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Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

Yikes!? Ann found me!? I’m the Skye Wolf with a profile pic of a black and tan dog in an agility tunnel (it’s Kibeth).

?

Ann – I waved in your direction from the top of Mt. Tammany yesterday and told Arielle that if we hung a left over the river we were sorta kinda nearish to a Monger.? She humored me ?

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Therese Shere
Sent: Monday, September 7, 2020 3:29 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] How is everyone?

?

Melisande, sorry to hear how complicated and tough this all this on the kids -- but yeah, not surprised. Hope that Baird's and Ezra's school situations stay stable.

?

About FB - hate to tell you this, but there are several "Skye Wolf" profiles, including one with a naked profile pic. Which one are you??

?

-T.


Thérèse Shere
Freelance indexing & digital information design

?

?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 12:13 PM Melisande R. Wolf via <melisanderwolf=[email protected]> wrote:

I’m sorry to read that things are so rough for you Jenny, and about the extra challenges and frustrations the pandemic is bringing to others too.

?

At the moment, we’re keeping on here.? After a lot of chaos and last minute insanity, both Baird and Ezra are physically back at school.? They drove out together (which occasioned a lot of the insanity trying to get in touch with anyone who could grant Baird permission to arrive early to accommodate Ezra’s class schedule) and survived the road trip.? Ezra’s school went from “everyone is welcome back” to freshman, transfer, international students on campus only, all classes virtual for the first module (first half of the semester), with other students able to petition to return.? Ezra felt strongly that he needed to be out of the house, which he was right about, so he asked to return and is now back on campus along with two of his close friends, and the first week of classes seems to have gone well.? About 25% of the student body is at Mac right now and they seem to have good protocols in place.? Carleton seems to have adopted more of a head in the sand approach.? Yes there is testing and mask and distancing requirements, but professors were allowed to opt to make classes in-person only, so although Baird had originally decided to stay home (but return from his leave of absence), he had to go back physically to take a class he needs for his major and his minor.? Carleton is going to have about 75% of the student body on campus, which is only slightly down from the usual 85% in any given term.? And yes, I am worried.? Especially worried about the possibility that the campus will close and I will need to find someplace for Arielle to stay and fly out to drive back with Baird if Macalester doesn’t close and send Ezra home at the same time.

?

I can’t remember who mentioned the idea that this pandemic is especially hard (in a different way) on teenagers and college students, but based on my kids, I tend to agree.? Having the 3 of them home for 7 months was really hard on all of us, and I am hoping, for everyone’s sakes, that the boys are able to stay at school.? Arielle goes back and forth with how she’s doing.? She had a group of 3 or 4 girls she was spending time with socially distanced over the summer but a lot of those families chose to take vacations so that’s been nearly nonexistent the last bit.? She starts school with a hybrid approach on Wednesday but we just don’t know how that’s going to work out or for how long.? Extracurricular dance class is currently a go with small sizes, masks, and extra precautions, and I’ve opted to allow that (her father disagrees) because in weighing the risks for our particular family, given that she is also going to school (which was also her choice in the face of her father’s opposition), it seems like the best choice to balance her physical and emotional health.? She hasn’t seen her father since February since Jemma is afraid of everything and even the several ideas I floated about outdoor distanced ways for them to spend some time together didn’t generate any interest on Jemma’s part, so I’ve given up on that.

?

We did see my Dad a couple of weeks ago before the boys left and I’m hoping to get back down there some Sunday before it becomes too cold for outdoor visits.? That was really nice and he and his wife seem to be doing well.? Arielle and I have also had a couple of outings with Lise, who Arielle adores, which has been really wonderful too.? My dog training club has reopened with lots of careful measures in place (the average age of teachers and students for everything except the manners classes – and those are still virtual – is probably over 60, and the board and members seem to have a real sense of the importance of what to do so that we can stay open) and being able to go back to class with the dogs is really good for me.?

?

My work really hasn’t changed much, so I’ve mostly just added juggling pandemic related things to the mix.? I’m still knitting a ton but not so much spinning or weaving lately, since I turned my ankle and have been babying it quite a bit.? Which did not stop me from agreeing to take Arielle and the younger dogs hiking at the Delaware Water Gap yesterday.? We had a wonderful time, I was glad we didn’t take the oldest dog (she would have been miserable) and I found out that an 18 or 19 inch (at the shoulder) dog can scramble up rocks much more easily than we can, so Arielle is busily picking some other rock scrambling hikes she’d like to do this fall too.?

