a saint is hard to live with at home (plus sweaters)

On Thursday, July 29, 2010, 7:50 am, in knitting, NY stories, silly, sweaters, by Lori

announcement to texans and new yorkers: nobody likes you if you think you’re the best.

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Maybe, in your life, you once had a relationship that was unsatisfying, but there wasn’t really anything wrong with the person. Everyone said Oh, s/he’s so great, such a nice person, funny, etc. I did once, and I agreed with them! Still, “perfect” as he seemed to be, it was not a good relationship for me. Around that time, I heard Joan Baez sing a song that included the line I used as this blog post title: a saint is hard to live with at home. It cracked me up, it felt very familiar and personally true, and obviously it stayed with me.

This line came to mind this morning when I saw the following article in the NYTimes:

we're perfect

Yep – that’s what it says. More city preschoolers are perfect. Test scores show. To me, that suggests that the tests are imperfect, or imperfect for assessing what they need to assess. Had I seen those data, I’d have written an article pointing out the problems with the test. But New Yorkers – you know how they are – instead say that we’re just perfect.

As a Texan, I really get that, and it’s one thing I find dear about New Yorkers. Well, dear and really irritating. Just like people get irritated (or worse) with Texans for their/our grandiose views of themselves (ourselves). NYers and Texans should either get over ourselves, or at least keep our mouths shut a little more often. :)

And look at this – what do we see in my gigantic knitting bag next to my place on the couch:

peasy and mondo, mixing it up together in the bag

That’s my Peasy sweater (I’m knitting a sleeve right now) and my Mondo Cable Cardigan (also on a sleeve). Two sweaters! But lost in sleeveland, the seemingly endless land of stockinette tubes. Yesterday I did a little Peasy sleeve knitting, then a little Mondo sleeve knitting, then back to Peasy. It didn’t feel like too much of a break, switching to the other. I don’t have a purse knitting project going right now, and I keep thinking I ought to cast on something small and quickly-finishable, but then I know I’d just do that instead of sleeves, and the sleeve-knitting elf hasn’t found my apartment yet so if it’s going to be done, I’ll have to do it.

Everything there is to do in this world has a bit that’s less fun than the others. I read an article by Jane Patrick in one of the first issues of Handwoven, where she talked about how much she hated sleying the reed (I think that was the detail). Then she realized that’s a necessary task, she’s always going to have to do it when she weaves, so she tried to reorient herself to the idea. That happened to me when I took my intro stats course as an undergrad – at first I hated it, but I realized it would be my essential tool so I found another way to think about it, and now I adore stats. So my mission is to find another way to conceptualize the endlessness of sleeves.

Happy Thursday, y’all.

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8 Responses to a saint is hard to live with at home (plus sweaters)

  1. Tammy says:

    Sleeves – shudder – even in crochet they are a chore!
    On her own blog, Tammy just wrote a post titled..Another BookMy Profile

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  2. Jocelyn says:

    And all the kids are above average? Heh.

    So true about the sleeves and other necessary tasks like chopping onions. It’s best to find a way to make them feel like a good thing to do, since we’ll be doing them anyway…
    On her own blog, Jocelyn just wrote a post titled..Knitters are everywhereMy Profile

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  3. Jen V. says:

    Stats – Yuk. But then again, this lit. review (for my thesis) is pretty yuk too. I’m trying hard to find a way to like it, but it’s just not there. Yuk.

    :D

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    • Lori says:

      I never liked doing lit reviews either; theoretically I did, I loved the idea, but the doing of it is another thing. My comps paper was very nearly the end of me. I feel your pain!

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  4. janna says:

    That Texan attitude really annoyed me for about the first 10 years I lived there, and then I apparently got used to it! In fact, at some point I realized that I had developed that attitude myself! ;-)
    On her own blog, janna just wrote a post titled..But wait – theres more!My Profile

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    • Lori says:

      It’s like a paraphrase of that old joke about paranoia: just because you think they’re all after you, it doesn’t mean you’re wrong. Here, just because you think you’re all that, it doesn’t mean you’re wrong! But it DOES mean you should keep that little sentiment to yourself. Texans and NYers, I’m looking at you (and me!). But all that aside, Austin really is awfully wonderful, isn’t it. Thanks for the comment, Janna!

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