Sunday, May 23, 2010

It's Easy Being Green

My previous post referred to our guild's challenge for the quilt show in October. Here are my first blocks:



They have been fun to make: no rules, no specific cutting or piecing. I just cut a bunch of strips and I throw them together within a few guidelines. I want one strip of the dark blue on each block. (It may not be easy to see in the pictures - one of the dark strips is a bit darker than the others.) Each block has an even number of strips, so one "end" has dark strip and the other has a light blue strip. The "background" (light) denim is the fabric from the two pairs of jeans I cut up. The medium-dark blue denim is left over from a dog bed I made a couple of years ago. The darkest blue is a remnant bin find. So far, I have 10 blocks.

I am loosely following a pattern from an instruction kit called Quilt It Kit. I received the kit as a gift a few years ago and I pull it out every so often when I need a little different kind of inspiration. The projects are very contemporary and simple, but they are well designed.

Sewing along merrily, I am running out of denim from my jeans. I could stop at a wall hanging or lap quilt, but I really want a throw or bed size quilt. The colors fit in my guest room nicely. We'll see. I could add plain blocks. I could add wide strips of solid denim. I could find some more jeans in a similar color to cut up. We'll see.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Work-life balance

Work has been so crazy, I haven't had much time to work on anything else. This past week, for some reason, the patient load dropped off. I think it had to do with most of the MDs being at a conference. It was actually pleasant to be at work again. My resolve to leave weakens...

I had my interview and it went very well. I don't have the ideal experience they want in nursing but I think I clearly showed my energy, enthusiasm, and knowledge regarding well designed and usable software systems. I got a second interview, which has not been scheduled yet. To some degree, it will depend on what they want - others may have more med-surg nursing experience but few can top my background in the computer field.

It would mean a 5-day-a-week job working semi-normal hours, like 8-5 or something. It would be a return to a flexible schedule. This is a salaried position. These things are appealing in one way, but I am nervous about changing anyway. I like my weekdays off. I like working 12-hour shifts, mostly. I like the patient interaction.

Trust Karma. I must...trust...Karma....

So, I am better rested now and I can spend some time on my hobbies again. I worked on the Cherries Jubilee wall hanging quilt again - deciding upon and quilting the sashing areas. I've decided to start a quilt for the guild challenge - a recycled items quilt - by making a denim quilt. I cut up 2 pairs of jeans and I bought some denim from the remnant bin.

Yesterday I did a photo shoot with a friend for some more hat shots. I hope to post them soon and maybe sell a few more caps online.

And, I went shopping. I have wanted to buy some shoes and clothes recently, but I haven't taken the time. Now, I took the time and I feel relieved to have gotten that out of the way.

With the lousy weather this weekend, I am able to get these indoor things done without the pull of yard work and gardening. No need to feel guilty because I am not working on the yard - I can't anyway!!

Off to hobbies....

Friday, May 7, 2010

Love and Hate

Work continues to get worse and worse. Why does it always happen this way?

I don't know who thinks it's OK to schedule 23 patients in a unit with 22 beds, and not even account for those staying over night. There must be some logic I'm missing, and I'm a logical person.

But, I love the coworkers (well, using the term love in a general way). We have each other, and it bugs me to watch us all get hurt repeatedly. We try so hard. We get few kudos. We get lots of stress and pressure from the other units.

I hate having to leave, but the leaders will reap what they sow.

So, I'm going in for an extra shift Friday to help out my coworkers, not my manager. I have an interview on Wednesday. This is so unnecessary and so wrong.

And once again, I am taught that my gut feeling is right on. When the power was transfered on the management of this unit back in December, I was concerned for the unit, even though I couldn't define it specifically.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Retirement Party

Yesterday, my group at work had a retirement party for one of our colleagues. She worked at the hospital for 31 years and was ready to call it quits. It was a wonderful get together, something that people don't do as often as they should.