?

I’ve finally been dragged onto Facebook, kicking and screaming, so if anyone wants to find me, I’m Skye Wolf (yup, borrowing a dog’s name for my pseudonym because I don’t feel like being found by a bunch of people I went to high school with).?

?

Melisande


Re: How is everyone?

 

Melisande, sorry to hear how complicated and tough this all this on the kids -- but yeah, not surprised. Hope that Baird's and Ezra's school situations stay stable.

About FB - hate to tell you this, but there are several "Skye Wolf" profiles, including one with a naked profile pic. Which one are you??

-T.

Thérèse Shere
Freelance indexing & digital information design



On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 12:13 PM Melisande R. Wolf via <melisanderwolf=[email protected]> wrote:

I’m sorry to read that things are so rough for you Jenny, and about the extra challenges and frustrations the pandemic is bringing to others too.

?

At the moment, we’re keeping on here.? After a lot of chaos and last minute insanity, both Baird and Ezra are physically back at school.? They drove out together (which occasioned a lot of the insanity trying to get in touch with anyone who could grant Baird permission to arrive early to accommodate Ezra’s class schedule) and survived the road trip.? Ezra’s school went from “everyone is welcome back” to freshman, transfer, international students on campus only, all classes virtual for the first module (first half of the semester), with other students able to petition to return.? Ezra felt strongly that he needed to be out of the house, which he was right about, so he asked to return and is now back on campus along with two of his close friends, and the first week of classes seems to have gone well.? About 25% of the student body is at Mac right now and they seem to have good protocols in place.? Carleton seems to have adopted more of a head in the sand approach.? Yes there is testing and mask and distancing requirements, but professors were allowed to opt to make classes in-person only, so although Baird had originally decided to stay home (but return from his leave of absence), he had to go back physically to take a class he needs for his major and his minor.? Carleton is going to have about 75% of the student body on campus, which is only slightly down from the usual 85% in any given term.? And yes, I am worried.? Especially worried about the possibility that the campus will close and I will need to find someplace for Arielle to stay and fly out to drive back with Baird if Macalester doesn’t close and send Ezra home at the same time.

?

I can’t remember who mentioned the idea that this pandemic is especially hard (in a different way) on teenagers and college students, but based on my kids, I tend to agree.? Having the 3 of them home for 7 months was really hard on all of us, and I am hoping, for everyone’s sakes, that the boys are able to stay at school.? Arielle goes back and forth with how she’s doing.? She had a group of 3 or 4 girls she was spending time with socially distanced over the summer but a lot of those families chose to take vacations so that’s been nearly nonexistent the last bit.? She starts school with a hybrid approach on Wednesday but we just don’t know how that’s going to work out or for how long.? Extracurricular dance class is currently a go with small sizes, masks, and extra precautions, and I’ve opted to allow that (her father disagrees) because in weighing the risks for our particular family, given that she is also going to school (which was also her choice in the face of her father’s opposition), it seems like the best choice to balance her physical and emotional health.? She hasn’t seen her father since February since Jemma is afraid of everything and even the several ideas I floated about outdoor distanced ways for them to spend some time together didn’t generate any interest on Jemma’s part, so I’ve given up on that.

?

We did see my Dad a couple of weeks ago before the boys left and I’m hoping to get back down there some Sunday before it becomes too cold for outdoor visits.? That was really nice and he and his wife seem to be doing well.? Arielle and I have also had a couple of outings with Lise, who Arielle adores, which has been really wonderful too.? My dog training club has reopened with lots of careful measures in place (the average age of teachers and students for everything except the manners classes – and those are still virtual – is probably over 60, and the board and members seem to have a real sense of the importance of what to do so that we can stay open) and being able to go back to class with the dogs is really good for me.?

?

My work really hasn’t changed much, so I’ve mostly just added juggling pandemic related things to the mix.? I’m still knitting a ton but not so much spinning or weaving lately, since I turned my ankle and have been babying it quite a bit.? Which did not stop me from agreeing to take Arielle and the younger dogs hiking at the Delaware Water Gap yesterday.? We had a wonderful time, I was glad we didn’t take the oldest dog (she would have been miserable) and I found out that an 18 or 19 inch (at the shoulder) dog can scramble up rocks much more easily than we can, so Arielle is busily picking some other rock scrambling hikes she’d like to do this fall too.?

