Like hemming a bicycle

sewing
It's been forever, but I'm dusting off the needle and thread to work on some clothing that will fit around my belly over the next few months.

It's taking twice as long as normal because I have to find the pattern, fabric scissors, chalk, tape measure, straight edge (which is still MIA - how do you lose a drywall square?!), thread and straight pins. I also have to work a bit harder to find consistent motivation.

I've always said that there is a sewing muse and if you try to create things when you don't have the muse, you are doomed to make two left sleeves or put the pleats in the armpit (Jeremy had a tunic like that, but I wasn't the responsible party for it). But after all this time, I'm having to coax the muse out of hiding, shaking a tin of treats while it cowers under the bed.

So I have a dress cut out and serged around the edges and the fabric for Rich's tabard is in the dryer. And I'm getting there piece by painfully cut out piece with 1/2" seam allowance.

One thing, though? My drafting table KICKS ASS! Being able to raise it up to above belly height for cutting out fabric is a Godsend. Best thrift store purchase ever!

Family chemistry

In early 1971 when my mother went for her checkup after birthing my older brother Perry, the doctor told her that he wanted to talk to her about birth control. She figured he had some new product she could try since she felt like she'd tried everything out there, but he followed up by saying, "because we don't want this to happen again." My 33-year-old mother gave that doctor hell. She explained that my brother's conception was very much planned and he was not going to be the last pregnancy if she had anything to say about it and he should just shut his trap. Those of you who have met my mother know that she must have said it a bit nicer than that, but her point was made.

And so my parents went on with their lives raising a 12-year-old Doug and a newborn Perry that grew into a toddler that grew into a little kid. They were living in a two bedroom house (the green one across the street from where they live now) and my father was building an addition on it himself. Life was busy and complicated, but it was good.

My parents decided it was time to try again for another child. I learned later that they had read up on what factors could encourage a girl baby versus a boy and did what they could to facilitate that. My father sheepishly said recently, "I tried to convince your mother to douche with soda water but she drew the line there." In December of 1975, Mom was pregnant again.

Next thing you know it was March of 1976, shortly after my mother's favorite aunt Millie had died. She was lying in bed and my father was vacuuming out the floor furnace in the hallway outside their bedroom. She had a horrible belly ache, but figured it would pass. As the evening wore on she thought, "Dear God, I'm going to die. I'm going to die in this bed and George won't even know I've died because he can't hear my moans over that damn vacuum. Yes, I'm going to die." Eventually she made her way into the bathroom and passed a large blob. It was then she realized all those aches were labor pains. She collected the fetus, left Perry with Doug (who was nearly 17 then) and headed with my father to the hospital.

They did whatever doctors do in 1976 after a woman has just miscarried a fetus in her bathroom at four months and were taking their sweet time with paperwork. My father kept asking if they could go home and the nurse kept saying they couldn't leave until the bill was settled. They had insurance but there was a debate over the co-pay or something. Daddy calmly left the nurse station and went to ask Mom if she could walk. She asked why and he explained they were leaving but the nurses might be mad about it. And so they gathered her things and walked out. As they passed the nurse, she said, "You can't leave!"

Daddy: "And what are you going to do about it?" Nurse: "Well ... I'm going to mark your bill UNPAID!"

And she loudly stamped their bill unpaid with a large red stamp as they walked out the door.

Afterward, when others expressed concern or condolences over Mom's miscarriage, she shrugged it off. She casually explained they didn't have time to mourn a blob because they had to get busy making another baby. Mom was 38 and the doctors were getting more and more concerned about her being "high risk."

By August of that same year, Mom was pregnant again. She always said it was a miracle they managed to conceive me because all that summer my parents hosted Daddy's four nieces and nephews (in that same two bedroom house) as Daddy's brother went through a rough spot in his marriage. But miracles happened and I stuck around in her belly for 39 weeks and came out perfectly healthy.

We were then a busy, complicated family of five in a two bedroom house, but we were happy.

I talk about my father a lot on this site, but don't mention Mom nearly as much. Dad is the one raging against nursing staff while my mother is quietly passing a fetus in her bedroom. In many ways they compliment each other well.

My parents don't panic. My amazingly patient mother doesn't make a fuss. And my father shows super-human levels of support for his family, even if he doesn't manifest it in the most mainstream of ways.

A family doesn't just happen out of the blue on a wedding day or in a hospital delivery ward. A family (and in particular our family) grows just like a person does, hopefully taking the best characteristics of each member and blending them together. It's the closest things to magic we get to perform every day.

A random list of reminders

First, don't forget that this Sunday at 5pm eastern is the deadline for our latest Living Out Loud Project. The theme for this month is your own personal folklore. The hardest part for me so far is just picking which story I want to tell (but we seem to have a ton of folklore to choose from). Remember that one lucky entrant receives a small prize of appreciation and all participants earn fame, glory and a link on the LOL Members blogroll! Go team! The next reminder is that I'm still pregnant. Hello, I know, right? I'm still getting used to it myself. Having never been particularly fat or particularly pregnant before, I'm still getting used to how this stage has characteristics of both. My boobs are starting to no longer be the part of me that would touch a wall first should I walk into one. I make old man noises sometimes when I get out of a chair. I dropped my favorite pen on the floor at work yesterday right after lunch and seriously considered just buying another one versus trying to bend over to get it. But overall, I still look and feel the same, just with a swimmy person inside me and an insatiable desire for chips and salsa (which counts as well as a paternity test to prove that Rich is the father of this child).

We're going to two SCA events this month. I'm just as surprised as you all are! But Rich has been asked to participate in the Golden Rose Tourney and my favorite Mistress is cooking at our local event so it was a no-brainer for them both. There's a guy at work who has gotten excited at the prospect of heavy fighting within the society and it's interesting to be around such fresh enthusiasm after all my general ennui about modern middle ages stuff of late. It's refreshing. I may get off my ass and sew a new outfit (particularly if I want to be able to fit this ever-expanding body of mine into something other than our pavilion). Wish me luck!