The Gifts

I suggested that a great gift for her would be a scrapbook. I made the suggestion knowing full well that I would have to make it. At least I had a co-conspirator who took almost all of the pictures. We were right: the scrapbook was a hit.

A scrapbook for someone's retirement is a wonderful idea. We didn't have access to photos from her work life prior to her employment in our unit, but we made a snapshot of work now, when she completed her career. I used a great book as my guideline: Scrapbooking Made Easy. This book gave me ideas for all the page layouts and embellishments. In fact, I copied many of the pages outright.

Most scrapbooking sites and books focus on: weddings, births, family heritage, graduation, vacations, or milestones of growing up. I didn't find many suggestions about retirement and work life, so I improvised.

Here are some other tips if you are thinking of making a retirement scrapbook:
  • Title page: with title, a quote or phrase that is meaningful to the situation, and a nice picture of her with one or two favorite coworkers.
    • Search for retirement quotes on Google.
  • Dedication page: a few sentences of dedication written by a trusted colleague who can write from the heart. Also include names of those who helped make the scrapbook.
  • Table of contents: which outlines how the book is organized.
    • I organized this book by topics: our unit, the units we work closely with (and have close working relationship with), other coworkers (such as former colleagues), and extracurricular activities.
  • A section for each item in the TOC.
  • An ending page
  • Appendix pages: the recipient can place a few more pictures or mementos on these pages. Another good idea is to attach vellum envelopes or sleeves to a page or two, into which the recipient can tuck retirement cards.
  • Use a scrapbook kit or a coordinated line of products for a cohesive look. You can buy these at Joann, Archiver's, Michaels or any other major craft/scrapbooking store.
  • Don't skimp on the text. Tell a story.
  • Label photos with people's names. That becomes priceless as time goes by.
  • Find an outgoing person to take the pictures (if that's not you).
  • Use online photo printing. I used Costco's: you upload the photos, order the prints, and go to the store to pick them up the next day. I would guess other photo services do this, too.
If you don't know how to scrapbook, many craft stores have free classes. You really don't need to be super crafty or creative to create attractive pages. It helps, but as long as you can cut a straight line, glue neatly, apply stickers, follow a page layout template, and either write neatly or print out text on your computer, you will succeed. And, there are tools available to help you with these things!

Warning

If you want to do a good job, this will take a lot of time: maybe 1-2 hours per page. My book had 20 pages. I started working on it in January. Yes it's laborious. But it's so personal, so special. If you think it will be well-received and if you really like the recipient, of course you should do it. Go for it! Work in teams if you have to!

Somehow I also got the responsibility for buying the other gift with the remaining money. I went to Things Remembered and found a pretty necklace. I got it engraved with her initial on the front and the date and occasion on the back.

The Dinner

We went to a chain restaurant that had a private room we could use. We had about 30 people there. This allowed us to be a little rowdy and noisy. Everyone ordered off the menu. Everyone paid for themselves - they were kind enough to allow us to have separate checks. We took good care of the serving staff who had to put up with a group of 30 women!

The Toast

And, because I am a bit sentimental, I prepared the following toast for our guest of honor:

May you always have work for your hands to do.


May your pockets hold always a coin or two.


May the sun shine bright on your windowpane.


May the rainbow be certain to follow each rain.


May the hand of a friend always be near you.


And may God fill your heart with gladness to cheer you.


I found the above blessing on the Internet when I was searching for quotes on retirement for the scrapbook. It was sweet and added a nice heartwarming touch to the evening. People thought I wrote that myself! Oh my, I'm not that creative!

Like I've said before, I'm really good at applying ideas. That I did, with most lovely results.

And, OK, OK, yeah, I liked the attention, too

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Simple Tribute

I've talked about my quilt a bit. I think it's time to show some pictures.

Here is my quilt as it hung for the play earlier this week.



Here is my quilt with the quilt that was hanging next to it.