?

I’ve finally been dragged onto Facebook, kicking and screaming, so if anyone wants to find me, I’m Skye Wolf (yup, borrowing a dog’s name for my pseudonym because I don’t feel like being found by a bunch of people I went to high school with).?

?

Melisande


Re: Swedish Heartwarmer Shawl - finally!

 

开云体育

I absolutely have never managed to learn to knit backwards, but I’ve found that two-handed purling isn’t too bad (for me) and even adapted the Philosopher’s Wool method to work with purling, though it’s been a long time since I did stranded colorwork that wasn’t in the round.

Melisande

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Therese Shere
Sent: Monday, September 7, 2020 3:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] Swedish Heartwarmer Shawl - finally!

?

Thanks Jaya and Steph for this...filing away for the yoke of my Wild Apple, if/when I get to it - I want to do it as a cardigan.

Looking forward to seeing a couple of finished Swedish Heartwarmers this winter - such a beautiful design.?

?

--Therese


Thérèse Shere
Freelance indexing & digital information design

?

?

On Sun, Sep 6, 2020 at 3:45 PM Stephannie Roy <stephannie.roy@...> wrote:

Glad you found the link?

It was a skill I’m glad I learned. Though I would have to relearn it now.?

?

My shawl is in my office - where I haven’t been since March. I should go get it and wear it at home, though that might jinx things and I’ll have to go back ?

?

Steph?



On Sep 6, 2020, at 10:32 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?

Anmiryam, I’d also love to hear how the island is this year. When do you come back??

?

Jenny, I too thought I was the last one still working on this. It is good to hear that I am not.?

?

I searched for and found Steph’s video on how to do the colorwork while knitting left to right to avoid 2-color purling and am going to teach myself this technique. My goal is to have it done by Winter Solstice this year!? It is going to be gigantic I think. Maybe I’ll put it up as wall decor

?

On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 12:05 PM Jenny Swanson <jenny@...> wrote:

And there was me thinking everyone else had finished and I was the only one to fall by the wayside.

?

How’s the island this year, Anmiryam? I’m guessing you are still over there.

Loved the dog pics.

Jenny








--

Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

I’m sorry to read that things are so rough for you Jenny, and about the extra challenges and frustrations the pandemic is bringing to others too.

?

At the moment, we’re keeping on here.? After a lot of chaos and last minute insanity, both Baird and Ezra are physically back at school.? They drove out together (which occasioned a lot of the insanity trying to get in touch with anyone who could grant Baird permission to arrive early to accommodate Ezra’s class schedule) and survived the road trip.? Ezra’s school went from “everyone is welcome back” to freshman, transfer, international students on campus only, all classes virtual for the first module (first half of the semester), with other students able to petition to return.? Ezra felt strongly that he needed to be out of the house, which he was right about, so he asked to return and is now back on campus along with two of his close friends, and the first week of classes seems to have gone well.? About 25% of the student body is at Mac right now and they seem to have good protocols in place.? Carleton seems to have adopted more of a head in the sand approach.? Yes there is testing and mask and distancing requirements, but professors were allowed to opt to make classes in-person only, so although Baird had originally decided to stay home (but return from his leave of absence), he had to go back physically to take a class he needs for his major and his minor.? Carleton is going to have about 75% of the student body on campus, which is only slightly down from the usual 85% in any given term.? And yes, I am worried.? Especially worried about the possibility that the campus will close and I will need to find someplace for Arielle to stay and fly out to drive back with Baird if Macalester doesn’t close and send Ezra home at the same time.

?

