Showing posts with label I am grateful for.... Show all posts
Showing posts with label I am grateful for.... Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Thanks & Giving Ideas in Preparation for Thanksgiving

This Thanksgiving I wanted to take some time to reflect about ways that I have been thankful and express gratitude; and ways that I have been giving. 

There was a free printable chart that I found on Pinterest that has lines for keeping track of both categories that was created by How Does She

I am thinking about having this list available on Thanksgiving - a blank one - so people can  fill it in. I'm not sure how well it would go over and if people would do it. Nonetheless, it would be a good tradition to start - even if it is with the immediate family.

It would be nice to be able to take a look at the list as the years go by - what changes, what stays the same, what's important, and what are ways that we have given of ourselves to others? I would have enjoyed being able to look back on what we all would have wrote five, ten, fifteen years ago. It's not to late to start creating memories and new traditions!




Thursday, April 9, 2015

Spiritual Practices A to Z: Gratitude

For the seventh spiritual practice this year, I am focusing on Gratitude. These ideas came from the Spiritual Practices website which has a wide variety of ideas for bringing this practice to life.

Spiritual Practice: Gratitude
Enhances: Satisfaction
Balances/Counters: Greed, Entitlement

The Basic Practice

The spiritual practice of gratitude has been called a state of mind and a way of life. It basically covers all our daily activities. To learn the spiritual practice of gratitude, practice saying "thank you" for happy and challenging experiences, for people, animals, things, art, memories, dreams. Count your blessings; and express your appreciation to everything and everyone you encounter. By blessing, we are blessed.

A sunrise at our farm.

Why This Practice May Be For You

According to the Spiritual Practices website, "The continuum of words related to gratitude go from greed and jealousy; through taking things for granted and feeling entitled; to appreciation, acceptance, and satisfaction. The practice of gratitude would be an appropriate prescription whichever one of the above describes your attitudes."

Gratitude can sometimes be puzzling. For example, instead of rejoicing in what we have, we greedily want something better, more, or different. We can't be grateful because we are making comparisons and coveting other possibilities.

When this happens on a personal level, when it's our ego that is dissatisfied, then we are ungrateful. But when we want something more, better, or different for the benefit of the community, this greed may be a manifestation of our love, devotion, or yearning for justice.

Quotes

Joy is the simplest form of gratitude.
— Karl Barth in Joy by Beverly Elaine Eanes

I think the dying pray at the last not "please," but "thank you," as a guest thanks his host at the door.
— Annie Dillard in Super, Natural Christians by Sallie McFague

Continuous practice, day after day, is the most appropriate way of expressing gratitude. This means that you practice continuously, without wasting a single day of your life, without using it for your own sake. Why is it so? Your life is a fortunate outcome of the continuous practice of the past. You should express your gratitude immediately.
— Zen Master Dogen in Enlightenment Unfolds edited by Kazuaki Tanahashi

Gratitude is the intention to count-your-blessings every day, every minute, while avoiding, whenever possible, the belief that you need or deserve different circumstances.
— Timothy Miller in How To Want What You Have

Look closely and you will find that people are happy because they are grateful. The opposite of gratefulness is just taking everything for granted.
— David Steindl-Rast in The Music of Silence

Books

There are a couple of books that I started reading this month that I will be working to finish:

In Living in Gratitude: A Journey That Will Change Your Life, Angeles Arrien, presents a tribute to the practice of gratitude and its related qualities of thankfulness, appreciation, compassion, generosity, and grace, through a a month-by-month practice of gratitude.

Naikan - Gratitude, Grace, and the Japanese Art of Self-Reflection by Gregg Krech. Gregg Krech is Director of the ToDo Institute, an education and retreat center near Middlebury, Vermont. He is a practitioner of a method of self-reflection, attention, gratitude, connections, kindness, and compassion developed in Japan during the 1940s by Ishin Yoshimoto, a devout Buddhist of the Pure Land sect. David K. Reynolds introduced Naikan to the United States in the 1970s.

The Japanese word Naikan means "looking inside." This practice of self-reflection is based on three questions: What did I receive? What did I give? What troubles and difficulties did I cause?

"We hurry through our day giving little attention to all the 'little' things we are receiving. But are these things really little? They only seem so because, while we are being supported, our attention is elsewhere. But when there is no hot water for a shower or we lose our glasses, these little things grab our attention."

When we consciously pay attention to what we have received from others, the realization dawns on us how dependent we are on others.

When our days begin to reflect gratitude, it becomes much easier and more natural for us to give to others in acts of kindness, generosity, and compassion.

Poetry

The Spiritual Practices website recommends The Lively Garden Prayer Book by William Cleary which is a collection of poems in which plants, beetles, dogs, cats, worms, and aphids sing their praises to the Sky and Earth. The blessings range from A (Acorn) to Z (Zucchini).

A chipmunk we saw when we took a trip 
to Grand Marais in 2010.

This book is unavailable through libraries in Minnesota, but there was an except on the Spiritual Practices website:

"Among the deeper mysteries of life is the mystery of manure, how awful it smells, how disgusting it looks, how repulsive it feels — yet how delicious it is to our vegetable cousins in the garden: the tomatoes, the corn, the carrots.

"We put manure right into their bed. They not only welcome it, but they take it in, and through the life powers within them, absorb its very substance into their individual beings, transforming its smelly and disgusting substance miraculously into bright shining red tomatoes, yellow luscious corn, sweet wholesome carrots.

