I am almost but not quite finished with the Sunrise placemats and napkins. There are a dozen of each, you know, so I have some excuse.
I am only almost finished because there are just too many things to do.
Unfinished projects might have something to do with the fact that I can be forgetful. For example, I might forget that I had been sewing, go upstairs to get something to drink, and then start the laundry, forgetting that I was in the middle of something else. That usually happens when I am in the phase of rote sewing rather than creating or deciding what to do next on a piece.
Or, I waste the creative bit of the morning and early afternoon by the need to do the horrible old-folks-early-in-the-morning-covid-timeslot grocery store run. For me, this is horrible because I must rush: rush through coffee, have a small bite to eat to hold me over, gather the protective gear, coffee to-go, and drive extra far to a larger grocery store where they actually wear masks. I feel safer there not only because the staff have the right idea about the masks (well mostly, there are those two chatterboxes cutting fruit for the plastic containers; I stay well clear of them), but also because the store is huge. Heck, if I go early Sunday morning, I am almost the only customer there! The terrible draw back on Sunday is that you can’t buy beer or wine until after 12. North Carolina. I remember Chatham County in the 70’s. Very dry place.
It has taken weeks, but I am slowly acclimating to the new grocery store. I enter the parking lot, put on the mask, pull out my cell phone and change the setting so that it never goes to sleep because when it goes to sleep the face recognition doesn’t work because of the mask. And begin the slug through a gigantic, week-long grocery list.
40 minutes into shopping and I am still running back to the beginning veggie section or cheese section having forgotten yet another item. To me, it is a modern miracle that I can say to a small round tower, Alexa, put cheddar cheese on the grocery list while my gloved hands wash newly dyed textiles in the sink.
Here’s an idea: Why doesn’t Ingles make an app to supplement Alexa’s app? Instead of listing the groceries in categories like Baking and Cooking or more informatively “Other” , an Ingles app would match grocery items on the list to their position in the store the aisle number!
I am not an early morning person. I do not like to plan meals in advance; we used to shop 3 or even 4 times a week, a habit left over from when we lived in a denser population setting. So, instead of planning I pick a variety of 3-4 fresh veggies, buy a bunch of different frozen fishes (during old peoples hours, the fresh fish counter at Ingles is rarely open), buy a lot of milk and cheese, get a treat, buy seeds and nuts, random other stuff. Get home and sigh. Good news though! We can drive to a fabulous fresh seafood store Mother Ocean Market on Merrimon, and guess what is right next door????! The Hop Ice Cream, that’s what.
Mornings are the best times to be creative, to think. This comes after retired-person sleep until you wake and feel like getting up and a relaxing coffee, reading time. Grocery shopping should be late in the day. I resent Covid-19. We all do. Our new reality. But I will still go to the grocery story early because I do not want to catch that nasty virus. I was fortunate to hear Dr. Fauci speak to the students at Georgetown via Zoom the other day. He explained that previous viruses outbreaks were due to viruses that either spread rapidly in humans but were not causing serious disease, OR, didn’t spread in humans having been contracted from contact with animals and were extremely serious medically. SARS-CoV-2, on the other hand spreads rapidly in humans AND has extreme medical outcomes in people. This is the explanation of the Covid-19 pandemic relating to the causative virus, SARS-CoV-2.
Well, I did divert a little into non-fiber territory. What were we talking about before? Oh yes, I want to tell you about the nearly completed Sunrise placemats and napkins. Change that. It is late in the evening. I want to show them to you.