I preserve here the recipe for future reference. As usual, all measurements are approximate, as I throw together meals with some casualness!

In your blender, puree one large (4″ diameter) onion, 2 stalks of celery, 1/2 can cream of mushroom soup, and the liquid from a 10 0z can of sliced mushrooms.

Pour the puree into a large frying pan and simmer 4 or 5 mins.

In a large mixing bowl, break up one kg  (2+ lbs) of lean ground beef, pour the puree over, and stir, add 2 eggs, the canned mushrooms, seasoning salt, parsley, majoram, black pepper, garlic flakes (say 1/2 tsp of each spice), add bread crumbs to get a firm consistency- about a cup to 1.5 c-

Oil a 9X12 pan.  Form 3 loaves and place them short ways in the pan, 2 against the sides, one in the middle, so there is about 1-2″ between them.  (Each will be about 9X3)

Bake, covered in foil, in a 325 F oven for an hour.

Add 1/4 c of milk to the remaining 1/2 can of mushroom soup.  Mix well.

Remove meatloaves from oven, and baste each liberally with the soup mix.  Return to oven to bake for another 30-45 mins uncovered.

These are flavourful and moist.  I served 4 with one loaf, one went into the freezer, and one went into the fridge for leftovers. Very good in sandwiches!

I baked russet potatoes to go along with these.  I put a skewer through the centre of each potato, and placed it directly on the rack.  They were added a few minutes after the loaves went in, so they were baking about 90 mins total.

 

the book sale October 21, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:45 pm
Tags: , ,

I spent a couple hours tonight selling used books to support a local writers’ group. It came to me again what a wealth we have of words. So many years represented in all those donated books. So many authors researching, crafting, pitching, promoting. Words being trades from one reader to another. Each to have his or her own experience and connection.

A book is enjoyed not on the basis of its literary merit, but on the connections forged in the reader. When the reader cannot relate to a book in some way, s/he can not enjoy it.

I watched all those books being chosen and the new owners venturing off with adventures, romance or knowledge bundled in their re-cycled grocery bags.

Here’s to the book sale. So much possibility for so little!

 

what is vs what could be October 20, 2011

In the acknowledgements at the beginning of Drums of Autumn, Diana Gabaldon observes that her husband says, “I don’t know how you keep getting away with this.  You don’t know anything about men.”  That made me laugh out loud.

Gabaldon might not really know men (though I think she captures them very well, myself), but she definitely understands what women WANT their men to be!  Strong and tender, proud and humble, wounded and capable, physically arresting and self-effacing, full of  desire and faithfully devoted, a gentleman and a serf.  Her main character, Jamie Fraser, may not actually exist, but he is the complex bundle of contradictions that women desire.

This should be a consolation to the men: Jamie’s weaknesses are at the root of his strengths, and he is adored for them.

 

in praise of paper, or not… October 18, 2011

Filed under: Reading — Shawn L. Bird @ 5:13 pm
Tags: , , ,

Here’s a link to a blog post by a young lady in Toronto who LOVES books, Kelsey Bhatia.  She is vocally anti-electronic book.  I keep trying to convince her, but she isn’t buying the concept.   😉  Yet.

See my response to her comments below her blog.

When I look around my house that is exploding with books, I know I have a problem. I have over a hundred books just ‘about’ in my living room within sight of where I type at this moment, and two shelves of cookbooks in the kitchen, stacks on the backs of the toilets in two bathrooms.  There are two shelving units packed with books in the guest room, and 14 4′ long book shelves in my family room, 4 shelves in my craft/laundry room, and six 6 foot book shelf units in my office (where most books are laid in vertical stacks, in double layers), plus boxes and bags of my ‘class room library’ books in office and garage.  Obviously, I love paper books, but I am so thankful that the e-reader is storing 60 books that don’t have to find a space for in my house!  I hear that you can store well over 2000 books on a new generation Kindle, and that makes me very, very happy.  An entire library in your purse, all the time.  So far I’m fine with my Sony e-reader (despite my frustration that Grace Awakening is STILL not showing up on the Sony Store!)

 

500! October 17, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:15 pm
Tags: ,

This is my 500th post since I started the blog in May 2010.  18,000 people have been by to read and comment.

Thanks for coming!   I’ve been thoroughly enjoying this adventure.  I hope you have, as well!  I think  500 blogs is worth celebrating, so here is a celebratory cheer to enjoy from the 2011 USA National Cheer Champions- University of Cordillera Jaguars:

.

.