"Miraculously, that execrable manure has now turned into something humans can eat: nourishing, sweet-smelling food, delicious to the mouth and life-giving to every part of our bodies — a magic we might expect to find only in mythical Eden."

Children's Books

In Three Hens and a Peacock Lester L. Laminack wrote about three hens and a peacock who try an experiment and come away with new respect and gratitude for each other. The hens think the peacock has an easy job attracting the attention of potential customers to the farm, while the peacock think the hens have an easy job of laying eggs.

After switching jobs for a day, they realize that they are meant to do the things that they are gifted and skilled with...not something that another animal is meant to do. It's an interesting story about the assumptions that we make about others' roles in life and how we believe that we sometimes could do a better job.

Yet, when faced with the responsibilities and challenges that another person has to go through, we often become aware that the journey they are on and role they play in this life is equally as challenging as our own and we are grateful that they are able to do their job and roles so effectively and with such grace.

A beautiful white peacock at a wildlife sanctuary at 
Oak Leaf Park in Glenco, Minnesota.
(Taken on June 8, 2012.) 

A book I found at the library when searching for ones about gratitude was Giving Thanks - Poems, Prayers, and Praise Songs of Thanksgiving edited by Katherine Patterson. Below are some poems and prayers that I liked and/or brought back memories from childhood:

For each new morning with its light,
For rest and shelter of the night,
For health and food,
For love and friends,
For everything Thy goodness sends.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson


Earth who gives to us this food,
Sun who makes it ripe and good,
Dearest Earth and Dearest Sun.
We'll not forget what you have done.
- Christian Morgenstern ("The Waldorf Verse")


'Tis the gift to be simple, 'tis the gift to be free,
'Tis the gift to come down where we ought to be,
And when we find ourselves in the place just right,
'Twill be in the valley of love and delight.

When true simplicity is gain'd,
To bow and to bend we shan't be asham'd,
To turn, turn will be our delight,
Till by turning, turning we come round right.
- Shaker Song by Elder Joseph Brackett ("Simple Gifts")


Morning has broken, like the first morning
Blackbird has spoken, like the first bird
Praise for the singing, praise for the morning
Praise for the springing fresh from the world

Sweet the rain's new fall, sunlit from heaven
Like the first dewfall, on the first grass
Praise for the sweetness of the wet garden
Sprung in completeness where his feet pass

Mine is the sunlight, mine is the morning
Born of the one light, eden saw play
Praise with elation, praise every morning
God's recreation of the new day
- Eleanor Farjeon ("Morning has Broken")



Oh, the Earth is good to me,
and so I thank the  Earth for giving me
the things I need,
the sun and the rain and the apple seed.
The Earth is good to me.
- "Johnny Appleseed Grace"


To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee, - 

One clover, and a bee,
And revery.
The revery alone will do
If bees are few.
- Emily Dickinson


O heavenly Father, protect and bless all things that have breath: guard them from all evil, and let them sleep in peace. 
- Albert Schweitzer (when he was a child) ("A Child's Prayer")


The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart.
- Helen Keller


Blessed are we who can laugh at ourselves,
For we shall never cease to be amused.
- Author Unknown


Give me a sense of humor,
Give me the grace to see a joke,
To get some pleasure out of life
And pass it on to other folk.
- Author Unknown


When I rise up
let me rise up joyful
like a bird.
When I fall
let me fall without regret
like a leaf.
- Wendell Berry ("Prayers and Sayings of the Mad Farmer")


Do all the good you can
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
Too all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.
- John Wesley


May all who are sick and ill
Quickly be feed from their illness,
And may every disease in the world
Never occur again.
And now so long as space endures,
As long as there are beings to be found,
May I continue likewise to remain
To soothe the sufferings of those who live.
- Dalai Lama


Do your little bit of good where you are; it's those little
bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.
- Desmond Tutu


Films

I didn't have the time to watch two movies that were recommended for this spiritual practice. However, I do want to mention them because at some point I'd like to watch them:

=> Wings of Desire - a story about an angel who sheds his wings and takes a leap of faith into a worldly existence. He's drawn by a desire to experience the sources of gratitude — from the pleasures of a cup of coffee to a love relationship with a woman.
=> Harvest of Fire an FBI agent is sent to investigate several barn burnings in an Amish community. A local sheriff believes that it might be a hate crime. At first the FBI agent finds the Amish very formal. They are, after all, a religious community that is uneasy with outsiders whom they call "English."
       One of the Amish widows whose barn was burned down, befriends the agent and for a brief time lets her stay in her home during the investigation. In the end, the real drama is not about the crime but about the friendship which forms between these two very different women. As the widow tells the FBI agent, "When two lives touch, they can never again completely be separated."

Music

Since becoming a member of the Orthodox Church in 1977, British composer John Tavener has endeavored to use music to praise the Creator. He wrote Akathist of Thanksgiving which is a hymn of thanksgiving. Tavener used poetry written in the 1940s by Archpriest Gregory Petrov shortly before his death in a Siberian prison camp. I had hoped to find this through the library system, but it was unavailable.

Since I couldn't find that particular CD, I checked out Tavener's Fall and Resurrection. There are ten tracks on the CD. Of those, I listened to Silence, darkness: In the beginning, before time; Representation of Chaos; The Serpent; The Lament of Mankind; and Cosmic Dance of the Resurrection: All is Transfigured.

Each song composed by Tavener completely captured the title and and part of the Creation story. I have never heard music that could so eloquently tell a story without words - just through a variety of music instruments and vocal sounds (but not words). It was quite engaging, and I'm glad I listened to it. This CD would not have been one I would have found on my own had I not being doing the Spiritual Practices A to Z challenge.

