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Irreversible Damage- Why I think you should not give or recommend this book to your child who is transgender, or anyone else, for that matter.

16 Feb

After my daughter came out as gender nonbinary and queer, an extended family member recommended that I read the book Irreversible Damage: the Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters by Abigail Shrier. This family member had not read the book but had heard about it on the Joe Rogan podcast.

I read the introduction of the book and dismissed it as inflammatory and hateful. But then, a transperson I love told me how their parent had tried to coerce them into reading it.  I found that some of my friends thought it was great, and one said, “Everyone should read it.”  I became really disturbed that parents might be trying to get their transgender and LGBTQ+ children to read this book.  I decided I had better read the whole book so I could credibly explain why I found it so disturbing, and to find out if it was really as bad as I had thought from the introduction.

It was worse.

When I finished reading the book and all the footnotes, it was bristling with post-it notes marking places I found problematic.  I typed up most of them, and the result was a six-page single spaced word document.  For the sake of clarity, I am not going to include every instance where Abigail Shrier uses language that misleads the reader or shows contempt for transgender teens.  I am going to write about my biggest concerns and give a few examples of each.  Be aware that there are far more problems than the few I am bringing forth here. My biggest concern is the way the author uses language to mock and show her contempt for trans-teens. The language she uses will not convince the trans-person you love that they are not transgender. It could really convince them that suicide is the only option they have. My second biggest concern is the way the author exaggerates the scientific support for her claims. An author who has to exaggerate support for her argument and actively belittle any evidence detracting from her claims cannot be trusted.

Misleading and Outright Dishonest use of Terms

On page after page, the author talks about teens being part of an “epidemic” and a “peer contagion” and a “craze.” While these words have non-derogatory scientific meanings, a teenager reading the book will not understand this. They will feel bludgeoned by these dehumanizing words. Even most adults reading the book will not be immune to the gut reaction of fear that comes hand-in-hand with the words “epidemic,” “contagion,” and “craze.”

In chapter one, Shrier claims that today’s “coddled” teenagers are less emotionally mature than previous generations. She will use this claim to justify calling 25-year-olds “teenagers” and “children.” She needs to do this so she can shock the reader later when she talks about children getting gender altering surgeries. The reader is picturing ten-year-olds and fifteen-year-olds, but the “children” Shrier talks about getting surgery were all over the age of twenty-one when they had surgery. In chapter 3, she refers to an influencer named Ash as a “teenager,” conveniently ignoring the fact that she told us a few paragraphs ago that Ash is in his late 20’s.

Mockery and Contempt

In the introduction, the author compares transgenderism to the Salem witch trials, the nervous disorders of the eighteenth century, and anorexia, bulimia, and “repressed memory” of the twentieth century. She says, “One protagonist has led them all, notorious for magnifying and spreading her own psychic pain, the adolescent girl.”

 In chapter 3, the author discusses the transgender influencers on YouTube who are supposedly convincing all these teenage girls that they are transgender also.  Every time the author quotes or summarizes a trans-influencer’s words, she inserts a sarcastic parenthetical statement that mocks or belittles the person she has just quoted.  Every time she refers to an interview she had with a transgender adult, she makes sure to tell the reader that she could tell what gender the person was born as just by looking at them or by listening to them talk. They can’t fool her, so they aren’t real.

Abigail Shrier never describes what a transgender teenager experiences because her audience is not transgender teens, and her goal is not understanding or compassion for transgender people.  Instead, in chapter 1 (page 18) Shrier describes the normal mental struggles of female teenagers, and how those have increased in recent decades. She talks about depression, social anxiety, and the lack of in-person interaction teens face. She says “puberty is hell,” bringing up cramping, bloating, and menstruation as experiences no girl or woman wants to go through. She says girls are developing physically at younger and younger ages, leading to sexual attention from men when they do not yet feel sexual or want to be so.