I can’t remember who mentioned the idea that this pandemic is especially hard (in a different way) on teenagers and college students, but based on my kids, I tend to agree.? Having the 3 of them home for 7 months was really hard on all of us, and I am hoping, for everyone’s sakes, that the boys are able to stay at school.? Arielle goes back and forth with how she’s doing. ?She had a group of 3 or 4 girls she was spending time with socially distanced over the summer but a lot of those families chose to take vacations so that’s been nearly nonexistent the last bit.? She starts school with a hybrid approach on Wednesday but we just don’t know how that’s going to work out or for how long.? Extracurricular dance class is currently a go with small sizes, masks, and extra precautions, and I’ve opted to allow that (her father disagrees) because in weighing the risks for our particular family, given that she is also going to school (which was also her choice in the face of her father’s opposition), it seems like the best choice to balance her physical and emotional health.? She hasn’t seen her father since February since Jemma is afraid of everything and even the several ideas I floated about outdoor distanced ways for them to spend some time together didn’t generate any interest on Jemma’s part, so I’ve given up on that.

?

We did see my Dad a couple of weeks ago before the boys left and I’m hoping to get back down there some Sunday before it becomes too cold for outdoor visits.? That was really nice and he and his wife seem to be doing well.? Arielle and I have also had a couple of outings with Lise, who Arielle adores, which has been really wonderful too.? My dog training club has reopened with lots of careful measures in place (the average age of teachers and students for everything except the manners classes – and those are still virtual – is probably over 60, and the board and members seem to have a real sense of the importance of what to do so that we can stay open) and being able to go back to class with the dogs is really good for me.?

?

My work really hasn’t changed much, so I’ve mostly just added juggling pandemic related things to the mix.? I’m still knitting a ton but not so much spinning or weaving lately, since I turned my ankle and have been babying it quite a bit.? Which did not stop me from agreeing to take Arielle and the younger dogs hiking at the Delaware Water Gap yesterday.? We had a wonderful time, I was glad we didn’t take the oldest dog (she would have been miserable) and I found out that an 18 or 19 inch (at the shoulder) dog can scramble up rocks much more easily than we can, so Arielle is busily picking some other rock scrambling hikes she’d like to do this fall too.?

?

I’ve finally been dragged onto Facebook, kicking and screaming, so if anyone wants to find me, I’m Skye Wolf (yup, borrowing a dog’s name for my pseudonym because I don’t feel like being found by a bunch of people I went to high school with).?

?

Melisande


Re: Swedish Heartwarmer Shawl - finally!

 

Thanks Jaya and Steph for this...filing away for the yoke of my Wild Apple, if/when I get to it - I want to do it as a cardigan.
Looking forward to seeing a couple of finished Swedish Heartwarmers this winter - such a beautiful design.?

--Therese

Thérèse Shere
Freelance indexing & digital information design



On Sun, Sep 6, 2020 at 3:45 PM Stephannie Roy <stephannie.roy@...> wrote:
Glad you found the link?
It was a skill I’m glad I learned. Though I would have to relearn it now.?

My shawl is in my office - where I haven’t been since March. I should go get it and wear it at home, though that might jinx things and I’ll have to go back ?

Steph?


On Sep 6, 2020, at 10:32 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
Anmiryam, I’d also love to hear how the island is this year. When do you come back??

Jenny, I too thought I was the last one still working on this. It is good to hear that I am not.?

I searched for and found Steph’s video on how to do the colorwork while knitting left to right to avoid 2-color purling and am going to teach myself this technique. My goal is to have it done by Winter Solstice this year!? It is going to be gigantic I think. Maybe I’ll put it up as wall decor ツ

On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 12:05 PM Jenny Swanson <jenny@...> wrote:

And there was me thinking everyone else had finished and I was the only one to fall by the wayside.

?

How’s the island this year, Anmiryam? I’m guessing you are still over there.

Loved the dog pics.

Jenny









--
Jaya


Re: Zoom call interest poll

 

开云体育

I’m interested – I’ve had fun on a few of these I’ve done with a couple of groups of people (some more successful than others).? I’m tricky because my work can vary and what Arielle needs (life is starting up again virtually and otherwise for her), but I’m often able to shuffle things around in my work day if 9-5 or 6 EST is the best time for others.

?

Melisande

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Jaya Srikrishnan
Sent: Monday, September 7, 2020 10:51 AM
To: yarnmongers <[email protected]>
Subject: [yarnmongers] Zoom call interest poll

?

I thought I'd move this to its own thread so others can ignore it.

?

If there is enough interest, we can work out times. So right now, tell me if you?want to participate and what days/times are NOT good (can be a range like 9-5 weekdays).

?

?

?