Art

French impressionist Claude Monet's series of paintings of the waterlilly pond on his property are blessings of the natural world and blessings to viewers. The artist's gratitude for a special place seems to pulse through these scenes, embracing the water, the floating flowers, the reflected sky and clouds.


Monet painted this water garden extensively during the last 30 years of his life, catching it in different seasons and times of day, his appreciation of its pleasures apparent in every brush stroke.



Daily Cue, Reminder, Vow, Blessing

• Picking up a spoon to eat a meal is my cue to practice gratitude.

• Every time I walk in the door of my home, I am reminded to count my blessings.

• On my birthday, I vow to practice gratitude during the new year.

Practice of the Day

You say grace before meals. All right. But I say grace before the concert and the opera, and grace before the play and pantomime, and grace before I open a book, and grace before sketching, painting, and swimming, fencing, boxing, walking, playing, dancing, and grace before I dip the pen in ink.
— G. K. Chesterton quoted in Different Seasons by Dale Turner

To Practice This Thought: Begin each new activity with a brief grace.

Spiritual Exercises

One of the ideas for practicing gratitude is to "...reverse any tendency you have to make comparisons. Quit talking about what you don't have compared to what you have; stop whining about how you are doing career-wise, relationship-wise, or any other-wise in comparison to how a friend or enemy is doing. The next time you start chattering about wanting something more, better, or different, don't listen," suggested the Spiritual Practices website.

One of the people I write to through a prison ministry program wrote about this exact same issue recently. In prison, the comparisons that were so difficult to handle were such basic ones: being envious of those who had family members who visited them; those who could go to the "store" there and get whatever they wanted since their account bank account was being funded by their families; and those who were fortunate to be able to extra food to supplement what they received at meal times.

After I read the issues, I thought that it is no different than what you see in the free world - except in the free world those comparisons relate to often larger - more material - objects: a nicer house, a better car, "toys" - like ATVs, snowmobiles, or campers, and so forth. The list could go on.

And then there are the more quiet - often unspoken - comparisons as one ages: that others don't struggle with health issues like you do; that one's relationship with a significant other seems stronger and happier; that other families seem to do a lot more together than your family does.

I see it at the nursing home and with those who are homebound: wishing that family members would visit more - or simply visit them; that a spouse was still living; or that others get to stay in their homes, but not them.

I think this spiritual exercise - about trying to not make comparisons - is worthy of my time. It certainly would be a challenge on some days. Other days, I see no reason to negatively compare my life to others.

Journal Exercises

Keep a Daily Gratitude Journal. Every day before you go to bed, write down five things that you can be grateful for that day. In Simple Abundance, Sarah Ban Breathnach describes this journal exercise as a transformative process: "As the months pass and you fill your journal with blessings, an inner shift in your reality will occur."

I did this during 2014 and by my 48th birthday had 1,000 things for which I was grateful. Whenever I would pick up the list and read a few of the things, it would immediately bring me back to that moment. I could envision exactly what I read and that memory would flood back and I could relive it again.

This is something that I truly need to start doing again - even if it is one thing that I am grateful for each day. Sometimes having to write 3 or 5 things each day can get overwhelming...but just one thing is easy enough to do.

Discussion Questions, Storytelling, Sharing

King Faisal of Saudi Arabia displayed a flask of petroleum on his desk with a card saying "Allah's Bounty." What would you put on your desk as a constant reminder of gratitude?

Some of the items on my desk that have special significance.

When I look on the desk that belonged to my grandma that's in my bedroom, I have several items on it that reflect what I am grateful for:
=> family - especially those who have died (a hand-carved camel that my dad gave me when he went to see the Holy Land; a picture of my grandma with my sister, brother, and me; and a stuffed fox that my dad had when he had Alzheimer's Disease - it was the closest stuffed animal that I could find that resembled a corgi - his favorite dog; an emerald green lamp that my brother gave me); and
=> the ability and opportunities I've had to travel (a picture of a tawny frogmouth bird in Australia; a hand-painted globe from China);
=> my spirituality (prayer beads; an image of a statue of St. Francis that I did by using a slide transfer method and then hand-colored using colored pencils).

Household, Group, and Community Projects

Create a Gratitude Calendar for use in your household daily or weekly devotional observances. Set up a schedule of blessing emphases in a date book, perhaps having a different focus for each month: (1) People We've Known, (2) People We Do Not Know but Admire (living and dead), (3) Artists, (4) Service Providers, (5) Spiritual and Other Communities, (6) Our Bodies, (7) Places, (8) Animals, (9) Nature, (10) Food and Drink, (11) Things, (12) Opportunities.

I like this idea and the topics that the Spiritual Practices website suggested. This is a matter of being much more intentional in thinking about different people and things for which to be grateful.