These are (unfortunately) normal struggles for women and girls. Shrier’s intended audience can identify with these normal struggles. So when Shrier makes the claim that girls who identify as transgender are over-reacting to a normal adolescent experience, and she expects the reader to agree that to “decide” to be transgender is an over-reaction to the experience that they, themselves, had as teenagers and weathered just fine. The problem is today’s adolescents and their “inability” to bear stress. The reader doesn’t realize that the experience of a transgender teen is completely different from the normal struggles Shrier describes.

The author makes use of sarcastic quotation marks frequently. In chapter 6, while discussing gender affirming care, Abigail Shrier says to parents, “Put out of your mind every manner of very understandable parental interjection.”

What a tragedy that woke therapists will criticize a parent for saying things like, “Are you out of your mind?” and “No I will not call you Clive” and “We don’t even eat hormone-raised beef, for God’s sake!”  The reader is expected to have had these same thoughts and to feel sorry for parents who cannot make these “very understandable” interjections.  These phrases communicate contempt and ridicule, two things which no parent should ever show to any child under any circumstances.

Then Shrier says, “You don’t want your child to hang ‘himself’ in the garage just because you accidentally referred to her as ‘Rebecca’.” Can you feel the mockery dripping out of these sentences of Shrier’s? Can you begin to see why I am so concerned about parents handing this book to their transgender child (be they fifteen or twenty-seven or forty)?

On page 79 Shrier belittles gender dysphoria by equating it with being a tomboy. Being a tomboy is not the same as gender dysphoria — as proven by Shrier, herself, on page 36 where she lists the DSM-5 definitions of gender dysphoria.

On page 98, Shrier tries to delegitimize body dysphoria by equating it to a woman looking in the mirror and being shocked that she has more wrinkles than she remembered.  Shrier deliberately downplays actual dysphoria, which is much different than “lugging around a body we wouldn’t have chosen.” If you will listen to an actual person who has gender dysphoria describe what it is like, you will understand how grievously Shrier is deceiving the readers of her book.

Catch-22

In chapter one, the author belittles transgender men for not really seeking to be men. She says:

“They don’t want to pass- not really. ..They make little effort to adopt the stereotypical habits of men: they rarely buy a weight set, watch football, or ogle girls… Only 12 percent of natal females who identify as transgender have undergone or even desire phalloplasty. They have no plans to obtain the male appendage that most people would consider the defining feature of manhood.”

Later, in chapter 12, after describing how complex a surgery phalloplasty is, and how likely it is to go wrong, the author admits, “if there is any way on earth to alleviate your gender dysphoria without phalloplasty, it’d probably be a good idea to pursue the alternative.”

So your transgender loved one is left with no good options. According to Shrier, if they are really transgender, they should prove it by conforming to toxic societal stereotypes. Further, either they do not have surgery, and Abigail Shrier (and people like her) can accuse them of not being serious enough to be legitimately transgender, OR they do undergo surgery, and Shrier (and people like her) can say they are clearly mentally ill because no one in their right mind would undergo such a complicated surgery with such a low success rate.

Lying about the lived experiences of LGBTQ+ children and adults

Shrier makes a one-sentence statement now and then, claiming to acknowledge the pain these transgender teens are suffering all the while writing multiple paragraphs belittling and dismissing that pain and claiming that people transition genders to receive a “social status upgrade.”

In chapter 4, Shrier describes a boy named Jamie being terribly bullied. Then she writes a paragraph where all her chosen words dismiss his experience. She says, “But one need not appeal to the case of Jamie…to believe that LGBTQ students might be picked on more than most…and are likely more abused than non-trans-identified kids…reports by activist groups suggest the same.” Here the author uses her words to cleverly introduce the possibility of doubt for something widely known and not disputed by anyone because she needs to belittle the bullying that transgender youth face in order to support her claim that kids are only “choosing” to be trans because it levels up their social status.

