Friday, December 9, 2022

Adventures in Arabic start, Michelle knits, and fruitcake rules

So yesterday I broke out a notebook to start my Arabic practice in, and you see the pages cut from an old one, to get a fresh start.


It turns out this was the notebook I kept from Handsome Partner's last weeks, in home-based hospice,  to his death and all the tasks I had to do. 

So much official work, with reminders to myself to breathe, not feel everything had to happen at once. I hesitated before cutting out these pages, but decided I'd lived through them, managed it all, and could recycle the notes. 

Then on to practicing my first two alphabet letters, alef and nun. They're written differently depending on where they come in the word, immediate complications!  

But how beautiful even the wobbly first steps of a beginner look





And in case I get too tense about it, remember good old Mediocrates.

Meanwhile here's Michelle, wise lady, who took up knitting during the early pandemic

And upon her inviting people to share in her Twitter thread about what we've done for peace of mind lately, I found myself in a nice little three way with her and Sister M, my sock connection.

In case you are missing an awwwww factor, take a look at 



And keeping up my strength through all these feats, Southern fruitcake for afternoon tea, Yorkshire style, with a slice of sharp cheddar and tea. Wensleydale cheese, is the authentic choice, but I can't get that, so Vermont cheddar  steps in just fine. South meets North, lives happily ever after.


Happy day everyone! Any puzzling success yet? Clue: Roy Rogers.  

Life's one big puzzle, really. I thought I'd know everything by now, heh.



32 comments:

  1. The wonder of the internet, a personal conversation with Michelle Obama. Pretty cool. Learning Arabic will keep you busy. I had no idea there is such a tiny bird!

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  2. I bet if someone had told Michelle when she was a young and fierce attorney with her incredibly prestigious degrees that one day she would be a former first-lady who learned and loved to knit she would have laughed and laughed.
    I admire you for being able to let go of those notes in order to begin something so new. You are pretty amazing, you know.

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    1. Remembering how she was when Obama's first presidential campaign started, yes!

      It was a minute of decision making to toss the notes. But life is about now, not about then, after all.

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  3. Interesting pairing cheese with fruitcake, did not know of that Yorkshire custom. That wee bird is precious. Good luck with the Arabic.

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    1. It's a Yorkshire thing, often men do it with a glass of scotch. To keep out the cold, you know..

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    2. Must be a Lancashire thing too, as my father also had sharp cheddar with apple pie or fruitcake. His immigrant great-grandparents (1865) came from Manchester.

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  4. Hah - this last puzzle's answer sprang out at me, even before your clue. Guess that makes two of us.

    Quite amazing to have a conversation with Sister M and Michelle the knitter. That Sock and Glove Ministry has unexpected benefits.

    Good for you for being able to recycle such things as hospice notes. I'm not there yet - if I don't have a paper trail or other tangible object, it seems to vanish from my past. This excess storage is a burden, but apparently one I'm not ready to shed yet.

    Chris from Boise

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    1. See my response to Mary about the notes. I didn't think there was any further learning to be had there, so they could go.
      But each to her own timeline.
      Funny about the puzzle. When I give the answer I'll tell you what wrong word I was stuck on for ages first.

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  5. I tried my hand at learning to write Hebrew. It's amazing, challenging, interesting, beautiful, time consuming . . .

    Those wee birds are amazing.

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    1. I was supposed to be getting Hebrew lessons a while back, but they never happened, so I continue to be mystified

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  6. Any crafting is great for the soul. You cannot rush craft. It’s a journey not a sprint
    So it makes you slow down and think. Simple knitting and crochet are almost meditative. Well for me they are.

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  7. Bee bird is thee champion of Awww!
    I saw a bee once, huge bee. I was told it's a humming bird! I don't think there's bee birds in MA. How such a small creature deals with windy days is a mystery.

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    1. I think these are Cuban, not really northern birds.

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  8. In a sense, I feel like I know Mediocrates very well.

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    1. Good old Mediocrates. Saves a lot of stress.

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  9. Your arabic reminds me of shorthand. Do you sound the letter out as you write or is this all silent at this stage? As Angela said, all craft is meditative - I am tinking a sock at the moment and even that has it's rhythm.
    Fruit cake - food of the gods. Those birds are so gorgeous. They must live in a very safe place - I doubt they would survive in Australia!
    I doubt Roy Rogers was as handsome as some.

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    1. Yes, I'm learning the sounds as I practice writing the forms, like preschool! It's written right to left, a lesson in itself. It might be like Gregg, but I learned the squiggles of Pitman.

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  10. The Arabic looks so interesting and challenging. The bee bird? Wow. Love it. Thank you, Boud.

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  11. What tiny hummers. I read about one that impaled its beak on something and was in a terrible predicament until rescued by a kind human.

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    1. Poor little guy. I guess he would be helpless.

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  12. Haven't had time for blogging, trying to catch up. I have a Roy Rogers story. My dad was a pathologist at a hospital and Roy and his band came to perform for the sick kids one year so my dad brought us kids for the event. I was in kindergarten and we had colored cowboy boot shaped paper and brought it with me to give him. Finally towards the end he asked if there were any requests and that's when I got up the nerve to walk up to him and hand him my colored cowboy boot. He seemed a little confused, turned it over where my name was written on it and said Ellen Abbott, I don't know that song. It embarrassed me and on the way home sad because I wanted my cowboy boot back.

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  13. Replies
    1. The game is to give a clue, not the answer, when you get the puzzle, so as not to spoil it for people still working on it. As it happens I'd already posted the answer in today's blog which you haven't caught up to, so no harm done, just fyi for the next one.

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  14. Having just come from Debra's blog I can only see boobs in your Arabic.

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    1. Me, I see butts everywhere! Those medial letters..

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  15. I'm on hold at the library for Michelle's newest book. Really looking forward to reading it but it's going to be at least a year before I get it no doubt. Maybe somebody will take pity on me and buy it for me for Christmas.
    And those teeny tiny little birds!! How in the world do they survive.

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