A random sort of post to start a new month.
1. The last couple of days I've realized that a case of the blahs has had me in its grip for part of April and most of May. I didn't get a lot done, I was grumpy and grouchy, and it was hard to get started on anything. My energy level was lower than it's been in years too. We had very hot weather, which always gives me the blahs; we had cooler than normal weather too. At any rate, this weekend everything started looking normal and rosy, I had energy to burn, I got things done and I'm happier for it.
2. My knitting UFOs and other UFFOs have not gotten as badly out of control as I feared - yet! Now that the blahs are gone, I'm feeling a serious case of startitis coming on. As was pointed out in KnitTalk, startitis can be defined as Hatikah , which is Hebrew for Hope. That's how I'm viewing startitis this time around. I even started and finished the knitting on W from Knitty in May!
3. I'm an introvert and I need quiet and solitude to recharge my batteries. I know this, and yet there are times when I want to be social and life gives me chances to do things and be with people and my social batteries get completely drained. (Interestingly enough, at least to me, the last time I did the Myers-Briggs assessment, my scores had changed a bit. I'm still INFJ, but my scores in most areas are very close. Only 2 points separate Extrovert and Introvert, Thinking and Feeling, and Judging and Perceiving. Sensing and Intuition, however, are very clear and separated by 16 points.)
4. Joan came over today and we spent some time on the back porch, knitting and chatting. She checked out the raised beds, and says I need to post photos because they've grown a lot since she last saw them perhaps a month ago. Noted, and I will do that this week.
5. Back to UFOs: if you'd asked, I would have said there were at least 40 of them and probably more. I counted and there are actually fewer than 30! If I can get really busy this week, I might be able to get 4 or 5 more off the list! The knitting is done and only finishing remains on them; in fact, Kenobi just needs to have the sleeves set in! That would be really good!

6. We've had our first salads from the garden already, and our first zucchini (Roly Poly or Eight Ball variety). This week I'll need to pick Romano (Italian) beans, and snow peas (again). Tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers are setting fruit, and the corn is almost 3 feet tall. I still want to plant pumpkins and gourds, and there's still time for that.
7. This crop of lettuce and chard will be finished this week. I'm going to replant that raised bed with New Zealand spinach, lettuce, carrots, radishes and herbs. We will need to buy lettuces at the Farmer's Market for a few weeks, but that's OK.
8. Going through yarn in the attic was a surprise in several ways. I found yarn that I'd forgotten about (even though it's on my 14 page spreadsheet) and found enough of several yarns to make sweaters that just rose to the top of my list. In fact, I found enough of 21 different yarns to make 1 sweater (West Side Raglan from Oat Couture) which may make it my next mindless commute and open mic project. It's the sort of thing I wear for work year round, with slacks or skirts, with or without a jacket. And it would be a great use for some of the "interesting" yarn I bought with no clear plan in mind. The pattern is long sleeved, but short sleeves or 3/4 sleeves would be easy to do as well. And it would certainly showcase the "interesting" yarn.
9. I also found enough of the specified yarn (!) for several patterns just earmarked. Based on a couple of blog entries by Bonne Marie Burns of ChicKnits, I revisited several issues of Vogue Knitting, from about 2001 to 2004. What a treasure trove! Not only was the Shirley Paden sweater Bonne Marie did on my list (but the turtleneck and pullover aspects had me convinced it would never work), but now I know how to convert it into something I'll actually wear. There are several other wonderful sweaters in the 2 issues I chose to work with for now, and I'll highlight those in the next few entries.
10. Notice the wonderful clips holding W together? They're little hair clips from the Dollar Tree, 24 for a buck (I think that's right, it might be 48). Whatever! It's a lot cheaper than the special ones sold in knitting stores and catalogs. I'm finally learning to embrace my inner thriftyness! (I'd like to take credit for this, but Ann of SheepShots found and blogged this several months ago.)