I looked up the source of “waiting for the other shoe to drop.” Wiki-something-or-other says that it comes from early industrial age tenements where the walls and floors were thin. You could hear your neighbors getting ready for bed and when you hear one shoe hit the floor you know another will soon.
It is used two ways:
- to defer action until another matter is finished or resolved
- to await a seemingly inevitable event, especially one that is not desirable.
Two shoes have dropped, on different sides of the bed. We have two crises pending in the family. Both are inevitable. The exact details of the crises are not clear, but sooner or later both situations will result in an unpleasant, stress-filled crisis (if we are lucky it will be one crisis each, but I am not optimistic). It is hard to live like that. Not wanting the crises, but knowing they are brewing and that the people who could make the situations better will not. I have no say in the matter but will, inevitably, be called on to pick up the pieces and try to put them back together.
The phone call or calls may come in the next few minutes or the next few months. Every time the phone rings I flinch, then stiffen my spine and answer.
What is wrong in this picture?
Enough pouting, how do I stay sane waiting? I find sewing therapeutic. I get to touch fabric, enjoy color and create something, it takes focus, but on something I enjoy…and I have some control over the outcome.
So I decided to make a quilt, in this case I decided to finish a quilt I started over a decade ago (bonus points toward sanity). Quilts do take on a life of their own sometimes. So it isn’t always as controlled as one might think, and this one was no exception.
I made the star blocks over a decade ago after having read a book about color. I don’t remember the theory or philosophy that lead the the choices, but I still love the colors. Every so often I have brought the blocks out, but have never figured out how to put them together. I finally decided to float the stars in a midnight blue sky instead of trying to make a pattern.
Since I started the quilt so long ago and didn’t have a clear enough plan when I started, I did not have enough of the right fabrics to finish the project. The fabrics I used are no longer available and even the basic colors are not in vogue (royal blue seems to be in, not midnight, since when is midnight blue unfashionable?) so finding fabrics cohesive with the color scheme was a bit of a challenge. The fabrics I got to finish things up were not quite what I had in mind when I set out, either to make the quilt in the first place or when I plotted how to finish it this time, but I think the quilt will actually be better than I imagined.
It is coming together now. Having one thing come together, even if it is just a quilt, helps me cope with the stress of waiting for the inevitable crises. Problem is that there are only so many quilts one empty nest can hold.
I wonder if my hobby of putting different bit of fabric together to form a project is related in some way to why I always seem to get the calls?
This post was inspired by the post “Just a Stick in my Spokes” on the Miss Understood blog.
I, too, am facing difficult times. You post is a very interesting juxtaposition of my childhood and my present day life. I grew up in a small log cabin in the middle of the wood. My mom, a quilter. As a result of a brain injury and related complications, I now live in an assisted living facility. The crisis area aplenty and range in size, but one looms big and brooding in our immediate future. I do not know how to quilt, but i know how to flip one over and examine the stitching and look for other hallmarks of quality work. I recently began doodling to calm and quiet my overstimulated and angst-ridden brain. Some of the patterns are reminiceint of your quilt. May our waters calm quicker and with less of an emotional toll than we are preparing to face. All the best. #blogging101 #friendswiththeneighbors
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I can relate, one of our pending crises is related to an aging relative who is losing the physical strength and balance needed to do the daily tasks of life. I hope your creative doodles bring you peace.
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First: Thank you for the link. Second: I LOVE THE COLORS AND SCHEME. Beautiful. I like you post and I also have many quilting UFOs that I need to get back to. I’m likely to have the same problem matching fabric/color tones. Last: the photo: the bottom left blue/purple square does not match the upper right in color coordination.
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Absolutely right. I had to take that block apart and turn the corner 4 patch. Thank you for your kind words.
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