In chapter 8, Shrier calls being transgender a “status upgrade,” meaning that teens choose to be transgender because it wins them friends and popularity. But what does the data actually show? Twenty-two percent of transgender women who were perceived as transgender in school were harassed so badly, they left the school because of it.  Another ten percent were kicked out by the school.  The idea that transgender youth have an advantage because they are transgender ignores the actual conditions of their lives. The reality is bleak, as you can read about in this largest study ever of transgender people (click on the underlined words to read the study.)

Lying about the Support for her Claims

In the introduction (pxx) Shrier claims that after her book was published “Clinicians began publishing research confirming it…”  the only footnote here links to a paper published by Ken Zucker, rehashing the one problematic Canadian study (by himself) which is the basis for most of the claims this book makes.  Hardly the huge, growing support Shier makes it sound like that her book is building. 

On page 134 the author speaks of “several long-term studies” that have shown that a majority of children with gender dysphoria have outgrown it.  The footnote only lists one.  Again, it is Dr. Zucker’s study.  There is no other study to support her claims.  Anyone who must continually inflate and exaggerate their evidence is not someone I trust.

Shrier refers to a survey study done by a Dr. Littman which she claims proves that teenage girls are only deciding to be trans because it is currently popular to do so. Dr. Littman’s “study” was actually a survey of an extremely limited set of parents for the purpose of gathering data. This data could then be used to create hypotheses to be researched and tested. Only parent who disagreed with their child about their gender identity and whose children did not express gender dysphoria until their teenage years were included. In Dr Littman’s own words:

“The purpose of this study was to collect data about parents’ observations, experiences, and perspectives about their adolescent and young adult (AYA) children showing signs of an apparent sudden or rapid onset of gender dysphoria that began during or after puberty, and develop hypotheses about factors that may contribute to the onset and/or expression of gender dysphoria among this demographic group.”

Breaking the cardinal rule of sociology that correlation is not causation, Shrier uses the results of the survey to draw most of her conclusions about the cause of the “teenage trans epidemic.” She also mistakes the demographic group of the survey as indicative of the whole population, instead of recognizing that it was a very small and tightly controlled group based on the limits put on the survey by Dr. Littman.

On page 31 of chapter 2, Abigail Shrier tries to get Dr. Littman to speculate on a variety of possible causes of the “trans craze.” Dr. Littman refuses to theorize beyond the limits of her data (kudos to her), but much like a lawyer in a courtroom calling out a list of questions she knows are unfair and will be objected to by the defense and thrown out by the judge, yet calling them out anyway because she knows it will influence the jury; Shrier calls out all her speculations hoping to influence the reader and capitalizing on the fact that there is no opportunity for the defense to object, and the likely fact that the reader is not reading critically, but only to find validation for the position they held when they began reading.

Are college students choosing to identify as trans because being white and rich is “perhaps the most reviled identity on today’s campuses?”

“I wonder aloud if inflated collegiate sexual assault statistics haven’t scared adolescent girls off of womanhood entirely.”

Is “this transgender craze partially the result of over-parented, coddled kids desperate to stake out territory for rebellion?”

A discerning reader will see how these questions show utter contempt for students. In Shrier’s mind, they are all pampered rich kids who are over-reacting to small problems. There is no acknowledgment that any college student would have a legitimate reason for claiming to be transgender. The reality of the danger of sexual assault on college campuses is apparently “inflated,” and the well-known fact that transgender persons are vastly more likely to be victims of assault than cisgender persons is blatantly ignored by Shrier because, again, that would weaken her position of claiming that students are “choosing” to be transgender because being a woman is dangerous.

Distinguished World Experts?

Shrier says (on page 29) that Dr. Littman’s research drew praise from “some of the most distinguished world experts on gender dysphoria.” The foot note quotes tweets on twitter from Ken Zucker, and J. Michael Bailey. 

