Wednesday, March 6, 2019

The Impatient Patient

That would be me. I've been given to understand that shoulder injuries take a long time to heal. I'm here to testify to the truth of that. I'm doing everything I know to promote healing but it seems to be taking FOREVER!!! I sustained this injury back at the beginning of January. Wasn't able to see the doctor until the end of that month. Then another month went by before my next appointment. There has been improvement since my last visit but it ain't happenin' fast enough to suit me.

I've been taking advantage of the opportunity to read but there's only so much reading I can do in any given day. Daytime television isn't worth talking about. Thank goodness for TCM, the classic movie channel we get via our cable service. Even that has let me down many days however.

I have four quilts waiting to be bound. Bindings have even been made for them. There's another quilt just about ready to come off the long-arm and one that only needs a back made. I might be able to apply a binding or make that quilt back but I don't want to take the chance of slowing down the recovery process. Not yet anyway.

My local quilt shop had a fantastic sale in the clearance department last Saturday: five dollars a yard! Most of her new yardage is selling for twelve to thirteen dollars a yard. Hubby kindly drove me down (driving also exacerbates the injury) and acted as my lackey in the store. He pulled bolts and carried them to the cutting counter. Then he paid for over 18 yards of fabric. Two cuts were four yards each for prospective quilt backs. The rest were colors and prints I simply felt I could put to good use eventually. Hubby picked out a few yards he thought I should add to my stash. The biggest surprise of that lot was this panel print:


He's not particularly a chicken fancier as far as I was aware. What drew him to this, he says, is the deep red in combination with the black and white. And he likes the panel in the lower left corner. It will be fun to play with these panels and see what develops - someday.

In the meantime, about all I've been able to do lately, other than read and watch TV, is embroider. I've even found needlepoint causes more pain than working on a small hooped piece of fabric. So I've started on the fourth "page" of my Year in Stitches sampler.


The light green in the upper left is my first-ever attempt at Chevron stitches. Can't say I enjoyed it but I suspect with more practice my brain will get the hang of it. I had a few false starts with the line of featherstitching across the middle of the block too. The spiderweb was just plain fun (all backstitched).


Of course all of this stitching has been done with Nancy's beautiful hand dyed floss. I have other embroidery projects I could probably work on. I want to be careful not to do too much in any given day however. {big sigh} I just hope all this restraint pays off sooner rather than later!

7 comments:

  1. Years ago Hugh fell on his shoulder, and it took 12 months to heal, probably should have insisted on a MRI at the time.guess it was a tear, they tried injections, strapping, and physio.But time does heal. Hope you can manage with all the restrictions it imposes, and will heal a lot faster than Hugh's did.The roosters, love that panel,and what bargains with the fabrics.All good therapy to look at, pat and ponder meanwhile.

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  2. Well done, your stitches look beautiful!

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  3. I can imagine you are well and truly over being a patient... I wish there was something that could speed up the healing process... in the meantime, hang in there... I love the chicken panel, it's a great addition to any stash!! Your embroidery is looking good... take care xx

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  4. Oh, how frustrating! Maddening to be unable to do the things you love, to be limited to a small corner of your creative kingdom. I'm so sorry it's taking such a long time despite your good behaviour and care. I do love the Mister's chicken choice, and I'm with him on the favourite panel. I hope to see what you make of it as soon as your shoulder lets you. Take care, my friend, and I wish you fully healed very soon.

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  5. How awesome that your hubby also chose fabric! So sorry to hear the shoulder is still being such a problem -- and you are so right about TV (not worth mentioning really). And Reading gets tiresome after a while . . . hang in there. It has to improve a bit soon!

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  6. Twelve to thirteen dollars would be a good sale price for quilting fabric here!! I approve of your husbands taste in chicken fabric. I envy you your choice of cheap fabric but I don't envy you your shoulder problems. I hope all will be well soon.

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  7. Difficult though it be, I think you are wise to be cautious and slow about re-entry. The poultry panel reminded me of a quilt I started once, a poultry patchwork quilt. I gathered every patchwork block I could find and started to make them. I got stuck when I had to decide whether to make more than one block if the same block had different poultry names (ie, hen and chicks, goose and goslings, duck and ducklings). should I have one color for chickens, anothr for ducks? I set it aside and it awaits a decision and action.

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