Monday, October 22, 2012

One man’s dog…

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…is adjusting to becoming this woman’s dog!

Chester Collage

Chester the Wonder Lab has discovered his inner ‘softie’.

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After three years of conscientiously avoiding hanging out with us in front of the TV in the evenings, preferring instead to guard us from the hallway, he’s suddenly realised that with the change in ownership his new place is by my side. Gotta love the boy!

So now my beautiful Chester sleeps at my feet if I’m sitting in the TV room (actually on my feet if he can!), and if I’m hand stitching a quilt he absolutely insists on curling up in its folds. It’s a good thing I always give my finished quilts a good wash :-).

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Never far from me wherever I go, he’s such a gentle and sweet companion, but still very protective. I’m even learning to forgive him for waking me with a big wet ‘kiss’ every morning – pretty hard to ignore Be right back.

Oh Chester, you’re such a S.N.A.D.* IMG_9960

Di

*Sensitive New-Age Dog Red heart

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Together

Every quilter knows the deep satisfaction that comes from taking a pile of sometimes quite ordinary fabrics, cutting them into a variety of pieces and stitching them back together into a beautiful quilt that warms not only the body but also the heart.

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Creating these quilts together with good friends boosts that satisfaction a hundredfold, as St Mark’s Quilters know well!

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Machinists, hand stitchers, even quilt knitters, came together last Saturday for our October workshop, a day of creativity and not-so-quiet enjoyment.

Moo had bindings to stitch down as she chatted with Kirstin who’s working on a beautiful knitted baby quilt using fine cotton yarns in citrus tones of pale lemon, soft green, and tangerine along with powder blue.

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Di B and Gillian tossed around ideas – at least I think that’s what they were saying!

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Gail helped Amanda trim and pin her latest quilt, ready for machine quilting.

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Cath had a fresh pile of finished quilts waiting for labels to be attached, once she and Di C had caught up on their news since we last met.

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Susie and Amanda, absorbed in conversation, momentarily forgot their sewing too.

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Sue’s paper-pieced baby blocks are coming together nicely, another slow-burner quilt, easy to work on while enjoying a chat with Gillian.

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We missed this precious girl, but even though she’s back in the States she was still with us in spirit: Sarah Skype-texted me in the midst of the creative buzz, and for a couple of minutes we enjoyed a ‘conversation’ from one side of the world to the other.

My inner geek gets so excited by such things!

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It wasn’t entirely about the conversations.

Sometimes there was just the quiet companionship of the shared creative experience as we sewed together, side by side, making our quilts for RPA Newborn Care and the autistic little ones who attend “The Marcia”.

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How wonderful, how beautiful, when brothers and sisters get along <and sew quilts together>!

Psalm 133:1 (The Message)

Di

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Hugs galore–you’ve been warned!

1-Sarah Goodbye   QuiltWhen we took these photos of ourselves saying goodbye to Sarah as she flew back to the USA at the end of August Boak and I had no way of knowing the Lord would decide it was time for one of us to join Him just 12 days later.

Sarah was returning after three wonderful weeks here sharing with us the all the happiness and excitement of Ben and Sunny’s wedding, but it was this sadder reason that brought her back to us again so soon.

Having her here for the last month has done us all a power of good. We’ve been able to cry, laugh, eat, drink, and reminisce about what Boak meant to us as a family.

We’ve been for plenty of walks with this beautiful boy.

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We’ve even done a little quilting (always therapeutic!) and started Sarah off on her first Cathedral Windows project.

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Last week her brothers and I, along with Di B, were back at Sydney International Airport, this time with even more hugs as we sent her off to resume her animal research work.

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4-Sarah Farewell Oct 2012

I hope the next time I’ll see Sarah will be when I can travel to visit her one day, either in the States or in Botswana.

In the meantime knowing her wonderful godmother, Alicia, will be catching up with her over there in a few short weeks made our parting just a little less sad.

