Piercing truths, and some yarn

§ August 4th, 2007 § Filed under Everything else § 8 Comments

When I was a little girl, my aunt took me to get my nose pierced. Cool, I thought then, and came back attached to a little gold ring. I had it till I was a teenager, when much of my annoyance against the world in general, and my parents in particular came to be expressed through this ring. I thought it to be the worst kind of rural hicky tradition and unfashionable piece of jewellery they could have foisted on me. Diamond and gold studs were bad enough, but noserings? Come on, Hindi film heroines in milkmaid-damsel get-up wore those. The first chance I got, I took it off and basked in my non-pierced urbanity. (Ears were a different matter, earrings have *always* been cool) My mother tried to tell me about ways to keep the piercing even without the ring, saying, "what if they become fashionable again?" but with strict linearity and progress, I pronounced myself and the modern world done with them and looked down my gold-free nose at all those recommendations.

It is always painful when you have to redo what you needn’t have. It is always more painful to try and heal a piercing as an adult, especially when the memory of the nice one you had adds to the stab. It is the most painful when your mother tries not to look reproachful, and manages to say "I told you so" without uttering the words even once. My sister and I determined sometime back to get the damn things back because they didn’t look so bad after all, but The Ring, it would appear has not yet forgiven us for rejecting it back then. Both of us have bonded this summer over allopathic, homeopathic, ayurvedic, yunani and last-resort-internet remedies. I felt a warm and fuzzy feeling when she confessed that she too was now angrily, but surreptitiously staring at other women’s noses, resenting their happily ensconced studs and rings.

Do-gooders and well-wishers (I am trying not to use the nose-pokers  descriptor here) abound here, and over the last few weeks I have gathered several such remedies and advice about How to Deal With Your Recalcitrant And Angry Piercing. Friends call to ask about it. Strangers peer at it in the market and offer the surefire solution that their neighbour’s sister’s daughter used. These range from possibly effective to positively hazardous (I’m not going to say which is which, or which ones I’ve tried): sea salt soaks, hydrogen peroxide dabs, aspirin crushes, neem leaves paste, honey daubs, tea tree oil rinses, boroline, soframycin, neosporin, fomentation, betadine… the list is endless. Others shake their heads and say, yeh to kabhi theek nahi hoga ji (this ain’t ever gonna work). But I live in hope, as I try desperately to remember other things that I threw out the window, which might come back to bite me in the ass become fashionable again.

To cheer myself up, I went to look for some wool at the Punjab Woollen Co in Munirka Market in south Delhi.

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I was happy that they were open, and that they did not laugh me out of the store for asking for pure wool in the first week of August. The shop is typical Indian wool store – reasonably priced and dyed acrylic-wool blends that wear like iron, with a few brands of pure wool
that are more expensive, and are neatly stocked away in boxes. The price differential means that most people prefer the acrylic for its durability and price. Some Merino is available, but as Mrs. Arora explained to me at great length, for a number of reasons only a few companies manufacture it locally. Knitting and the heavy consumption of yarn is not a hip hobby here as it has suddenly become in the US and elsewhere, so I imagine the high prices of imported wool would put it out of reach for those who could use it, and useless for those who could afford it but prefer to buy readymade
cashmere instead. Mrs. Arora oohed over my Kiri shawl, she showed me some of her sample swatches, and we spent some happy minutes exchanging tips and notes. Bliss. She was too shy to be photographed directly, but you can spot her behind the counter:

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I almost bought a gorgeous fingering acrylic blend in a moss green shade, but then I found a few skeins of fingering yarn in a lovely light coffee shade for a pair of basic socks instead and stocked up on some metal needles. 

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As soon as I cast on for a sock, I’ll be ready to deal with any damn piercing.

8 Responses to “Piercing truths, and some yarn”

  • spudsayshi says:

    OW! This reiterates for me the fact that I have no desire for any more piercings, ever. And the fact that even though I go for months without wearing earrings sometimes, I ought to wear them now and again so as not to have to go through that. Not that ears and noses are exactly the same, but still.

    Hope it heals properly, and you can bask in the glory of your… nose.

    And, of course, happy knitting. When are you heading back to CA?

  • Mel says:

    My nose has always given me enough trouble to preclude attempting to pierce it, though the thought has crossed my mind a time or three. I figure being a man with 8 ear piercings is enough to put me in a fairly exclusive club – even now and especially when I got up to that number 13 years ago. The curious thing is how many little old ladies tell me they love them.

  • Swapna says:

    Ooh that takes me back! The Punjab Woollen store, that is!
    Do do tell me what the blends are (brands etc) so I can look out for them when (if) I go to Delhi again. I’ve only ever found acrylic :(
    Is the wool all imported then? How did you find the prices compared with the prices in the US/elsewhere?
    And I’d also appreciate the actual address of the store so I can add it to my database (although I know which one you mean, I don’t think I could give directions instead of an address).

  • Opal says:

    I used to have 5 piercing up my right ear. Some of them were right through the cartilage. I can’t even imagine trying to get them pierced again! I wish you lots of luck with yours and I admire you for doing it.

  • Heide says:

    Good luck with the re-piercing. Where I live it is the norm to not have one’s nose pierced and I’ve therefore always admired those with the courage to get it done and not care if others do the same or not.

    The yarn store pictures are remarkable and the bright colors and rows of skeins have me drooling. When knitting for babies and small children I almost always choose acrylic or cotton. They wash and hold up better than wool for little ones.

  • Cass says:

    I am so enjoying your blog.
    (sea salt soak. Works wonders. ;) LOL)

  • polly says:

    hope that piercing sort itself out soon, just thinking about it makes me twitch in pain. It’s funny how as teens we rebel against so many things and only embrace them again when we become sensible adults!

  • Nigel Pottle says:

    Thanks for the reference to Punjab woolens. If I need yarn I now know where to go, at least in Delhi. I’ll be in India for four months, but much of it will be in the south. I may be needing yarn to knit socks while I’m on the beach.

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