Dr. Ken Zucker is the author’s favorite expert to quote.  This doctor has been kicked out of the medical practice in Canada for using reparative therapy (a form of conversion therapy). You can read about his coercive treatment method in an article which describes Zucker treating a little boy who wants to be a girl by counseling his parents to never allow him to wear pink or play with dolls. The little boy is described as walking by a store window display and covering his eyes so that he won’t see the pink sparkly things and want them. I’m just a mom and not a doctor, but that method seems like shame and repression to me, not healing.

The other “distinguished expert” who tweeted support for Dr. Littman’s study is J. Michael Bailey.  Some of his “distinguished” work includes advocating lenience for a rapist whose victims were infants and young children.  According to Dr. Bailey, “if he didn’t physically hurt them, and if they didn’t remember traumatically, his actions should be penalized less than had he physically hurt them and they did remember.” 

In a paper published (read online at pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) J. Michael Bailey stated that it was “morally acceptable” for parents to screen for and abort gay fetuses because “selection for heterosexuality may benefit parents and children and is unlikely to cause significant harm.” 

Did you get that? He is claiming that abortion is ok if the fetus is gay. Aborting a gay fetus is “unlikely to cause significant harm.” I guess death doesn’t count as “significant harm” as long as the person who dies is gay? What??

Is this really the world expert whose recommendations we are going to trust?       

Not me.

If you want to know what the science actually shows, and why Dr. Ken Zucker’s research is not to be trusted, I recommend this 9 minute read from Scientific American.  https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-the-science-on-gender-affirming-care-for-transgender-kids-really-shows/

Tell the Truth

If you want to advocate against gender transition for adolescents, you are free to do so. But tell the truth.

When speaking to your child/family member/friend, tell the truth and say, “I don’t have any science to back my feelings up, but I am afraid you will regret your choice.”

Tell the truth and say, “I don’t trust that you understand the consequences of hormones or surgery.”

Tell the truth and say, “I think you are mentally ill, not transgender.”

Tell the truth and say, “I don’t think you know what you really want.”

Tell the truth and say, “I don’t think God wants you to transition.”

And after you tell the truth about what you think, you need to be ready to hear the truth about what they think, and be willing to recognize their conclusions about themselves as at least as valid as yours.

And PLEASE do not use this hateful book to try to convince anyone. Truth telling and compassion are important. This book holds little (if any) of either.

More Sewing Projects

27 Nov

Banana Cream Pie refuses to wear pants because she hates sitting on seams. So I used some fabric that I kept when we moved to make her a skirt. I used an old skirt that she liked as the “pattern.”

Skirt Success

One of the days for Homecoming Spirit week was “Wear your Bluebird Flour gear.” Apple Pie really wanted something to wear, and she pestered me until I figured something out. And then continued to pester me until it was done.

Here is an example of traditional flour sack clothing.

I used the Feliz Apron Dress pattern from the book Sewing Clothes Kids Love by Nancy S Langdon and Sabine Pollen. I’ve made this dress before. It is one of my favorite patterns.

Apple Pie was thrilled, and I really enjoyed making it!

Sewing Pattern Addiction

11 Apr

A $220 purchase in clothing patterns wouldn’t be excessive at all, right?

I deleted out all the extra ones –these are just the basics that I NEED for my classic capsule wardrobe.

Plus they would all look good on my daughters too. It’s an investment.

What was that? When am I going to actually have time to sew all these lovely garments?

I don’t see how that has anything to do with this conversation. At all.

I am in LOVE with the patterns over at Hotpatterns.com

#hotpatterns #idratherbesewing #onlinewindowshopping

Feliz Apron Dresses

22 Oct

Pumpkin Pie and Cherry Pie have had their dresses for awhile…possibly almost a year. Peach Pie finally has one too.

Feliz apron dress from Sewing Clothes Kids’ Love.

I am in love with this pattern and this book.