--

Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

Zoom first: don't worry about me - probably I would stay away anyhow, I still work a lot of hours on the computer and really don't enjoy socializing there.

Amy, congratulations on the retirement! What a concept - can't imagine when I'll be able to pull that off.

Update second. Jenny, I'm sorry to hear things are getting so difficult for/with your parents - not to mention being separated from DH so much! What a rough time.

I feel as though I *am* pretty much making lemonade from the lemons. Not that there aren't plenty of difficulties and disappointments - this week, I should have been on the North Yorkshire moors, walking the Cleveland Way with my sister. I'm being tortured by Instagram posts of the heather in bloom. Oh well, maybe next year. We haven't seen daughter Eve and her two girls since Thanksgiving, hard to see when that will be possible (they're in Colorado). But happily Emma and Hank are nearby and we're seeing them regularly. As many of you see on IG or FB regularly, Hank is just always a joy. Beginning tomorrow he's coming here one day a week for his morning remote school session (pretty amusing) followed by lunch and an afternoon of play with us here.

Jenny's parents' situation resonates with me. Mine are here on the property, in their own house - they are both 85 now, my dad in declining health with metastesized prostate cancer, my mother just, well- old and getting older. Although they seem to be coping pretty well with the pandemic-related isolation, it really isn't the best place for them for the long haul. Where we live, if/when they can't drive, life will get very complicated. And if my dad dies soonish and my mother's on her own, that will be difficult as well. There's a lot to take care of here, most of it now being neglected, by us as well as them. Eric's health, and ability to physically maintain the property, is ever declining.There *will* be more floods and more fires. After last year's flood we had some conversation about the idea of moving elsewhere and parents were adamant about staying - "dying here," as they put it. It's going to be rough on me. It's not the best place for me and Eric for the long haul either, for the same reasons, so I'm hoping I can initiate some real conversation about doing something different before too many years go by. I don't want to be trapped here ten years from now, and I don't want Emma to find herself in the same position I seem to be in, down the road, being the only or main support for ailing parents.

Aside from that - think I said this before to you all, but a silver lining for me these last months has been the extra time that has magically materialized from somewhere. I have never had more time for serious reading, writing, reflecting. I've done a lot of satisfying sewing and knitting. And I'm on a dedicated fitness kick, finding new gym-free ways to keep my body in good shape, inspired by watching my parents' and Eric's physical declines. Determined to be as strong and flexible as I can be for as long as possible. Daily yoga or pilates (there's lots of good teaching online), that kind of thing. Walking whenever I can. Staying out of chairs and off sofas as much as possible :-)? Yesterday I drove out to our beautiful coast, solo, walked a little, then sat on the bluff and read, wrote, and knitted for 3 hours, listening to the waves (111 degrees here at home, 72 there).

Now if we can just wake up from the nightmare this country is in in November, and somehow get into 2021 without a civil war of some kind. Through all of this, another fairly recent enthusiasm is a great help to me: an embrace of a kind of modern Stoic philosophy (if interested, Google around - there's lots of good writing about it). My dad's impending death? The natural order of things; when it arrives, I won't be surprised; every day, I'm grateful for the man he is and the father he's been. Donald Trump's possible reelection? Well, if that happens, I won't be surprised either, and I'll know that I did everything I could to prevent it.

Good to hear from those of you who are usually quiet - Beryl, Laura - and hope we'll hear from a few more!

Onward,
Therese


Thérèse Shere
Freelance indexing & digital information design



On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:20 AM Amy Brotslaw Schweiger <brotslaw@...> wrote:
What a wonderful idea. I’m in.?

Amy


On Sep 7, 2020, at 7:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day
Mon 7:00 pm *Tue 9:00 amMon 4:00 pm *
Mon 8:00 pm *Tue 10:00 amMon 5:00 pm *

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

What a wonderful idea. I’m in.?

Amy


On Sep 7, 2020, at 7:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya


Re: Swedish Heartwarmer Shawl - finally!

 

Yes, I'm using Mountain Colors Bearfoot, which is grabby but I think I will do the same. It is more rhythmic to do it that way and as you say, it keeps the reverse looking neat and there is nothing to snag on things.?

Thanks!