 Identify creative ways to show your gratitude to the world:
- Send letters of appreciation to teachers or writers whose work has touched you. I did this each month throughout 2012 for people who had positively impacted my life or our family's life. What made the letters so meaningful for the recipients was that they didn't expect them (first of all) and that they had no idea the impact they had made on other's lives. Many of the people called or wrote back to me saying they were moved to tears by what I had written. In 2014, I wrote to several people as part of my 48 acts of kindness for my 48 birthday. Again, it was the same reaction but by different people who I sent letters to. It was well worth the time to write and share these thoughts with others.
- Thank your body by giving your feet a massage or blessing your skin with moisturizing lotion. I've been using a body cream from Watkins that has been wonderful in terms of moisturizing my skin. It's one of the best creams I've used and each time my skin just absorbs the cream - clearly needing and appreciating it.
- Show your gratitude for the gifts of nature by incorporating some of them — house plants, leaves, acorns, rocks, sand — into a table centerpiece. I used to do this when Sophia and Olivia were younger. However, Cooper and Aspen both have high separation anxiety whenever they are left alone and will start finding and chewing anything they can get their mouths on. So, no more nature displays or seasonal displays like I used to do on my grandma's bureau in the dining room. I miss that. Yet, I haven't come up with a solution to do this in a way that things won't be destroyed.

• Be a blessing by performing a service to a neighbor or a shut-in — doing a chore, running an errand, or delivering groceries. Sophia, Olivia, and I took care of our neighbor's dog while they were on a trip. This gives their dog the ability to stay at home, and saves our neighbors lots of money by not kenneling their dog. We do this for them many times throughout the year.

Extend your gratitude into your community. In appreciation for the good service of a grocery store, a cleaners, or a gas station, tell your friends about the place so that their business can grow. To thank public servants and community activists, attend meetings and fundraisers or volunteer to help in their offices. One of the big projects that we are going to start working on this month is a Barn Quilt Trail. Olivia has received several grants and donations to do this project.

The finished barn quilt at Gammelgarden Museum.
This is taken from the road looking over the pond.
The barn quilt is 7'x7'.


There will be seven barn quilts that range in size from 4'x4' to 7'x7' that are placed in three neighboring communities. This is a way to beautify these three towns, draw customers to the small businesses in each one; and bring volunteers together from a variety of different places.

Olivia by the finished barn quilt at Gammelgarden Museum. 

To see pictures of the Barn Quilt Trail as the barn quilts are being painted and installed, we set up a Barn Quilt Trail Facebook page. We may set up a website at some point if the project expands beyond the seven quilts.

Monday, March 31, 2014

Monthly Journal for Tweens and Teens

Each month this year I am having Sophia and Olivia do a different monthly journal. There are so many interesting formats and ideas to recording one's thoughts. As I looked at Pinterest, I can across a pin for one that focused on gratitude. The pin itself doesn't lead to anything.

Luckily, though, it had the blog listed at the bottom of the image so I was able to trace it back to Second Chance to Dream which provided a link to the downloadable sheet.

Olivia's March journal entry.

I liked that this activity focused on things that the girls could be grateful for:

=> Relationships I am grateful for
=> 3 strengths
=> One overlooked blessing
=> Financial strengths
=> Spiritually I'm grateful for
=> People who've helped me
=> Activities I enjoy

Sophia's March journal entry.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Creative Every Day - Gratitude Mandala - Day 1

Back in 2012, I did a weekly gratitude list that was part of the Take a Stitch Tuesday embroidery journal I was doing throughout the year. I have missed doing that in 2013, and have been thinking about something to do in place of that.

So, on October 14th, I began writing a daily gratitude list. Each day, I'm writing three things for which I'm grateful. It's just a running list of things that come to mind that I am thankful for - people, things...anything, really.

Gratitude mandala I made based on things for which I was grateful 
from October 14th to now.
Inspired by Donna Gentile and Mandala 365 Project: Source

This ties into the monthly theme of "gratitude" at church. There are three questions that are offered as a springboard to deeper reflection and conversation:

=> What are you most grateful for right now, and why?
=> What does “having enough” mean to you?
=> What practices help you to express gratitude; for others, for life, for the earth, for the Sacred?

As I was thinking about these questions, I looked to the internet for some inspiring words and images that have been written about gratitude. I came across this pin on Pinterest that visually captures gratitude. (It links to Donna Gentile and her Mandala 365 Project.)

Using that concept, I created a mandala with 16 spokes. Each of the spokes has a different theme of something  for which I'm grateful.

The finished mandala.

Under the spokes, I wrote a bit more detail about the specific things I had mentioned during the past half-month on my gratitude list.

Close-up of the the center and some of the 16 spokes.

It would be interesting to do these type of mandalas every so often and see how they change...or if there are some things that I consistently write about. These people and things would be ones that I am deeply grateful for and are thankful that they are in my daily life.
 

Friday, October 12, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Knotted Loop Stitch - Week 41

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday I learned how to do the knotted loop stitch. For the sampler, I wanted to see the different looks that the stitch had when the space was varied.

The knotted loop stitch is worked right to left, so I began with stitches that were close together. Gradually, as I moved to the left I increased the distance from two spaces to three spaces. There are five stitches within each spacing.


The stitches are done at a slight angle, with the one on the lower half being slightly to the left (by one space). Out of the groupings, I like the ones that are close together.


As with each week I've been doing the Take a Stitch Tuesday challenge, I've created an entry in my embroidery journal that includes a personal reflection, gratitude list, name of the stitch, the sampler, and images that represent what I saw and/or did during the the period reflected.

I can't believe it's already the 41st week of the TAST challenge. Only 11 more left to go.

As I look back on the journals, I'm so happy I did each component. From the first week of the challenge (when my father died) to the present, I have 41 journal entries that reflect what happened during this difficult year as well as 205 things that I listed on the gratitude lists.

205 good things to look back on during a year of grieving...with more things to come. By the end of the year, I'll have 260 memories of gratitude.

