Thursday 20 September 2018

The Reading Challenge

It is rather obvious that I have been quite quiet recently on my blog here, and with the start of my podcast, it has really been left behind. The podcast has taken over the purpose of the blog, and recently I have been posting shownotes for the podcast and links, and not much of anything else.

My plan from now is to change that. I will still have my podcast, (I am enjoying it a lot, and it feels a lot better way to show you what I am up to) but I intend to post more in-depth notes on each podcast and project within it on here, and only the minimum on Youtube. I may even include the in depth notes on Ravelry too for you who are on there - if you are find the podcast page under the pages tab and search for the Lemmon Juicer Podcast.

What I intend to do for this blog now is to create some posts that are more discussions on what I have been getting up to, still focused on making and crafting, but less of the "I made this" and more of the "This is what I think and enjoy". I really hope that this is more interesting to you and will mean that there is more content on this blog that you will enjoy to read.

So I am going to start off with something that I have started that isn't really a making project, but it's a challenge I have set myself that I wish to share with you.

I have challenged myself to read 25 books in a year. Now that may not seem like a lot, and I am aware that usually the challenge is 100 books. But I'm starting small and keeping my goal something that I think I can achieve, because there is nothing more disheartening then an insurmountable challenge where you are only going to be disappointed in the end. Maybe, if I ace this challenge then we can work up to 100 books. But only time will tell.

The other interesting thing about this is the fact that I have not started this at the beginning of the year. I started my challenge on the 1st of September. I did think about this a little bit. I have only just finished my education and I am now working for a living (and loving it), and as almost a last goodbye to starting the year in September, I thought that it was a nice time to start a challenge.

As it was around the end of August that I was dreaming about keeping track of how many books I read in a year, I realised that I would read more books if I had an incentive to read more. I read for pleasure, and I love to read. But if there are other things that need doing, then I won't read. I have gone months not reading a single book because there are other seemingly more important things that need doing. This now gives me a reason to sit down and read, and something that I need to set aside some time for - and I love it.

The very last reason I decided to start in September, was the thinking that we spend a lot of our time waiting for the beginning of the year to make new goals and set ourselves challenges and resolutions for the new year. Whilst for some things that is the best way of doing them (I have a few things waiting for then) occasionally we put off doing things until the 1st January and they are forgotten, or the passion and drive for them is forgotten or dwindles. So, I grabbed the passion I had, and the motivation, and I picked the 1st of the month as a new start and I went for it. I probably never would have if I didn't.

It is important to remember that it doesn't really matter where you start your year from as long as you have the motivation and that it is a good time for you. I feel that now is a better time than any!

The very first thing I did towards this challenge was to create a way of keeping track of my reading. I decided that I would record the book I had read and when I finished it. I could have included a lot more information, but for now, this will do. Then it was a case of deciding how to track it, I have a bullet journal, and I am a visual person, I like to be able to see things and if I can see my progress then that will keep me motivated and on track. So. I decided that instead of having a bullet journal page dedicated to the challenge, I would make a chart on an A4 piece of paper, and I would put it up next to my bookshelf.

Whilst I love my bullet journal for keeping me on track and including whatever I feel like putting in there, I do tend to forget about things that I keep in it. The problem is that I can shut the journal. I close the cover and then I can't see it, so it gets forgotten. I struggle with my habit trackers, because they are not always on the same page that my weekly is on, so I forget it's there and don't fill it in. The wall chart for the books was to keep it in the front of my mind and keep me focused. So far it is working.

My boyfriend made a rough calculation for me and said that I would have to read about one book every two weeks to keep on track. That figure was initially quite worrying. I didn't know if I could do that and wandered if I had set myself up to fail. But I came around to the thinking that there wasn't really any point of an easy challenge. If it was easy, then it wasn't really a challenge, right?  So with this in mind, I pencilled lightly into my chart the theoretical two week "Due By" date of each book. This should keep me on track.

The first book I decided to read was The Tales of Beedle the Bard, by JK Rowling. One of the three small charity books she wrote as part of her bigger Harry Potter series, and a book that features in the books. Now I love Harry Potter and I loved the childish part of me that was satisfied when reading that book. What is great about it, is that after every one of the tails, there is a section explaining the moral of each story and how it shaped the wizarding world, as well as the variations of the stories that were told throughout the ages reflecting what life was like then for the wizarding children who read them.

I read this first book in two days. It's a small but loveable book. It was then I realised that, whilst the mathematical calculation was one book every two weeks, what it really depended on was the size of each book. I could read The Tales of Beedle the Bard 25 times over in 50 days. But that is not the point. I suddenly became less anxious of the challenge I set myself, realising that I could effectively "borrow" leftover time from other books, to read the bigger books. So I was proud of myself already, feeling ahead of the game, and now choosing the next book to read.

I decided on variety and chose to read a book that was most common in the era of steam railways.  The British Transport Commission, which oversaw the railways when they were nationalised from the big four companies into British Railways released a book as a guide for all its locomotive staff. Called the Handbook For Railway Steam Locomotive Enginemen.