Just Eat It

13 Oct

I have reasons to make a change:

**I feel nauseous after I eat. 

**My mom had cancer when she was 37 and I am turning 34 next month.

**I’m struggling with low energy & dramatic mood swings.

**My kids need to eat more vegetables.

**I’d like to lose weight.

I have history: I grew up eating healthy.  

**Whole Wheat:  My dad made me eat cracked wheat mush nearly every day for breakfast whether I wanted to or not (on Saturdays mom made whole wheat pancakes.)   Any kind of baked goods, my mom made with 100% whole wheat flour that she ground in her electric wheat mill.  Bread, rolls, pasta, cookies- all 100% whole wheat. 

**No Sugar:  Mom only used honey for sweetening things like cookies.  When she made pancakes, she would make a little syrup on the stove boiling honey & water together.

**Lots of vegetables:  Most of what we ate either came from the garden or it was a kind of dried legume.  When we had meat, it was  a small part of the meal–a little hamburger in gravy to go over mashed potatoes.  The only time I ever saw a chunk of meat on the table was Thanksgiving Day and Christmas day.  Those days we had roast turkey, although one year, I remember going to Grandma Bennion’s house and she had made some kind of a baked brisket.  It was so good. On the menu for dinner at the Hansen house depended on the season.

Early spring: Asparagus soup or Broccoli soup; lettuce
Late spring: boiled potatoes with cream sauce & peas; steamed green beans; milk; cantaloupe

Summer: tomato & cucumber salad; mashed potatoes; corn on the cob; milk;  or garlic & parmesan cheese coleslaw; watermelon

Fall: split pea soup; bread & butter; milk;

Winter: home-canned tomatoes poured over rice & homemade cheese; milk

The eating healthy train is derailed:

Then I left home to go to college.  I ate the cafeteria and reveled in the glorious bounty of meat and gravy, white flour pasta, cookies, pudding, and cake. 

I gained 10 pounds.

Then I went to basic training for the army.  I ate in the Dining Facility. Everything they gave me, I ate.  I was so worried about having enough fuel to work with.  I didn’t eat syrup on my pancakes though–I couldn’t stomach that much sugar in the morning.  I would pour the strawberry yogurt we got on my pancakes in place of syrup.  Saved me time anyway.

I gained 10 more pounds.  But to be fair, a lot of it was probably muscle since I went from not being able to do a single pushup to being able to pump out 42 in 2 minutes. 

Back on track for a little while:

When I got back to college, I suddenly couldn’t stomach the cafeteria food anymore.  I still had to eat at the cafeteria (since I was living in the dorms) but I switched to omelets for breakfast and bagels & salad for lunch and dinner.  I just could not bring myself to eat all those meaty, gravy, fatty foods.  I lost 15 pounds, but I’ve felt guilty about it for a long time–that I “starved” myself skinny. 

Then about 3 weeks ago, I realized:  I didn’t starve myself at all.  I just went back to eating like I did at home as a girl, or as close to it as I could at the cafeteria.  I chose to eat what didn’t make me feel sick: vegetables.  The salads I ate were not just a bit of wimpy lettuce–the glorious thing about a cafeteria salad bar is all the chopped vegetables you want, and you don’t have to be the one who chopped them.  My salads were a plateful of lettuce and broccoli and cauliflower and cucumbers and mushrooms and green peppers with chopped boiled egg and sunflower seeds and cherry tomatoes and baby carrots drenched in ranch dressing and cheddar cheese.  There is nothing starving about that!

Marriage (in other words, keeping the Man happy):

About 2 weeks after our marriage, the Man of the House asked me, “When are we going to have meat for dinner?”

I was confused.  “What are you talking about?  I made chicken soup this week, pizza, hamburger gravy and mashed potatoes. All those things have meat.”

He said, “No I mean a chunk of meat.” 

I did not know how to cook a chunk of meat.  But I had The Joy of Cooking and 2 Relief Society cookbooks full of cream of mushroom soup casserole recipes. I learned how to cook pot roast, country fried steak, pork chops, and 5 kinds of chicken.  After 2 weeks of eating a chunk of meat every day, I decided our budget couldn’t handle that much meat.  Surely people didn’t eat like this all the time?