Taking the time to appreciate the people, pets, and things that have sustained me this year has been a positive action for which I am truly grateful for doing.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Linked Double Chain Stitch - Week 34

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday, the featured stitch is the Linked Double Chain Stitch. This stitch, by far, was one of the most confusing stitches I have attempted to do as part of this weekly challenge.

When I first saw it, I couldn't follow the written or pictorial instructions. Normally, I can do the stitch by following one or the other instructions (most often the pictures are easier to follow for me).

With the Linked Double Chain Stitch, it was a lost cause. Even removing wrong stitches and trying again didn't work. So, for that reason, there are only three incorrectly stitched stitches in my sampler. That's all I had the time or patience for with this stitch.


Since I don't plan to ever use the Linked Double Chain Stitch in the future, I didn't want to waste any more time with it. I wrote my journal entry and gratitude list, put some images on the pages, and called it a week. I was ready to move on to the next week.


As a side note, the layered circular pieces as well as the floral image on the lavender paper were ones I found when I was cleaning and organizing my office this week. In the process, I put together all the items I could use for the journal and other collage projects.

It came at a good time because I am running out of images from which to choose. The TAST project has been a good one on many levels including that I am using up what I have on hand. This has been a great way to put to use what has been sitting around in my home office for a long time now.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Basque Stitch - Week 29

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday, the featured stitch is the Basque stitch. It also is known as the twisted daisy border stitch. 


The Basque stitch is found on old embroideries from the Basque area of northern Spain as well as from southern France and Portugal. 

Traditionally, the Basque stitch was done with red thread over green fabric or white thread on blue-green background.

Since I was learning the stitch, I made two small samples. One is of three flowers and the other is the sun.

The flowers are a a bit more orderly looking.


The sun has more of a chaotic look to it. It's not how I envisioned it looking...but that's part of learning.


As with past weeks, I've included the embroidery samples in my TAST journal. The journal also includes a reflection about what happened during the past week, a list of five things for which I'm grateful, and images of things that represent the week.


The stamps, for example, represent the stamp show that Sophia, Olivia, and I went to this past Friday. Of those stamps, one is from China (where the girls were born), and two are from Japan (where one of my friends, Yoshiko, lives). 

Yoshiko has been a friend of mine for more than 30 years now...we have known each other since high school and have corresponded through high school, college, first jobs, and other transitions in life. She is a true friend...and, thus, the quotes about friendship that are included in the collage.

One quote was part of a greeting card and the other was something that my dad wrote about friendship. (I've also been going through more items of his during the past week and determining who would enjoy having it, if it is something I want to keep, or if it can be donated.)

I'm happy I'm sticking with TAST and doing this journal. It is interesting to go back and read what I wrote and all the stitches I've learned throughout this year.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Up and Down Buttonhole Stitch - Week 28

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday, the featured stitch is the Up and Down Buttonhole. It is a stitch I had not heard of prior to doing TAST. Like last week's stitch (Bonnet), I enjoyed doing this one and was happy with the results.

For the first sampler, I did the:
- first row 3 spaces high and 3 spaces wide.
- second row 5 spaces and then 3 spaces high; and 3 spaces wide.
- third row in a 5-4-3 pattern; and 3 spaces wide.


For the second sampler, I wanted to try couching with this stitch. I ended up couching/weaving two strands of a variegated cotton perle thread with the yellow perle thread.


I integrated the embroidered pieces into my TAST journal. On the left hand side of the layout is a reflection about what happened during the past week, the name of the stitch, and images of a bear and cow. 

Both of these images tie into the county fair: Sophia and Olivia each did a project about dairy cows for one of their 4-H projects. This year, Sophia did 27 projects and Olivia did 17. Out of the projects, Sophia received 24 blue and 3 red ribbons; and Olivia received 15 blue and 2 red ribbons. 

For each project they met with a judge who asked questions about their project and assessed their knowledge about the topic. The ribbons reflect 50% on the project itself and 50% on the child's knowledge.

On our way to the fair on Wednesday, I saw something black in the ditch along the highway. It was moving, but being in the distance I couldn't figure out what it was. As I drove by, Sophia said, "It's a bear! It's standing up!"

Needless to say, that was pretty exciting. It's not every day that you see a bear!


On the right side of the layout is a background with dragonflies (which are abundant at this time of the year), ferns (which are doing well under the pine trees in the front yard), mushrooms (which are sprouting up in the yard in various places), a quilt (to reflect one of the 4-H projects that Olivia did and I helped her with...like pressing the sewing pedal since her feet don't reach the floor yet), and a bear that's standing up.

There also is a gratitude list with five things or experiences I'm grateful for during the past few days.

I'm happy that I have each of these components in the journal - embroidery, reflection, gratitude list, images that reflect what happened during the past week, and the name of the stitch. It is truly something I enjoy reading, looking at, and touching (having tactile elements in it is different than any journal I've kept in the past).

Sunday, June 17, 2012

3 Things I Discovered About My Personality…A Father’s Day Reflection

When the Summer Blog Challenge posed the question: “What are three things you are proud of about your personality?” I immediately thought of a file that I came across when going through my Dad’s office after he died earlier this year.

In the file, there were two reference letters that were sent to the adoption agency when going through the home study process to adopt Sophia and Olivia. One of the questions on the recommendation form (when adopting Sophia) asked what three descriptive words would describe me. Another asked to note my greatest strength and weakness.

It was interesting to see how my Dad described me – particularly since I don’t remember him ever saying these things to me directly. It’s especially meaningful now to have an idea how he saw me. For me, this truly a gift to find this paperwork.