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Di

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Dotty Di

Today It’s my turn in Madame Samm’s and Corrie’s Dots on Dots Blog Hop, and right now it couldn’t be more appropriate.

With my brain going to mush , my short-term memory unreliable at best, and my physical co-ordination on the sluggish side, “dotty” is the perfect word for me!

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I put my hand up to participate in the Dots on Dots Blog Hop back in July, blissfully unaware of the speed bump my life would hit before my day for sharing my 12.5 inch dot-themed block came around.

Fortunately I had finished the stages of my block requiring any brain power several weeks ago.

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What better theme than a party to show off as many dots as possible?

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I had multi-coloured confetti dots in the background, big bold balloons (they’re dots too) appliqueed in the corners of my block, and a dotty ribbon garland in aqua to surround a ring of cupcakes. IMG_9771

Even the spotty cherries are 1cm dots!

If you’d like to know how to create these tiny applique dots you can see my tutorial here.

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This week, when I once again took up my stitching, I decided my party-themed block might look rather fun as a cushion cover, so the next step was to sew on some more of that aqua dotty fabric as a border, and hand quilt around the shapes. This didn’t tax my concentration too much!

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Then I embroidered coloured strings to float around my balloons.

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Finally, being in a dotty frame of mind, and because you just can’t have too many dots on a block such as this, I embroidered French knots to make coloured hundreds and thousands (nonpareils) on the pink-iced cupcakes.

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Unfortunately, with life taking an unexpected turn, time didn’t allow me to finish my cushion cover. That will happen down the track when I’m not feeling quite so “out to lunch”.

In the meantime I can’t help but smile just looking at the colours, movement and dots on dots in this fun block I designed.

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Like dots? Then click on this image to see the entire schedule for this blog hop on our cheerleader Corrie’s blog.

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Thank you so much, Madame Samm and Corrie, for the opportunity to join in the blog hop fun. Putting the finishing touches to my happy looking block/cushion cover has been hugely therapeutic for me.

Now, dear reader, please make sure you go visit these blogs today where you’ll find lots more yummy dottiness Winking smile

September 20th

Cherry's Prairie Primitives

Quilts From My Crayon Box 

Sparrow in Flight

The Slow Quilter
Petit Design Co.

Geta Grama

Quilted Delights

Di of Snippets 'n' Scraps (Me!)

Nunu's Quilt World

Di

Friday, September 14, 2012

In which I wear my heart on my sleeve

There's a tape playing in my head, over and over.

I'm on my knees on the bedroom floor, pumping my husband’s chest like his life depends on it. It does. The phone’s on loud speaker and a blessedly calm female voice at the end of the 000 line is making me count each CPR compression out loud so she can monitor my timing. She is reassuring as she tracks the ambulance’s swift progress through the pre-dawn gloom to my front door.

"You’re doing really well. Now you’re going to keep it up till the paramedics are there beside you, OK? The ambulance has just turned into your street. It should be pulling up right now. Can you hear them yet?"

I've already flung wide the front door, so the four paramedics can race up the stairs and immediately begin their work. I phone a friend who lives closest, selfishly waking her with the news that her friend of more than 50 years is battling for his life. She’s there in minutes and together we cling together at the other end of the room as every piece of available modern technology is applied to the situation. It's a comfort to me, and a credit to them, that not once does anyone say my husband is not going to make it. But after 40 minutes we know the truth. My darling man has gone.

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Twelve days later I can still hardly believe it. The sun rose, as it always has, on that Saturday morning, the first day of spring, and life outside my bubble of grief life has gone on as if nothing has happened. The wisteria in my garden has transformed itself from a bare tracery of sticks to a hedge of dripping purple. Everything outside these walls has continued on uninterrupted and the sun has shone brightly every single day.

But my life has changed forever.

