Thank you Mrs MC retired to bed at 11.30pm and I was wide awake and decided to paint so just over the hour. Hope you have a great parkrun and enjoy the fry up.@Muddy Cyclist your painting of the clouds inspired by the Dorothy L Sayers quote is marvellous, can’t believe it took you just an hour.
Too modest Sir. I get the feeling you had a vision, if you will, of this thread very much along the lines of the debating society you enjoyed so much at school. If not it gladdens my, oh so cynical , heart to think that way. Either way, we are all indebted to you for creating this safe place. I just need to up my no platforming meds to avoid spoiling it.I cannot find another thread that comes close to those stats and it's all down to you.
Down to your vision and it works.6.6 this morning but it's my own fault for snacking late
1000 pages, nearly 20,000 posts, and over 282,000 views in less than a year. I cannot find another thread that comes close to those stats and it's all down to you. Your stories give life to our shared diabetic journey, you show just how unique we are in our relationship to and management of this pernicious disorder. Congratulations to you all
@Muddy Cyclist I'd be honoured to sit at your table, I miss the long debates of days gone by.
My school was a very old fashioned grammar school and we had a debating 'society' for after-school activities. It was a favourite of mine and a place where I learnt that a good debate can be pursued with equal vigour irrespective of viewpoint. Our teacher would make us change sides multiple times in a debate to stop us becoming too rigid. Years later it stood me in good stead and the other forum can often look like a battleground when it actually is no more than an intellectual version of rugby
When completing my degree we had to participate in the mooting society we were given a fictitious case/client to represent in teams of two...I was so looking forward to it until I realised with a surname that came at the end of the alphabet (like mine) and an odd number of students in class my team consisted of one...me!My school was a very old fashioned grammar school and we had a debating 'society' for after-school activities
Too modest Sir. I get the feeling you had a vision, if you will, of this thread very much along the lines of the debating society you enjoyed so much at school. If not it gladdens my, oh so cynical , heart to think that way. Either way, we are all indebted to you for creating this safe place. I just need to up my no platforming meds to avoid spoiling it.
Good experiment look forward to seeing more. Of this one I like the sharper and stronger colour of the non watercolour paper. Also looks very much like some of the tree lined trails of Cannock Chase.Okay...
Fbg at 3:20 am is 7.1
when I went to make a cuppa early yesterday evening, I came back to the couch to find a totally fast asleep cat, Popeye, between my Berber fleece blankets. I wasn't going to disturb him, and so I took myself off to bed, expecting Popeye to rouse himself (he usually does when he realises I have gone to another location) and come and settle n the bed. But he didn't. So that was me waking up every couple of hours to check he was okay. He always seems to be awake normally, literally checking on me.
3am I went and checked on him again. He was definitely breathing (he is old, though doesn't act or look it, 28 in May he will be). Went back to bed, and moments later someone is mithering me, patting my face with his paw. So, we go off to the kitchen because he probably wants to use the cat tray after such a sound sleep (the kitchen door is always kept shut at night, I do shut all doors at night for fire safety, but if Popeye has decided to sleep in another room, then I leave interconnecting door open so he can reach me.
So, I am up very early painting...
This morning I tried doing two paintings at once. They are on totally different papers. One is the A5 sketch book I am using which is a mixed media paper. The other is a blank white index card.
The mixed media paper absorbs the watercolour paints and they look more hazy, which is a great effect for some subjects. The index card is not absorbent, the watercolours sit more on the surface, making the painting a little darker (which is what I was aiming for), and because of the nature of the index card (not meant for painting on) I cannot work into the painting in the same way as I do with the mixed media paper. But that is fine, I just have to find ways of working round it to get the effects I want.
The reason I am going small is because I belong to Postcrossing where random strangers send random strangers a picture postcard. The site issues you with an address. More people are asking for a handmade card on their bio. And I would like to do that. But send a painting. The painting will have to be postcard sized. And the reason why I am doing it on index card is so that I can glue it on a conventional postcard so I can post it. Some people still want you to send the postcard as a conventional postcard, others want you to put it in an envelope to protect it.