Prior to adopting Sophia, my Dad used these three descriptive words about me:

- Organizer.
- Energy.
- Sensitive.

Sophia and Me Playing the Gongs

Sophia and I playing the gongs at the annual Dragon Festival.
We had a chance to play the gongs (part of the gamelan). 


As my greatest strength, he said that I was “…an energetic, creative worker.” (To balance this out, my greatest weakness, according to my Dad, was the “…possibility of overextending herself in work and tasks unless she exercises self-discipline.”)

When adopting Olivia, he said that as a parent to Sophia, I was “…enthusiastic, loving, proud, devoted, and caring. The little one has grown, sleeps well, is healthy, responds to everyone and has adjusted well.” He continued that I had expressed my “joy, thankfulness, pleasure, and satisfaction with the little one and what she brought” to all of our lives.

He felt that “good parenting skills, routines, discipline, and appropriate teaching and learning opportunities” were given to Sophia.

My Dad had to do another recommendation for Olivia’s home study, and had to answer the same questions. This time he said for the three descriptive words about me:

- Talented writer.
- Energy.
- Perceptive sensitivity.

Olivia Dogs and Me by St. Croix River

Olivia, Montague, Gretel, and I at a state park on a walk
This was taken in June 2008.

He said my greatest strength was that I was “…a creative, organizational, talented individual, sensitive writer, and people person.” My greatest weakness was that I “…has sometimes taken on too much with work and programs and farm chores, but has recently taken steps to reduce and correct this.”

At the Chapel

Sophia, Olivia, Dad, Mom, and me at the 
Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Wisconsin.
This was taken in July 2010.

On this first Father’s Day without my Dad I was given a wonderful gift by him: what he thought about me. It truly is a gift I will treasure and remember.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Combination of Stitches - Week 23

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday, there was a catch-up week for those who were falling behind. For those who weren't, the challenge was to embroider something that had up to eight different stitches that have been featured so far as part of TAST.

One sampler I did features four different stitches: buttonhole, herringbone, running, and couching. It has a hodge-podge of different elements that represent a trip that Sophia, Olivia, and I took this past weekend to southwestern Minnesota and southeastern South Dakota.

Layers of Fabric Lace and Yarn with Embroidery

The background fabric represents the prairie (the type of land and plants that are in the area). The fabric with the pienes, birdhouse, and leaves represents camping at Lake Shetek State Park. It is stitched onto the background fabric using the herringbone stitch.

The next section of fabric has dragonflies (which I saw many of at the state park). It is attached to the background fabric using the buttonhole stitch.

There are two types of yarn that are couched onto the fabric - one is red to represent the campfire we started in 35 mph winds so we could make our dinner; and the other is blue to represent staying next to Lake Shetek and the girls swimming in the lake.

The rainbow-colored rick-rack reminds me of happiness and surprise - both which were represented on the trip.

The lace is from my mom, and it represents the parts of the trip that reminded me of my parents and when we traveled to Mitchell when I was a child.

The three flowers represent Sophia, Olivia, and me.

TAST Sampler with 5 Embroidery Stitches

The other sampler has five different stitches: chevron, buttonhole, herringbone, running, and couching. I chose the colors for this sampler and the background fabric because it was a hot and humid weekend. Reds, yellows, golds, and oranges all represented the heat of the day. The blue was the refreshing coolness of the lake; and the green represented the grass and leaves.

Week 23 - TAST

As with other journal entries, I included a personal reflection, list of things for which I am grateful, and images that remind me of what happened or what I saw during the week: wind turbines in southwestern Minnesota, the Three Maidens (rock formation) at Pipestone National Park, the Corn Palace in Mitchell, and Native American images (to represent all the Native American sites we visited).

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Butterfly Chain Stitch - Week 21

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), the featured stitch is the butterfly chain stitch.


To do the stitch, I did three vertical stitches. These can be done in the same length or varying lengths. In the picture above, the red group of stitches are in a 5-7-5 pattern while the blue stitches are in a 7-5-7 pattern.

Around the middle of the stitch, I did twisted chain stitch in the other color. So, with either pattern noted above, that would be on the fourth (or middle) row.


I chose red and blue for the embroidery floss and white Aida cloth for the fabric because it was Memorial Day weekend during this time period.


As with the other weeks, I combined the samplers with a journal entry, a list of things for which I'm grateful, and images of things I saw or did:

- Red and white check background - Sophia, Olivia, and I went to a picnic at Stone House Museum on Memorial Day. We also grilled a Caribbean-theme meal and enjoyed eating homemade ice cream outdoors on Sunday.

- Pot of lavender - In the backyard, there are three different types of flowers that are purple that are blooming right now. The butterflies are visiting them and drinking nectar.

- Arrowhead arrow - The girls and I went to William O'Brien State Park and learned about Ojibwe dream catchers and the symbolism of each component. We learned to make one, and each of us took one home.

- Hummingbird - Not only is the hummingbird visiting the feeder multiple times each day, but lots of butterflies. Also saw something that looked like a hummingbird, but wasn't. It is a white-lined sphnix moth. Found a video that shows how the moth looks and flies. It is also called the hummingbird moth or hawk moth.

- Trio of owls - Sophia, Olivia, and I went to William O'Brien State Park on Saturday and learned about owls, and then dissected an owl pellet. It was an interesting program.