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I'm bereft, adrift. I feel half a person. Our whole family is devastated. We are numb with shock at the suddenness of Boak’s death. And whilst I know this turn of events is all part of the Lord’s plan, He and I don’t entirely see eye to eye over this one right now. And I know that’s OK with Him  too.

This week has been a blur. I've been carried along on a huge wave of love and compassion. My house is filled with flowers, my freezer is stocked with food, I have a huge box filled with cards and letters from well-wishers, and I've been oh so cared for! I have the BEST family and friends in the world!

Boak's funeral service on Thursday was so very, very beautiful, but I desperately wish he was here to help me pick up the pieces of a life cut short, to hug me close and tell me it will be alright.

I'll never forget the sight of our brave young assistant minister and the three scarlet-clad bishops doing Boak the singular honour of walking his hearse down Darling Point Road, pausing briefly outside our home of the last 10 years, as the police directed traffic and the whole world seemed to stop for a few minutes.

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Boak was a gentleman, a man of real integrity, compassion and principle. As a minister he loved his congregations, and when they needed him in tough times he was always there. It saddened him when too often he heard someone had been ill, hadn't thought to send him a message to let him know, and now felt uncared for. His great gift, however, was as a preacher. Oh, how that man could preach!

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He seriously underestimated the effect his words had on people, but I've had several separate messages this week from folk to whom his simple greeting at the church door one morning meant the world to them, given the particular concerns on their minds at the time.

What a blessing that he was able to marry Ben and Sunny just 4 weeks earlier.IMG_9190-001


Boak was authentic. What you saw was what you got. He could at times be inflexible, irascible, pessimistic and obsessive. But he could also be tender, solicitous, selfless, loving and funny. I could always rely on him to see a way through difficulties, and handle problems wisely and thoughtfully. Grumpy Grappa

He had a fine sense of the ridiculous. Who in our family will ever forget his performances of "Dancing on the Table with my Teddy Bear", a ditty he composed for The Princess when she was just weeks old so he could dance her around the kitchen?

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He demonstrated his love for me not just in words, but in real and loving actions, the last couple of years waking me with breakfast in bed every morning and making the dinner  every evening when I had lost my mojo for cooking. Wednesday was the day he did his own washing, but that was more about making sure I couldn't lose any of his socks in the wash than about saving me the chore! He always maintained that, unlike me, he never lost a single sock after taking on the washing himself.(.hmmmm...I wonder!).

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We've shared 40 years of marriage and he's been my treasured companion. We've worked as a team and, though I won't pretend life has always been perfect, we’ve always loved each other and told each other so. He had a tender side that few saw and I'm so grateful that in Gods loving plan my voice was the last he heard.

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As I pick up the pieces I struggle to find strength and consolation in four thoughts -

* The way Boak always encouraged me when I doubted my own abilities (which i do most of the time). I want to make him proud of me as I rebuild my life.


* My three grown children and two daughters-in-law who I love so much and who have so swiftly and sensitively taken charge of what's had to be done this week. I know I can count on their love and support - but I don't ever want to burden them.


* My unbelievably generous and loving friends, who’ve also been by my side. They are all an inspiration to me and I know one day, one day, things will get better.

* Finally, I know have the best and most dependable arms of all carrying me through this, and indeed the whole of my life.

Deuteronomy 33:27 - The eternal God is your rescue, and underneath are the everlasting arms.

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I just pray He’ll erase that tape inside my head before too long.

Di

PS. I’ll be back here very soon, blogging about quilting and other snippets ‘n’ scraps of my life, so please bear with me while I try to re-join some of those scraps.

Links  to some articles written about Boak by his colleagues and our friends -

http://sydneyanglicans.net/news/stories/former-dean-of-sydney-dies 
http://markdthompson.blogspot.com.au/2012/09/boak-jobbins-19472012.html
http://holbeck.wordpress.com/2012/09/03/090-boak-jobbins-1947-2012-former-dean-of-sydney-a-tribute-from-a-former-colleague/