From the category archives:

Blog Archive

Where is the Love??

by Dana Mekler on June 9, 2011

Dearest Knitting Diary, the following is a true tale of bullying, discrimination, and appalling inequity.  Although I was stunned into inaction yesterday when it happened, the subsequent anger-aneurism boiling my blood hours later forced me to contemplate the close encounter once again.  So, Diary, it comes to this: I am reduced to writing my wrath, as a way of leveling the playing field…

I was in the school parking lot 15 minutes before the release bell rang, ergo, at the very end of the school day.  While the school’s field is large enough to land the Space Shuttle, the parking lot is inexplicably the smallness of an inner city Jack-in-the-Box.  Naturally, 90% of the spaces are marked “staff”.  But when the “staff” spots are vacant, especially in the last few minutes of the school day, it is fair game for a lowly parent to park there, and knit of course, while she waits. So, there I was, backed into a prime spot, knitting for Comicon. Comicon!!!! Along comes a brand new $50K Mercedes, dealer plates, passing by all of the vacant spots, driven by a teacher whom I recognize, only because my son has been a captive at this school since 2nd grade.  (Mercifully, he is in fifth, and due to be ‘promoted’ to (gasp!) middle school this week.) Fool that I am, I smile and wave at the apparently affluent teacher because she is staring at me.  I got a quick hot flash of shame for parking there, but then I thought of several factors: the bell is going to ring in a few minutes therefore I am allowed to park here; there are MANY other vacant “staff” spots still available to her; and since she just drove on campus with a parent in her passenger seat, she must have been off today (paid substitute). So, I return to my knitting.

Tap Tap Tap. “Hi, this is technically MY parking space since I am a teacher here, so I’m going to have to ask you to move.” Dumbfounded, stunned, and ashamed all over again, I pulled out, then backed up only 5 spaces, and parked in another “staff” spot, of which there were still at least 10 available.  A spot she passed in her Benz when she was creeping up to me, but apparently not good enough for her.  This is where reparations are actually due: I let loose a tirade that nearly deafened my teenager,  who came along to pick up his little brother  but became the only unwitting witness to this crime. It may have repercussions on his finals the next few days. He’s never heard those swears uttered by his mom before.

It was my Bell, California moment Diary: I was bullied by my own tax dollars.  And when I think about it, the fact that my taxes pay for the teachers’ salaries (and judging by the Benz, slush funds as well), and with all of the (mandatory) volunteer work parents do at the public schools, does that not technically make us ‘staff’ also, even if indirectly?  At least for the final 15 minutes of the third-to-last-day of school?

Now parked in steerage in my oh-so-ghetto economy car, paralyzed with rage and therefore unable to knit (it is a kind and gentle craft after all), I pondered the apparent caste system that was ruling the untouchables of the younger-generation teachers.  In another glaring example of the dire need for education reform, we are slaves of our own machine: cushy, iron-clad pensions doled out whether or not performance reviews or good behavior earn it.  Every year the teachers hand out flyers of protest, threaten strikes because of their hardship, and cry “Budget cuts!” but they remain, lose their manners, and drive luxury cars.

May God smite me with the pensions and security of a public school teacher’s plight, supported by an infinite stream of volunteer parents and union-bought politicians!!!

I tried to calm myself by remembering that my son’s outstanding fifth grade teacher, the most beloved in the school for merit and experience and kindness, drives a 30-year old VW Rabbit with probably 800,000 miles on it.  By choice.  There is still good in this world.

My teenager, ever the wise and drama-free presence in my life, admonished my overreaction (who, me?? Overreact??) and reiterated that it is, technically, a teacher’s spot.  The he exited the car to go extract his brother from behind the ‘East Gate’.

Hmmm.  He’s right of course.  But why weren’t the other spots good enough for her?  Why did she go out of her way to inconvenience and piss-off a parent (=taxpaying employer of public servants), as if I was loitering illegally? Why would anyone risk the inevitable and subsequent bad karma? How could she possibly have the countenance to be rude from behind the wheel of her new Mercedes, to bully me out of the spot, just because she could? Where is the love?

In order for me to move on, I must find a way to compartmentalize this encounter, embrace and accept some reasonable catalyst that triggered this incident. And since none of the aforementioned makes any sense at all, it must be that she saw me knitting, and was having none of it.  Not in her parking lot, not during school hours (even though she was coming from off-site), and not as long as she had the power to stop it, even in the last few minutes of the school year. This was an act of blatant knitscrimination: She caught me knitting in a “staff” spot, was overcome with malevolence (or jealousy? or disgust?) based on her own past epic-fail with the craft, and used her uber-unionized, hyper-pensionated powers to oust me from her realm.

Makes more sense than an employee calling caste rank on her employer, right?

Knit well and prosper! And you shall accrue good karma!