- Pond image of a frog, irises, and dragonfly - The pond in the pasture is very high this year thanks to many thunderstorms recently. The irises are in full bloom - more than I've ever seen. The frogs still are singing which is unusual. Usually they sing in April and then stop. It's been wonderful hearing them for such a long period of time. The dragonflies have returned, and are flying about the farm.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Bullion Knot - Week 20


This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), the featured stitch is the bullion knot. I put off learning this stitch as much as I could...until the new one for the 21st week was introduced today.

It reminded me of the French knot which I find challenging. At least with that one, my final product looked half decent. With the bullion knot...well...that's another story.


Words such as "embarrassment," "amateurish," and "laughable" come to mind when I look at what the stitching looks like. It is what it is...and for some reason it just wasn't one of the stitches I found easy to do.


Suffice it to say that the two small embroidery samples are included with the journal entry about what has happened over the past nine days; a list of five things I'm grateful for (one of which was seeing an eagle carry a huge branch to its nest); and images of things I saw during this time period (the first hummingbird of the season, dragonflies, and flowers).

What I didn't find was an image of a monarch I could include in the collage. I wish I did...there have been so many of these beautiful orange and black butterflies flying around the backyard. It's been a joy to see them each day.

Olivia and I went on a walk through the pasture this evening; and she and I found four monarch eggs on milkweed leaves. She brought them indoors to raise, as she and Sophia have done in the past.

Between the monarchs, the many migrating birds that have returned, and the little wren who kept coming back for little pieces of wool yarn that I had cut and the girls put out - it was a day filled with lots of wonderful natural things.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - French Knots - Week 16


This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), the goal was to learn or practice French knots. I have done French knots before, but not with much success. For some reason they would unravel or not sit tightly against the fabric.

I looked at examples of what people had done with French knots on Flickr and Google images. There are some very impressive pieces. If I was more skilled with French knots and embroidery, it would be nice to be able to an image with hundreds of little French knots. In reality, that would take me a very long time to do that.

So, I opted to do one sampler this week that used linen for the background fabric. After cutting it to the size I wanted, I frayed the edges by taking out the individual threads (about a half dozen on each side).


I sewed on two types of lace, and then began adding French knots directly on the linen as well as onto the center piece of lace.


One thing I found was that if I pulled the needle and embroidery floss too strongly through the linen, the whole knot would come right with it. With a more gentle-mindset and hand on the needle, I didn't have that problem for long.

As with past weeks, I combined a journal entry about the past week, a list of what I'm grateful for, and some images from greeting cards and scrapbooking paper. For example, the robin is representative of the ones I am seeing quite frequently now. The yellow bird is the closest image I had to a goldfinch which now are visiting the feeders decked-out in their beautiful yellow plumage.


The elephant, lion, and giraffe paper is a reference to the Library of Hope Book Drive that Sophia, Olivia, and I began earlier this month. Our goal is to collect 1,000 books and raise $800 to start a library in Lesotho, Africa. (As a side note, if you have children's books you want to donate or would like to make a donation to help ship the books to Africa, please click on the link above. We certainly would welcome your support!)

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Stem Stitch - Week 15

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), the featured stitch is the stem stitch. It is one that I have not done before, so I learned it this week thanks to this year-long project.


I embroidered the stem stitch in dark green cotton floss for the three flower stems, and a light green cotton floss for the grass. The fabric is tie-dyed using a few different colors.

The flowers are made from several different patterns and textures of paper. Two of the flowers have colored "gems" in the center. (The flowers were made by someone else. I received them in exchange for a window star that I made.)

This sampler was part of a two-page spread that I did in my embroidery journal. Along with the embroidery, I had a written personal reflection, list of things for which I am grateful, the name of the stitch, and different images that represent (to me) spring and different things I saw this week (e.g., birds).

The candle symbolically represents my Dad who wasn't here for Easter this year (the first Easter without him)...but was with us in spirit.


According to the Embroiders' Guild, to do the stem stitch, "Work from left to right, taking regular small stitches along the line of the design. The thread always emerges on the left side of the previous stitch. This stitch is used for flower stems, outlines, etc. It can also be worked as a filling stitch if worked closely together within a shape until it is completely filled.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Satin Stitch - Week 14


This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), the featured stitch is the satin stitch. There are so many beautiful examples of this stitch on the internet. What should be a rather basic stitch - just sewing the stitches next to one another - for some reason I find difficult.

From left to right, I used yarn, six strands of embroidery floss, and
twelve strands of embroidery floss.

Next to the fly stitch (which I learned during the first week of TAST), the satin stitch has to be another one of my stitches that I am rather embarrased to show. In all honesty, I probably will never use this stitch again given the rather dismal look of the small samples I did.


Despite how small they were, they took a rather long time for me to do. Perhaps that's the other reason why I'll choose not to do this stitch again. I'm much happier with other stitches that either take a shorter time to do and/or may take longer but the result (based on my limited skills) is more pleasing to the eye.


As with past weeks, I've included the samples in my TAST embroidery journal along with a personal reflection, gratitude list, name of the stitch, and some images that reflect what I've seen this week. (Tulips are in the stores for Easter and the butterfly is similar to one that's on a pillow I purchased with a gift card my mom gave me this past fall. I finally made it to this store...after about six months.)

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Mini-Challenge - Week 13


This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), there were two mini-challenges. One was to combine 3-6 stitches in a sampler. I did this with my monthly Embroidery Journal Project in which I'm creating twelve 12"x12" embroidered quilt squares. I incorporated six different embroidery stitches into the quilt square: detached chain, running, chain, blanket, cross, and back stitches.