Anyway, over the last month, I have mailed myself a few of my paintings literally exposed on the postcard. They were pasted on to the postcard. I wanted to see if it was feasible without damage. To test it further, I out it in a postbox exposed to the elements on a Saturday, and it wouldn't get collected until the Monday afternoon. Each postcard survived out postal system intact and no damage at all to the exposed painting. One was a minimalist acrylic painting of Mount Fuji, another was a Chinese black ink drawing, the third was a collage of my painting to create something different...so it is feasible. I do have loads of ideas, far too many...I used to think ideas would run out, but they don't, ideas are unlimitless...they are are bottomless pit...
View attachment 39027
Top one is sketch book. Bottom one is index card.
I will do this for a few days, two a day to see how it goes.
Now to get started with the day...I have some work I promised to do for someone...
Have fun
Take care
Hugs if you would like some...
6.6 this morning but it's my own fault for snacking late
1000 pages, nearly 20,000 posts, and over 282,000 views in less than a year. I cannot find another thread that comes close to those stats and it's all down to you. Your stories give life to our shared diabetic journey, you show just how unique we are in our relationship to and management of this pernicious disorder. Congratulations to you all
@Muddy Cyclist I'd be honoured to sit at your table, I miss the long debates of days gone by.
My school was a very old fashioned grammar school and we had a debating 'society' for after-school activities. It was a favourite of mine and a place where I learnt that a good debate can be pursued with equal vigour irrespective of viewpoint. Our teacher would make us change sides multiple times in a debate to stop us becoming too rigid. Years later it stood me in good stead and the other forum can often look like a battleground when it actually is no more than an intellectual version of rugby
Thank you @PenguinMum@gennepher your sketch book trees were like willowy ladies dancing to me. It must be tricky to scale down to postcard size but will bring joy to the recipients. Glad that Popeye was fine and dandy even if it gave you interrupted sleep.
Oh great @Muddy Cyclist !Good experiment look forward to seeing more. Of this one I like the sharper and stronger colour of the non watercolour paper. Also looks very much like some of the tree lined trails of Cannock Chase.
Thanks SL it is just a slight cough & I've slept pretty well through the last week...feeling so much better this morning & for the last few days...I'll still have a look for pholcodine just in case...I take warfarin so have to be careful of what I take otherwise my INR levels go haywire...I know with the Lemsip all in one I'm fairly safe so I sacrifice one for the other.If a cough is preventing sleep I use pholcodine. It's a cough suppressant. Take only at night so sleep is possible. Comes in sugar free version as well. Ofc this depends whether you can buy it where you live.
Sometimes things just stack against us and we wonder why, even despair, funny old life, but I'm sure you will bounce back and in the meantime deal with whatever is thrown at you. However here is a wish for an easier time ahead.29-02-2020
8am FBG 5.7
@HarryBeau If a cough is preventing sleep I use pholcodine. It's a cough suppressant. Take only at night so sleep is possible. Comes in sugar free version as well. Ofc this depends whether you can buy it where you live.
@Muddy Cyclist thanks for the hug. Even more under the weather this morning. In both meanings of the phrase. Woke to lashing rain, howling winds, puddles in living room and kitchen. Plus a fresh wave of maggots. In both rooms. Not the best start to the day.
Later discovered next doors cat (the baguette thief) had been shut in our car overnight. Possibly up to 18 hours. Thankfully no puddles in there.
Fbg was 6.1 today. Far too high and quite demotivating when I consider the prospect of so little food, such high numbers and so little pleasure from all this discipline for the rest of my life. I seem to have reached my lowest weight and best bg control so those rewards have gone. Adjusting to the new normal is hard. I think the full implication of the BUT implied in T2 isn't inevitably progressive if you go LC has finally slapped me in the face. A little odd to wish everyone a great day after that but I think I'm capable of genuinely holding both those thoughts at once.
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