Now I volunteer on a steam railway and am involved in the firing and running of steam engines, and this book was given to me to give me more of an understanding into steam engines, and to help fuel that curiosity I had about how they worked and the best ways to operate them. It's been on a bookshelf waiting to be read for a little while, so it was the next book to read.

This book, being a little bit bigger than the first one, did take longer to read. It was also the end of the off shift and I was back in work again. So it got a good reading every break and lunch time. I really did enjoy reading it, and it was useful to begin to understand some of the intricate workings of the different types of valve gear and braking systems that are in use, or rather were in use.

Whilst I enjoyed the book, I did struggle a little bit. I'm not particularly good at reading reference or non-fiction books. Books that do not have an easy to follow plot I find difficult to read and that might be partially down to dyslexia. But I was very proud of myself when I got through this book with 8 days to spare. That means another 8 days I can spend on the next book if I need to right? This was a real boost to my motivation, and I decided to re-read a book for the next one.

This year is the 20th anniversary of the second Harry Potter book, and for my birthday my lovely best friend got me the Hufflepuff edition of the book. Having finished the last book on the train home from the Warner Bro's studio having seen The Making of Harry Potter exhibition, I really wanted to start this book. I am currently still reading it and have made considerable progress in the past few days. I have been taking it to work and have been managing almost a chapter per break time. So that is almost a guaranteed three chapters a day. This and the fact that I love the stories is helping me fly through the book.

Once I've got this one down, I'll be back to excitedly choosing the fourth book. I'm not sure what sort of book I am going to go for. I have plenty of books that need reading and am on a little bit of a book buying ban as I really need to get through some. But there are a few old favourites that are poking their heads up wanting to be read again.

What is your favourite book? Or your favourite books? Any recommendations? Or would you like to join me in trying to read 25, or maybe more books in a year?


Wednesday 19 September 2018

Lemmon Juicer Podcast Episode 6: Paintshop



Welcome to Episode 6, settle down with a cup of your favourite beverage and we'll get started.

Instagram: @lemmonjuicer
Ravelry: sockbug97
Ravelry Group: Lemmon Juicer Podcast
Blog: www.lemmonjuicer.blogspot.co.uk

Finished Objects:
Necker Socks: https://ravelry.com/patterns/library/necker
- These socks are from my Op Art sock book, which is a brilliant book full of different sock patterns that have been created to form simple optical illusions. These ones have really not gone very well, as I have learnt the hard way, that textured patterns and self-striping yarn do not mix.

Emma's Project Bag: A small bag, simply made. No pattern.
- For this I really should have looked up what I was meant to be doing. But I didn't and I've ended up with a bag that is alright. But it is really not the best. next time I'm going to make one so much better and actually measure the fabric I'm cutting.

Breathe MAL:https://www.ravelry.com/projects/Sockbug97/breathemal
- This is a Make-A-Long I have entered, and I am so glad I have, it is run by the girls from the Knit3Together podcast, and they are great people who want to talk about their knitting as well as mental health to reduce the stigma around talking about it. The more people who know that it is okay to talk, the more people who will hopefully get the help and support they need.

Another Bear Hat:https://www.ravelry.com/projects/Sockbug97/polar-bear-hat-2
- A quick and simple crochet hat pattern. This time a second hat, in the same yarn and in much the same pattern. I decided that the ears were just a little bit too small on the first hat, so I've made some amendments and the outcome is just as good as I hoped.

WIPs:
Giraffe Cross-Stitch: A cross stitch kit given to me ages ago, I'm afraid I haven't got any other details.
- A quick little giraffe kit given to me a while ago, and has been a languishing WIP for a very long time now. I finally decided that if I am to get onto making my huge cross stitch I really need to finish all the little ones first. This has made considerable progress recently and is tantalisingly close to the end.

Necker Leftovers: https://www.ravelry.com/projects/Sockbug97/leftovers-sock---necker
- I decided when I first started knitting socks, that for every pair of socks I make, with the left overs I was going to make myself one shorty sock. I have four at the moment. The idea is to have loads of odd socks that can remind me of all the pairs I have made. And the leftovers from those socks? Well scrappy socks of course!

Fishtail Headband: https://www.ravelry.com/projects/Sockbug97/fishtail-braided-headband
- This was an idea to try out for keeping my ears and some of my head warm at work. It is proving a lovely to knit pattern, it has a simple cable pattern which is complex enough to enjoy working on it, but simple enough to knit through it quickly.

In The Shed (But really on the craft table):
Spitfire: https://www.airfix.com/uk-en/shop/themes/spitfire/supermarine-spitfire-mkia-starter-set-1-72.html
- The spitfire is one of my favourite aircraft and modeling has been something I have enjoyed to do for a while. I just never have the time to get around to doing it. The spitfire is quite an easy make, the only particularly complicated bit being the painting. Which I have attempted to show you here. Although I have just come straight home from work when doing it, and it is a little late.

Knit3Together Podcast:
Ravelry: https://ravelry.com/groups/knit3together-podcast
Instagram: @knit3togethertts
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt4eBPnJdIDk36qgNC70QfA
Go check these lovely ladies out. You can listen to their lovely northern accent and join in with their giveaways and their real talk about mental health and all things knitty.

Music:
"Inspired" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/