Since this wouldn't be going in the weekly TAST embroidery journal that I'm keeping, I wanted to do a couple more samples.
Couching, running, cross, and chevron stitches.

One of the samples I did in a more orderly and precise fashion using wool yarn from sheep that I raised. The wool was cleaned in Frankenmuth, Michigan, and then shipped back here to Minnesota. A spinner took the roving and made it into yarn.

This sampler used the couching, running, and
whipped wheel stitches.

The second sampler was (to me) more chaotic and random. It kind of reflects my life right now - how parts of it are in order and moving smoothly; and other parts have been turned upside down and I'm muddling through the days because of going through the first year after my father's death.

I chose a less colorful yarn to couch this time than I did a few weeks ago because it also reflects grieving and the darker moments of some of my days and emotions. The bright colored embroidery floss shows that - despite the sadness...the loss...the grief - there are happy and "brighter" aspects of each week.

These highlights I put in a "I am Grateful for..." list that I do each week. This list and a personal reflection are included in my journal entry for the week.

The completed journal pages for Week 13.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Take a Stitch Tuesday - Running Stitch - Week 10

This week for Take a Stitch Tuesday (TAST), the featured stitch is the running stitch. According to Wikipedia, the "running stitch or straight stitch is the basic stitch in hand-sewing and embroidery, on which all other forms of sewing are based.

"The stitch is worked by passing the needle in and out of the fabric. Running stitches may be of varying length, but typically more thread is visible on the top of the sewing than on the underside."


What could be a rather dull stitch can actually be presented in many different ways by simply varying the stitch length and using a variety of colors of embroidery floss.


Throughout the world there are many forms of the running stitch.  For example, kogin is a traditional embroidery from the northern part of japan.

Originally kogin was used as a form of darning or reinforcing work clothes. The patterns became more beautiful and were known for their intricate designs. Kogin is most commonly done with white thread on an indigo blue background.

From Min Gei Kan: Japanese Kogin
Meiji Period, 19th Century

On Needleprint it said that "...Kogin [is] a form of sashiko. It was developed in the Aomori Prefecture which is in the Tohoku region. In the early 1700s, farmers were prohibited from using cotton for work clothes; only linen was allowed.

"In order to keep warm (this area is buried in deep snow in winter), the women darned threads between the gaps of rough linen cloth to make it stronger and warmer. Later, the darning took on decorative patterns and the women would present their best Kogin works as festive wear. The Kogin patterns symbolized nature such as the dragonfly, nuts, butterflies, etc."

One of the samples I did this week. Under the purple embroidery floss are
green lines to mark where to stitch.

Sashiko patterns are typically traced onto the right side of the ground fabric and then stitched with 5-8 small, even stitches per inch along the pattern lines.

Sashiko Pillow Close Up
One of the sashiko patterns I embroidered in 2010.
This one was made into a pillow.

Traditional sashiko patterns are done with white thread on indigo ground fabric but modern sashiko is now done with multi-colored thread on various types of ground, including silk.

Sashiko Fabric is Stitched
After I finished doing all the stitching on the sashiko fabric,
I washed each piece of fabric to remove the gold marks.
I dried it on the clothesline and then ironed the fabric.
What remains are the white stitches on indigo fabric.

Kogin embroidery is done on evenweave fabric and is stitched as an over/under darning pattern. In order to create the pattern, the horizontal stitches vary in length.

It doesn't show up well in the photo,
but there are two lighter shades of blue (Light - L; and Medium - M) and
a darker shade of blue (D).
So, the pattern is: L, M, D, M, L, M, D, M, L.

Traditional kogin embroidery was also done with white thread on indigo ground but modern kogin embroidery can be done with any thread you choose on any ground you choose.

This pattern is from a kogin pattern book.
The difference is that I used three strands of embroidery floss
on 11-count Aida cloth. The original pattern used
a tighter-weave of blue fabric with
thicker white thread/floss which (I thought) looked a lot better.

Another part of the world also has a type of embroidery that uses the running stitch. On Wikipedia, it says that "Kantha is a type of embroidery popular in Bangladesh and in West Bengal, India. The use of kantha is popular in kantha sarais traditionally worn by women in Bengal, but any garment or cloth with kantha embroidery, predominantly having a border of decorative running stitch motifs, may be called a kantha garment."


Kantha stitching is also used to make simple quilts, commonly known as nakshi kantha. Women in Bengal typically use old saris and cloth and layer them with kantha stitch to make a light blanket, throw, or bedspread, especially for children.

Kantha is similar to the decorative running stitch of Japanese sashiko quilting. Kantha originated from the way in which Bengali housewives mended old clothes by taking out a strand of thread from the colorful border of their saris and making simple designs with them.

For this week's TAST, I did the running stitch on Aida cloth as well as pre-printed cloth that had green lines. These lines did not wash out of the fabric like the lines on traditional sashiko fabric. I wrote a short journal entry, did a list of things for which I am grateful, and included the stitch name.

My embroidery journal entry and samples for the week.

I also added a couple of images from greeting cards that were in my dad's office since I'm still going through his files and two offices at home (one for his persona/business use and one for being a Deacon).

It's been a long process so far - with lots of work ahead - but it has been a helpful thing to do in the grieving process. The quote is one that I found in his items and truly reflects the way that he lived his life - to the fullest and positively affecting literally thousands of people.

I shall pass through this world but once,
Any good, therefore, that I can do or
Any kindness that I can show
To any human being
Let me do it now.
Let me not defer it or neglect it,
For I shall not pass this way again.
~~ Steven Grellet ~~