But a fundamental shift had occurred in my thinking.  I no longer thought, “What am I cooking for dinner?”  I thought “What meat am I cooking for dinner?”  If there wasn’t meat in it, the Man of the House insisted that it wasn’t a “hearty” meal. 

I did manage over time to shift some of his opinions.  I made homemade cinnamon & raisin swirled bread and gradually, week by week, increase the amount of whole wheat flour in it until he liked to eat whole wheat bread.  He insisted that there wasn’t a difference between margerine and butter.  I only used butter.   A month later at his mom’s house, he put margerine on his bread, took a bite and made an icky face.  “What’s this?”  he asked me.  “Oh, that’s margerine,” I said, probably a little too smugly.

I reduced the amount of meat I cooked as much as I could, using only 1/4lb of hamburger per quart of spaghetti sauce and making things like stir fry that had lots of veggies.  But my thinking was still, “What meat am I cooking for dinner?”  

I’ve blamed the weight I’ve put on in the last 13 years on 6 pregnancies, but I think it had a lot to do with all the meat and all the desserts my husband wanted me to cook and my inability to not eat just one serving of said dessert. 

Everybody is ready for a change:

The Man of the House has gradually come to his own realizations about eating healthy.  He knows that the less processed a food is, the better for us it is.  He likes to eat spinach, kale, and bok choy.  And now, he is wanting to feel healthier too.

The Change: 4 changes for 3 weeks: 

**Green Drinks The plan is for the adults to drink 1 quart of green drink and for the kids to drink 1 cup to a pint of green drink every day.  Here is my recipe for now:

2 1/2 cups water
6 cups kale or spinach or beet greens (I’m working up the courage to try comfrey)
1/2 tsp truvia
1/8 of a lemon (peel & all)
2-3 cups frozen fruit
1-2 small apples (sometimes)

Blended in my wimpy Walmart special blender.

I won’t go into all the reasons why this is good for you.  Suffice to say, we are getting more raw veggies than we were before by a long shot.  Kale & spinach are both packed with all kinds of nutrients. 

I bought The Green Smoothie Diet by Robyn Openshaw.  Much of what she said about how you should eat reminded me of what I grew up eating.  It was good to have facts to show the Man of the House and the more I read about the nutrients in raw food, the more I realized how much I had been worrying about cancer.   Now I know what to do about it.

**Less Cow milk.  Being the daughter of a dairy man, I grew up on the gospel of milk is the best food on the planet.  But after I read the research, I decided it might not be so.  I stopped drinking milk ( I was drinking a gallon a week- more than twice what the rest of the family put together drinks) and realized that nauseous feeling I had all the time was caused by the cow milk.  I’m considering getting a goat, to see if raw goat milk would sit better, but until then, no milk is better than processed milk.

**I have shifted my planning mindset back to “What vegetables and fruit are we having for dinner.”  We aren’t going vegetarian or anything, but my focus is on the vegetables.

**I’m cooking with olive oil and coconut oil and a little butter.  No more soybean based vegetable oil.


I also plan on  eating **Less Sugar, but I didn’t manage that one yet.  I’ve realized that  I’m addicted to sugar.

Results:

 After 3 weeks of green smoothies (although I didn’t make them every day- more like 3 times a week), only drinking 1-2 cups of milk per week, and using coconut oil instead of soybased oil:

I feel so much better!  I don’t feel nauseous all the time and my mood swings have dramatically evened out.  (I think the Man of the House is massively relieved.)  Also, by the way,

I LOST 4 POUNDS.  That might sound like a little thing, but I haven’t been able to lose more than 1/2 pound in a week for the last 12 years, and I had to carefully count my calories and exercise until I was red in the face and sweating buckets to do it.   