 

{ 4 comments }

Vote “YES” on Prop DMK

by Dana Mekler on October 21, 2010

After lamenting for months about the seemingly infinite elections in my adopted state of Cali, I finally relented and read the voter’s guide that came in the mail.  As expected, prop after prop is offered, each wackier than the next, each more misleading and diabolical than even those offered in the last election (and those were tough to top!).  But it wasn’t the Pot Prop that shocked me this time, as the hype had been playing out in the media for months.  It was Prop 23 that pushed me into a near-catatonic state of denial.  Its basic premise suggests we take 30 years off our anti-pollution strategy and subsequently the unemployment rate will magically and instantly drop to 5.5%.  (As if the current econ-crisis was caused by the sudden shut-down of thousands of emissions-belching factories, instead of the fund-siphoning and salary/pension-hoarding by the ‘civil servants’ we erroneously voted into office ages ago…).

So I offer a kinder, gentler prop.  A prop that offers true order and a real solution to ALL of our problems: economic, environmental, social, etc…

Proposition DMK: Legalizes Same-Craft Marriage and Cross-Crafting in the (apparently sovereign) state of California.

  • A “YES” on DMK means: same-craft couples can marry legally and be protected under the same laws and enjoy the same benefits as multi-craft couples.  No longer must homo-craft couples feign ‘opposite’ crafts in order to live as hetero-crafters.  They may enter the craft store together, shop the same yarn sales, buy the same pattern books, without being asked to respect the “only one per household” rule during coupon week.
  • ADENDUM: “YES” on DMK protects the freedom of the crafter to cross-craft or swing from one craft group to another.  Under proposition DMK an individual is free to join multiple crafting groups (a.k.a. circles, covens, cartels, hives, etc.) as this is no longer considered a moral hazard under California law.  Shunning a cross-crafter (i.e. one who knits and quilts for instance) from your group is punishable by law, and subject to up to 2 years suspension from Michael’s and all other craft havens.  A second offense will result in immediate deportation to Arizona.
  • A “NO” on DMK means: the economy could remain in its prolonged coma due to crafters in hiding.  The environment will suffer from the methane emissions-overload by unshorn sheep due to lower demand of yarn.  The majority of future sweaters will be acrylic and machine-knit offshore, in countries that condone child labor and sweat shops.  Violent crime will undoubtedly spike and thus drain the resources of law enforcement and border patrol.

Election Day is November 2nd!  Don’t forget to knit!

{ 4 comments }

Listomania!

September 27, 2010

Dearest Knitting Diary, The fall season (although it’ll be summer in San Diego for many weeks yet) brings the comfort of slipping back into disciplined routine with the kids and their school schedules, the joy of all the holidays one after another so we are always looking forward to the next, and the sheer panic [...]

Read the full article →

Teen Angst Managed: The iBeanie Elates!

July 27, 2010

It was bound to happen, especially by his fourteenth birthday (damn, I’m OLD!)  My son now towers over me at nearly 6-ft tall, and looks more like a man, or a tree with a fro, than a teen.  He’s a good kid,  not spoiled, works for his own money, and thus has many of the [...]

Read the full article →

Dear Knitting Diary…Pets Rule

June 29, 2010

Dearest Knitting Diary, Sometimes when I have the opportunity to people-watch, I cannot resist the urge to see the similarities between humans and their pets.  They walk alike in that they have a similar gate or a sympathy limp, betraying their ages and battle wounds.  They resemble each other in girth, shape, coloration, or facial [...]

Read the full article →

Dear Knitting Diary…Never Too Old

June 7, 2010

Dearest Knitting Diary, I’m not sure if you are aware of this but my Grandma is 95! My cousins and I went to visit her last month in her maximum-security resort fortress.  It’s tucked away in Inverrary (the jewel of Fort Lauderdale, Fla) in an ancient forest.  Her fortress is manned by the most wonderful [...]

Read the full article →

Man-sweater, Why Do You HATE Me?

May 18, 2010

It’s inevitable.  Yet at first, when your knit-addiction sets in, your husband eyes your needles suspiciously, panicked that whatever natty monstrosity you’re attempting to knit will be designated for him.  His fears are not abated as gradually your knitted ‘gifts’ start appearing on all the children and pets and girlfriends you have.  He knows his [...]

Read the full article →

Knitting As Social Action

May 10, 2010

Knitters and Crocheters UNITE!  We have a chance to do something extraordinary for our communities, and I promise it will be fun, even if it does mean setting aside our personal uber-important projects for a day. Every community has organizations that distribute basic essentials to the underprivileged or unfortunate.  My Knitting Circle will be knitting [...]

Read the full article →

Knitisms, Part Deux

April 19, 2010

Yarndevous: a gathering of yarn-addicted crafters, all armed with sticks, hooks, and infinite stories of the travails and/or victories of their knitventures. Knitventure: taking on a risky project that, based on your current knitting aptitude, will either make you a hero or a martyr (see “kniticide”).  An example of this would be a knitling, upon [...]

Read the full article →

Blocking: A Necessary Evil

April 10, 2010

There comes a time in every knitter’s sojourn when they are faced with a curling, folding, and generally misbehaving piece of finished work. The knitter has no choice: it must be blocked. Most knitting books will have you believing that blocking requires a peg-board, nails, spray bottle, the patience of a saint, and the Shroud [...]

Read the full article →
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes