There is something deliberate about working with needles and yarn. It requires thought, focus.
I started with someone else casting on for me; just a few stitches, so I could re-learn what I had forgotten over the past way-too-many years. I fiddled with holding the yarn: too tightly, and I couldn't get the needle tip between the yarn and the other needle. Then too loosely, and the stitches bulged and sagged. The sides - at first so tidy, the stitches so tight! - became wider and wider as I added stitches to my row by (accidentally!) splitting the yarn.
I just kept knitting.
But I soon learned that my real issue was not getting used to holding the yarn. It was getting used to holding the needles. They didn't feel natural in my hands, like a crochet hook does. (Yarn in one hand, hook in the other & off you go!)
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| beginning |
And then... disaster. The cat jumped in my lap, knocked the yarn to the floor, and my untidy mess of a beginning was undone. Because it all slipped off the needle, and there I was, unable to save it.
And I just started laughing.
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| #justknit |
And this time, I remembered to breathe. I let my hands relax, and my wrists, and my neck. I didn't fret about how to hold the yarn correctly, or worry if I dropped a stitch.
I just kept knitting.
And when I sit down to watch something on TV, I pick up the project, and with no end goal in sight, I knit. Perhaps only one row, perhaps ten. It doesn't matter. My racing thoughts slow down. My breath is easier, my hands relax. This simple practice has become my meditation.
#justknit

