* purge a great deal of un-needed, unused, or unhelpful things from my house and my life
- at least a third of the junk/fabric/etc in the basement sewing room which makes it too crowded to use as a sewing room!
- there are still bins of baby clothes and toys in the attic, and my youngest is 5 now
- I ask you, truly, how many sweaters does a person really need?
* practice patience
- pretty self explanatory
* try to be kinder
- again- easy to understand. As I tell the children, kindness counts.
- a little less sarcasm and a bit more encouragement - for everyone
* finish painting the kids bathroom
- I got the walls done in an afternoon this summer, but never got the trim painted. The walls are bright blue and the trim dull off-white. It will look so much cleaner with the glossy bright white I have for it.
* paint the kitchen
- We have been living with the former owner's pale blue kitchen walls for five years and it is time to put my own mark on this. The former owners were wall paper fanatics, and I have stripped the borders from one bathroom, the hall, and the kitchen, as well as the tiny flowered wallpaper from my two sons' bedrooms, and the mallard duck wall paper from the other bathroom.
- There is still a lot of their choices to change.
- We did repaint the foyer from builder's beige to yellow, but had to stop before the second coat when our youngest entered his Picasso phase and started wall drawing.
- The dining room had old lady floral wall paper with a blue background and pink flowers - it's gotta go!
- Then the piece de resistance is the living room which has a white on white patterned paper. This would be lovely, except when they hung the paper, instead of butting the edges up against each other, they overlapped it, so nearly every seam is lifting, and in the afternoon and evening, when the lighting is right, every seam is visible.
- My daughter has a wallpapered room as well, but her's was well done with lovely paper and although she wants us to strip it so she can paint her room purple, we've told her she is on the bottom of the list.
* knit a complete pair of socks
- I started a pair about a year and a half ago. I saw some sock yarn for sale and on a whim, bought it and started knitting the pattern found on the label. I stopped somewhere in the middle of the heel gusset and i now have no idea where to begin again. I also did something with the gauge because they look like they will be large enough for a diabetic person with swollen ankles. I think I may have to rip out what I have and start from scratch!
* knit an aran sweater
- I talked about this last year, but realized I needed a book on cables and such in order to learn how to knit the fancy stitches required for the sweater. I have a gorgeous sweater that my Irish godmother had made for me when I was fourteen - unfortunately, although it still fits from side to side and top to bottom, my arms are about 5 inches too long for it. So I found some fisherman's wool yarn and will start with that. I have also got some delicious wool fiber so I can spin the yarn for a second one after I get the technique down for the first. If I do not make myself crazy with the first sweater - this "test sweater" will be for me - I hope to knit one for each of the children.
* losing a few pound wouldn't hurt me either!
Good luck with your resolutions, goals, hopes and other plans for the coming year.
Good luck with your resolutions! They sound doable, not out of reach. I've never knit an aran sweater, so I'll be interested to mark your progress when you start.
ReplyDeleteAs for the painting, oh I don't like it, but it sure makes a room look nicer. Actually Hubby is the painter in our family, I'm the cheerleader.
Happy New Year to you and yours, Suzy