Small mindedness

Have you ever lived in a small town?  I’ve only lived in one for about 7 years now.  It’s a trip.  Like most things, it has its good points and its bad points.  For now, the good things outweigh the bad, so here we are.

For reference, when I talk about a small town, I’m talking about a town similar to the one I live in…our population is about 1600, city limits encompass 1 square mile, and the next closest towns are 5-10 miles away.  The next BIG town, with significant civilization, is about 30 miles away.

We aren’t a suburb, we don’t melt into another town.  We are surrounded by rolling acres of cropland — my husband grew up on a farm 6 miles south of town.  He left for school, and we lived in several other places in Iowa before we came back, so we could raise our family here, and eventually he’d like to work on the farm, though I don’t know if that will ever happen quite the way he’s already dreamed it would.

Many of the people that live here have lived here all of their lives, possibly in the same house they grew up in.  And the familial relationships are confusing at best — you have to be careful who you badmouth to whom, because you might be dissing a sister or cousin or whatever without even realizing it.

I don’t mean to imply that if you’ve never lived anywhere else, you can’t have an open mind and I know that small mindedness can exist anywhere, but there seems to be something special about small town small mindedness.  I’m also aware that I am just as guilty as the next person at exhibiting small mindedness on occasion, but I hope, for the most part, that I’m able to approach issues with an open mind, and I try very hard to make decisions based on facts, and not on my feelings about a person.

Our small town is voting on a local utility issue next Tuesday.  It’s actually a decision we thought we’d already made, but some of the more vocal opposition didn’t like the fact that the majority vote went against them, so they have managed to stir the pot and force this vote.  I’m still not clear on how that’s even possible, but here we are.

What frustrates me is that many people seem to be making their decisions based on their dislike of certain personalities, and based on things that happened 30 years ago, rather than on what might be best for our town.  I understand some of the objections to the issue at hand, I understand that it is risky, but you know what?  Getting out of bed is risky.  And it seems to me that making fear-based decisions are not what our town or even our country needs right now.  And I say that understanding our scary the economy is right now.  I’m a little bit afraid everyday — but if I let myself make decisions based on fear, I probably wouldn’t choose to get out of bed  most days.

I also think the argument that the system isn’t “broken” so we don’t need to fix it is flawed.  Just because we’ve always done something a certain way, doesn’t mean we SHOULD keep doing it that way. Tradition is important, but it shouldn’t be our only guide.

I don’t know how the vote is going to turn out next Tuesday.  I know how I’m voting, and I know that my choice is based on hope for the future: not fear and not past personal resentments.  I hope I can say the same about other decision about my life, and I hope you can, too.

Fiber content later.

I think I still have that cone of thread

pc040002 I think I still have that cone of thread

Last week my sister was up late one night, unable to sleep, and for some crazy reason she started going through old e-mail and forwarding it to me.

And by old, I mean prehistoric.  That picture was taken on December 4, 2001, the day my first quilting machine arrived.

Where do I start?  The hair?  The glasses?  The deer-in-the-headlight-look?

The other stuff she sent me was about the boys when they were really small — some really cute photos I had shared.  What was really funny, though, was the e-mail I had sent (to my whole family!) about potty-training.   I do NOT remember this, but Will would sit and say “two more squirts” and then and then after one squirt, he’d say “two more squirts” and keeps going like that….

Aren’t you glad I shared?

Oh look — here’s the two cute-kid photos she shared.  Mark even looks like a baby in this one:

pb260018 1 I think I still have that cone of thread

(November 2000)

And this one just makes laugh:

p9190008 I think I still have that cone of thread

(September 19, 2001).  They were posing, saying “Hmmmm.”  Don’t you want to just reach out and poke those bellies?

I could get lost for hours looking at old pictures.  As much as I enjoy playing with my pictures digitally, I need to spend some time actually printing some, I think the boys would enjoy paging through them, too.

I’ll get on that tomorrow.

Or maybe the day after.

Suzanne

Go Away Murphy

dsc09119 Go Away Murphy

Dear Murphy,
Didn’t you have enough fun with me yesterday?  It’s not that you ruined my day, but you sure didn’t make it all that great, either.  I won’t even list it all, you know the kind of havoc you wreaked on my yesterday.

Don’t shake your head at me like that and give me that wide-eyed innocent look.  You do too know.

You just can’t help yourself, can you?

First, the order from the distributor — the 2 things I especially need for customers?  You just HAD to make sure that those were on backorder.  Very kind of you.

And now this quilt?  COME ON ALREADY.

I know I checked the measurements.  Well, OK.  I checked before I squared it up, but sheesh, I didn’t take that much off in order to square the fabric up.  And yes, i should have measured it again before I got it pinned all the way on, but if I had, I’m guessing you wouldn’t have felt the need to interfere with me.

So, you’ve had your fun.

Please go bother someone else,

Sincerely,

suzannesig Go Away Murphy

5 minutes + 5 dollars = 1 happy camper

I won’t show you a picture of my repaired glasses, but I do have TWO new replacement nosepads, and can no longer blame my crabbiness on metal digging into the side of my nose.

I’ll have to find something else to blame my crabbiness on.  Either that, or I’ll have to get UNcrabby.  I bet the arrival of the UPS truck will do the trick.  Well, assuming the order from my distributor is on the truck, that is.  I ran out of batting, so it’s hard for me to do any quilting, and I’m getting tired of catching up on my bookkeeping

blame it on the glasses

glasses blame it on the glasses

This morning, I was cleaning my glasses when I felt something pop and then heard something skitter across the floor.

It was one of the nosepads from my glasses.

The eye doctor’s office is only open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays.  But that didn’t stop me from yanking on the door twice wondering why it wouldn’t open.

The glasses are still wearable, but wow, my nose has got a sore spot.

There’s more, Murphy’s Law is alive and well here at my house (well, shop…).

It all started with the glasses, though, and that’s where I’m laying the blame.

pixel blame it on the glasses