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 11:16 AM Stephannie Roy <stephannie.roy@...> wrote:
I can’t remember, and can’t check because I don’t have it at home. From the photo I think you’re right.? It makes sense to keep the floats short so they don’t catch on stuff. If you’re using a grabby wool it would probably be fine to have longer floats. ?

Steph?


On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:02 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
Steph,?
I had a question after watching the video. Maybe you'll remember. It looks as if you are catching the floats after every other stitch, like the Philosopher's Wool people used to recommend. Is that correct? I can see that you catching the working thread but I couldn't see why so I assumed this and want to verify that it is correct.

On Sun, Sep 6, 2020 at 6:45 PM Stephannie Roy <stephannie.roy@...> wrote:
Glad you found the link?
It was a skill I’m glad I learned. Though I would have to relearn it now.?

My shawl is in my office - where I haven’t been since March. I should go get it and wear it at home, though that might jinx things and I’ll have to go back ?

Steph?


On Sep 6, 2020, at 10:32 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
Anmiryam, I’d also love to hear how the island is this year. When do you come back??

Jenny, I too thought I was the last one still working on this. It is good to hear that I am not.?

I searched for and found Steph’s video on how to do the colorwork while knitting left to right to avoid 2-color purling and am going to teach myself this technique. My goal is to have it done by Winter Solstice this year!? It is going to be gigantic I think. Maybe I’ll put it up as wall decor ツ

On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 12:05 PM Jenny Swanson <jenny@...> wrote:

And there was me thinking everyone else had finished and I was the only one to fall by the wayside.

?

How’s the island this year, Anmiryam? I’m guessing you are still over there.

Loved the dog pics.

Jenny









--
Jaya



--
Jaya



--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

Lovely to hear so much news from everyone.

?

A group call sounds great, but better leave me out of it at the moment, my life is too uncertain. Maybe in a week or two…….

?

Jenny

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Laura Need
Sent: 07 September 2020 15:35
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] How is everyone?

?

And that doesn’t take Jenny into account...

?

Laura



On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?

I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day

Mon 7:00 pm *

Tue 9:00 am

Mon 4:00 pm *

Mon 8:00 pm *

Tue 10:00 am

Mon 5:00 pm *

?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:

Laura,

I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

?

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:

Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

?

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

?

Laura?


?

--

Jaya


?

--

Jaya


Re: Swedish Heartwarmer Shawl - finally!

 

开云体育

I can’t remember, and can’t check because I don’t have it at home. From the photo I think you’re right. ?It makes sense to keep the floats short so they don’t catch on stuff. If you’re using a grabby wool it would probably be fine to have longer floats. ?

Steph?


On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:02 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
Steph,?
I had a question after watching the video. Maybe you'll remember. It looks as if you are catching the floats after every other stitch, like the Philosopher's Wool people used to recommend. Is that correct? I can see that you catching the working thread but I couldn't see why so I assumed this and want to verify that it is correct.

On Sun, Sep 6, 2020 at 6:45 PM Stephannie Roy <stephannie.roy@...> wrote:
Glad you found the link?
It was a skill I’m glad I learned. Though I would have to relearn it now.?

My shawl is in my office - where I haven’t been since March. I should go get it and wear it at home, though that might jinx things and I’ll have to go back ?

Steph?


On Sep 6, 2020, at 10:32 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
Anmiryam, I’d also love to hear how the island is this year. When do you come back??

Jenny, I too thought I was the last one still working on this. It is good to hear that I am not.?

I searched for and found Steph’s video on how to do the colorwork while knitting left to right to avoid 2-color purling and am going to teach myself this technique. My goal is to have it done by Winter Solstice this year!? It is going to be gigantic I think. Maybe I’ll put it up as wall decor ツ

On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 12:05 PM Jenny Swanson <jenny@...> wrote:

And there was me thinking everyone else had finished and I was the only one to fall by the wayside.

?

How’s the island this year, Anmiryam? I’m guessing you are still over there.

Loved the dog pics.

Jenny









--
Jaya



--
Jaya


Zoom call interest poll

 

I thought I'd move this to its own thread so others can ignore it.

If there is enough interest, we can work out times. So right now, tell me if you?want to participate and what days/times are NOT good (can be a range like 9-5 weekdays).