I lost this 4 pounds (more than 1 pound a week) without suffering; without exercising, without spending hours planning meals and counting calories, without feeling hungry, and I ate more sugar than I should have.  Like I’m talking about a whole bag of mellow cream pumpkins and 2 bags of Lindt chocolate truffles.  (sorry for not sharing, Dear Husband.)  Then there was Julia’s birthday cake and after school cookies and etc. etc. etc. Just think what might happen if I did not eat sugar and exercised a couple times a week!

Now I’m 38 pounds away from what I weighed when I was married and suddenly it doesn’t seem like a hard thing, but a possible thing that those pounds could go away.

 
Hurray for Green Drinks!!

Recent Sewing Projects and happiness :)

28 Oct

**Note I actually typed this post in AUGUST. I’ve just been waiting to get pictures of the skirts I made. As is my usual on top of things and preparedness, I didn’t have my camera with me during the wedding reception. sign. I’m a bad, bad blogger.**

I have found time to sew recently!

I made skirts for my girls to wear to my brother’s wedding reception. I used the Insa skirt pattern from the book “Sewing Clothes Kids Love” by Nancy Langdon & Sabine Pollehn.

I’ve really been excited about this book, which I got for my birthday almost a year ago. I was finally brave enough to try one of the patterns and it worked up very easily–even though the coral brocade was a bit murderous to work with.

I measured my girls and chose their size based on the measurement chart. I recommend this highly, Cutie Pie wears a 3T from the store, but I made the 18month size skirt for her and it fit perfectly. The only caveat I would give is that if your child is close to the top end of the measurement range, go ahead and make the next size up. Peach Pie’s skirt just barely fit.

I traced the patterns with a sharpie marker onto that clear vinyl stuff you get to put over tablecloths. It was easy to trace and worked great. I loved being able to see through my pattern as I placed it on the fabric. The only issue I had was that when I stacked my pattern pieces up, some of the sharpie transferred onto other plastic pieces. I layered tissue paper between the pieces before rolling them up to store until next time.

**You have to keep in mind when using the patterns from this book that seam allowances are not included. I didn’t think I would like it, but it makes it so much easier to tell what size the pattern will fit and for matching directional prints **PERFECT** So I’m loving that now. Plus, I could make the seam allowance whatever width I wanted. Also, I could totally see myself using a quilting pencil to trace the edge of the pattern right onto the fabric so that I had a sewing line and my garment turned out perfectly. I found the directions in the book clear and the patterns easy to follow.

Modifications I made: I did trim the underskirt shorter by about 2 inches so that it wouldn’t be longer than the tulle (which was my brilliant idea to add.)


Didn’t they turn out great!!??

I’m excited to make more skirts with cotton. The Train to Crazy made this pattern with cotton and look how cute!!

I love her fabric choices. Definitely must follow this blog! She has a tutorial on making odd-sized sheets. I’m sew happy 🙂 Also she obviously has a serger that works. **jealous**

I also helped my mom and sister-in-law, Cegan, assembly-line these vests for the boys. (this picture shows about half of the vests we made.)

Jimmy is exactly 10 years and 1 day younger than me, and he is probably my favorite brother. (shhh, don’t tell Matt, he’ll never work on my house again) I got to drive up with Jimmy to St. Louis on the morning of his wedding. We talked the whole way and it was so fun. I’m not telling on myself the brainless thing I did later that day. But it didn’t matter because the whole day was glorious and peaceful and happy. I’m so glad for Jimmy and my new sister-in-law, Tahnee–who seems amazing and is obviously beautiful and smart and has a good sense of humor (or she couldn’t like Jimmy.) They’ve started out right *smiley*

I also made a pointy-kitty for Peach Pie’s friend for her birthday.

You can download the directions and pattern free at WeeWonderfuls.Com. It is a fun quick sew, although I add about a quarter inch seam allowance all around the pattern because the seams are so close! It is a little tricky, but still just a 4-hour sewing project.