Tag: Knitting

  • Charity giving – the difference in giving time instead of money (gratitude #46)

    It’s the holidays now, and calls for giving arrive in my mailbox every day from charities to which I contribute and charities I’ve never encountered. My knitting meet-up, the Ann Arbor Stitch n’ Bitch Knitters, is doing a “Knit One, Save One” Hat Drive. We’re knitting hats for low birth weight babies for Save the Children.
    Baby hats

    Sitting down to knit the little cap was just like any knitting project I do. I’ve knit several baby blankets for friend and family’s children, and in each one, it was like I was casting a spell of love and good wishes for the young’un, making a tangible blessing that (I hoped) would wrap the baby in love first and a blanket second. In this case, knitting a tiny hat for a small baby I’d never meet brought the baby to my awareness, and the experience of offering the hat was more intense and lasted longer than the experience of writing a check.

    I did some exploration of the Save the Children site after finishing the two hats, and I have the sense that the baby hats alone won’t do as much as immunizations, nutrition, antibiotics, bed nets, and the like. So why hats? It’s a strategy to get folks involved and aware of the precarious health of these low birthweight babies. You can write your congressperson and/or senators, call on President-Elect Barack Obama to prioritize child survival, or join one of several online Save the Children communities (including Twitter) to become more involved.

  • Fun creative pursuits with family (gratitude #45)

    My in-laws visited, and my mother-in-law and I spent as much time as we could knitting. We compared yarns and brainstormed projects, we exchanged patterns and even traded needles. She had just finished a lacy scarf and lamented that she wanted to put beads on it. I had a crazy beaded mohair, so I borrowed the pattern and started to make it on her bamboo size 13 needles. She had a packet of fun yarns that she was going to turn into a scarf, and she was frustrated with their slipperiness on her aluminum needles, so I swapped her bamboo circular needles.

    I showed her Ravelry.com, the knitting community site to which I belong, so we can continue to share projects and patterns when she’s back home. I missed having her around when I went to the yarn store today to get another skein of the funky mohair to complete the lacy scarf.

    Some things are better shared. Wish she were closer. I’ll have to head on over to my local knitting meetup for more knitting cameraderie.

  • Knitting socks to while away rainy vacation days

    Sock, almost there!What better to do on a rainy day in Nova Scotia than to knit socks? Janet gave me this lovely yarn from Baadeck Yarns for my Birthday – Colinette Jitterbug 100% merino wool. Of course, I went for the fuschia to blue colorway, alizarene. I followed the free simple sock pattern on the yarn’s label, adding a bit for the length of my size 11 1/2 foot. The sock turned out wonderfully, and now I’m looking online at the wealth of Jitterbug colorways available from Colinette, I think everyone will be getting socks this year for Christmas. Let me know if you have a favorite colorway! Sock, front side

  • New Year’s Resolution – enjoy my weekends

    CalendarI thought a lot about my resolution this year. I’d like it to be challenging, but not obviously impossible so I don’t set myself up for failure. I decided I’m going to work on better enjoying my weekends.

    I like the structure and the rhythm of the workday. It organizes my restless energy in a way that unstructured open time does not. The weekend does weird things to me. I meditate every weekday before work. Even though I have all day each weekend day, I typically never quite get to meditating on the weekend. There’s something too easy about procrastinating the important stuff with unstructured time. Somehow I don’t do the things I know will make me happy (meditation, exercise) and instead feel restless and bored. As awful as it sounds, I think I need to schedule my weekends a little bit!

    I felt relieved/vindicated when I saw a recent lifehack.org post “12 Tips to Improve the Quality of Your Free Time” that discussed how people confess that they “felt happier on the job, even though they said they would rather be at home.”

    So this year I am resolving to improve my free time. I am not planning to work on the weekend, that seems like a cop-out. Instead, I want to be a bit more intentional and systematic about my free time. Not super structured, I just want to make sure that I give myself just enough structure to do what I want. Specifically, along with the previously scheduled exercise and housework I want to plan in some activities:

    • find some nonpunitive and relaxing beauty ritual I like,
    • schedule a longer meditation 1x/weekend,
    • study yoga more seriously,
    • read,
    • make sure I get outside – take a long walk in the snow, cross country ski on the golf course (I miss having Gillian around for a ski and conversation partner, I need to locate a stand-in),
    • put some of that restless energy to good use by volunteering somewhere, and
    • scheduling some creative time gardening, cooking, knitting, writing, photography.

    I’m going to start small, by scheduling a few things in advance on weekends this January. I’ll blocking some time for creative activities (garden planning, figuring out what to do with the fuzzy fuschia yarn that has refused to become a raglan crewneck sweater), signing up for a class: winter photography at the Botanical Gardens 1/20/2007, and checking out some local Sierra Club events. That’s probably plenty for now.

  • Personality Profile – Considerate Creator

    So, a bunch of us at work took the PersonalDNA online personality test. They seem to do it right, not asking for personal information up front, providing an interesting experience (not too many questions, not totally superficial, sliders, multi-way sliders, 2-D charts).

    The results were interesting, grouping us differently than I might have predicted. Surprisingly, I grouped with our graphic designer (and others) as a “creator.” Now, I’m a project manager, I typically do not “make” much besides status reports and burndown charts on hours and budgets. I hold a little structure/the larger project view, but that doesn’t fit my idea of being a creative person.

    The more I think about it, though, I do have several pastimes that involve making things – photography, gardening (though with all the change the past few summers, my garden is a bit worse for wear), journaling, blogging, knitting. I spend an inordinate amount of my free time making things, and I really resist structure in those activities. For instance, my favorite knitting reference is The Handknitters Design Book (apparently not pictured anywhere online!) which is a technique recipe book. Allison Ellen provides only a few start-to-finish patterns, but she shares lots of information and inspiration on how to assemble your own patterns.

    Hmmmm. Do I need to get a bit more of that creative spirit into my day job?

  • Baby Blanket

    Roth-O'Neal baby blanket
    I finally finished my gift for Chris & Victoria’s daughter. I missed the Baby Shower, but I did get the blanket complete before the baby arrived.

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