--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

No, it doesn't take Jenny into account. Europe?+ Australia?+ US PDT doesn't work very well. I used to have to do this in China and I think, iirc, that I had to do 10 pm China time, which was 6 or 7 am US Pacific time depending on DST or Standard time. Australia is another hour beyond my time zone in China. For work, the guy in San Jose got up and participated at that time. I don't think it is reasonable for fun.

If both Beryl and Jenny want to participate, we have to do two different slots. Jenny is easy to work into a US set of timezones as her time zone is only 5 hours ahead of us and I think their Winter and Summer times change about the same time as us. Australia is opposite, if they do still change time. I don't remember if they did or not when I was working with people there.?

China and India don't change but we'll have to re-do our slots for the other Zoom call when we go back to Standard time.

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:35 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
And that doesn’t take Jenny into account...

Laura


On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day
Mon 7:00 pm *Tue 9:00 amMon 4:00 pm *
Mon 8:00 pm *Tue 10:00 amMon 5:00 pm *

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya



--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

And that doesn’t take Jenny into account...

Laura


On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

I have another knit Zoom group Monday evenings. ?

Laura


On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:22 AM, Nilda <nildamesa@...> wrote:

?
I would love to do this. I have classes T-Th evening so it’ll depend on timing. Thank you Jaya.?

I’ll chime in later on updates. Hugs to you all.?
Nilda

On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

I would love to do this. I have classes T-Th evening so it’ll depend on timing. Thank you Jaya.?

I’ll chime in later on updates. Hugs to you all.?
Nilda

On Sep 7, 2020, at 10:16 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

I just did a quick search for today and found that it is quite possible, US EDT first column, Australia east coast second column and US PDT third column. We could go a bit later to accommodate people?who are working or pick a weekend day

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 10:12 AM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote:
Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

Laura,
I thought I saw a new dog in your IG feed. I'm sorry it didn't work out. All the best to you in getting a new one and coping with work and the isolation through the winter.

To all the Mongers: one of the groups I admin on Ravelry has been very active with Zoom calls since COVID-19 started. We meet for two 40-min sessions every Sat am US time which is Sat pm Indian time. That has been a very pleasant interlude for most of us who are either isolating by choice or by necessity - India has been on total lockdown without public transport and requiring only essential trips till very recently. It is essentially like a knit night - we knit (sometimes I spin) and we chat and we look at each other's work, discuss patterns, food, COVID-19, politics (occasionally and very superficially), books, TV, movies, etc.?

If any of you are interested we could do the same for Mongers. It might be tough to work in Beryl and US PDT but early am US EDT might work. I can look into times if people are interested.?

On Mon, Sep 7, 2020 at 9:28 AM Laura Need <lrneed@...> wrote:
Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other.? I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself.? As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November.? All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process.? I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me.? I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her.? It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours).? So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work.? I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent.? At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors.? However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No!? Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic.? At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!).? Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible.? Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments.? However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea?? I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen.? All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along.? We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards.? It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses.? He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself.? So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?


--
Jaya


Re: Swedish Heartwarmer Shawl - finally!

 

Steph,?
I had a question after watching the video. Maybe you'll remember. It looks as if you are catching the floats after every other stitch, like the Philosopher's Wool people used to recommend. Is that correct? I can see that you catching the working thread but I couldn't see why so I assumed this and want to verify that it is correct.

On Sun, Sep 6, 2020 at 6:45 PM Stephannie Roy <stephannie.roy@...> wrote:
Glad you found the link?
It was a skill I’m glad I learned. Though I would have to relearn it now.?

My shawl is in my office - where I haven’t been since March. I should go get it and wear it at home, though that might jinx things and I’ll have to go back ?

Steph?


On Sep 6, 2020, at 10:32 AM, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:

?
Anmiryam, I’d also love to hear how the island is this year. When do you come back??

Jenny, I too thought I was the last one still working on this. It is good to hear that I am not.?

I searched for and found Steph’s video on how to do the colorwork while knitting left to right to avoid 2-color purling and am going to teach myself this technique. My goal is to have it done by Winter Solstice this year!? It is going to be gigantic I think. Maybe I’ll put it up as wall decor ツ

On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 12:05 PM Jenny Swanson <jenny@...> wrote:

And there was me thinking everyone else had finished and I was the only one to fall by the wayside.

?

How’s the island this year, Anmiryam? I’m guessing you are still over there.

Loved the dog pics.

Jenny









--
Jaya



--
Jaya


Re: How is everyone?

 

开云体育

Hi, I’ve been reading through with interest - like Beryl, I’m a lurker these days.

Jenny, it sounds like you’ve had a rough go of it, what with your parents, and everybody being scattered about and quarantined from each other. ?I am so sorry and I hope your small menagerie is helping when you’re not on the phone.?

I’m pretty isolated myself. ?As you may know, my beautiful Golden died just before I had a knee replacement last November. ?All of my attempts to adopt a new dog came to naught, as one after another candidate disappeared as I awaited yet another Rescue group’s approval process. ?I even had a re-homed dog for a week, but she had undisclosed aggression, got worse every day as she missed *her person* (and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t there), and had teeth on my face by the end of the week she was with me. ?I suspect she had acted equally aggressively towards her person’s wife, which is why the wife was re-homing her. ?It was an incredibly challenging week, made worse by my “helpful” greyhound rescue neighbor who basically accused me of being irresponsible to return this dog to the people she loved. After I picked myself up And dusted myself off from that, and even had been approved for a rescue puppy, The pandemic started in full swing, and I realized I couldn’t give a new puppy the time she deserved as my hours might get very crazy indeed, and the Doggy Day Care I had used for Max was closed due to COVID (and even now is only open limited hours). ?So I remain dog-less for now, but am hoping maybe next spring I can get one. ?

Work is, well, work. ?I still work several times a month in the hospital, in the nursery, and labor and delivery. Labor and delivery is an oddly high-risk location, as the risk of transmission from an asymptomatic laboring mother, panting, blowing, and pushing in close proximity to health care workers - sometimes for hours! - became quickly apparent. ?At this time, all moms are either tested prior to a scheduled induction or cesarean, or are tested as soon as they arrive on L&D, which I think is standard now here for all the hospitals in Boston. ?

At the beginning, as the hospital made lists of who could be pulled from their usual job to help elsewhere if needed, I had volunteered, as my pediatric cardiology background means I know more about ICU management, ventilators and lines than most average adult primary care doctors. ?However, I fall into a rather high risk group If I were to get COVID, so the head of the ICU (who happens to be my pulmonologist) and my cardiologist both said, “No! ?Thank you, but, please, no!”?

Outpatient primary pediatric care Is an odd thing during a pandemic. ?At the height of our shutdown, I was still seeing a handful of patients every day in the office - kids 2 yr and under who needed vaccines (because *my* patients are not going to get measles or diphtheria because of COVID, thank you very much!). ?Everything else was converted to telemedicine from my kitchen and dining room, and my *job* was to manage everything remotely and keep the ERs as empty as possible. ?Fortunately, with kids isolated from each other, the average constant background of infectious respiratory illnesses dried up essentially overnight. As the numbers in Massachusetts have gotten better, and we have slowly reopened, I now see all kids for physicals, and kids with non-COVID-like symptoms for urgent appointments. ?However, kids with fever, cough, sore throats, diarrhea? ?I can’t see those in my office without potentially exposing other patients, and the number of phone calls for those issues are ticking upwards as day cares and schools reopen. ?All pediatric COVID testing is taking place at Urgent Care centers (commercially separate free-standing clinics), and, as I tell my patients’ parents, if your kid has a fever, the most important thing to do is make sure it’s not COVID. ?

So we muddle along. ?We also moved office locations In July - new, bigger space, More exam rooms, more ancillary staff to help get patients in rooms and help clean them afterwards. ?It’s a good move, but a new space adds to the general dysphoric sense of being disconnected that I’ve heard from other outpatient primary care doctors. ?

Parker is muddling through his early 20s, trying to figure out what he wants to do. Someday I hope he will actually have a job that pays him enough to cover his own rent and expenses. ?He had flirted with the idea of using his Econ/Psych degree to go into business (investing), but over the past year, realized his lack of direction about finding a job was fueled by his feeling that much of business lacked a soul, and he didn’t think he could do that and live with himself. ?So he’s been writing (don’t know about what...), and is about to move to NYC (staying w a friend) where he has a short term writing contract for something in the music Industry, with plans to move to LA w the new year. ?

So I knit - some - and I read - some - and I walk - as much as I can - and I work. ? Not very exciting....

Laura?



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