Happy weekending...

First of all, I want to share a glimpse of the birthday celebration and trunk show at Yarns Unlimited last Saturday.  I took lots of pictures, but the revelry, sugar and caffeine must have gotten to me, because they are almost all blurry (sigh), but you can see the trunk show and a little of the shop here at least.

 




This was such a fun event!  The day just flew by with lots of laughter, and knitting and cake eating!  Knitters really are some of the nicest people in the world (if I do say so myself)...supportive, joyous, creative, and funny...these women love to laugh and have a good time...practically perfect in every way!  It's been a while since I've had a day in the shop and this one was spectacular...knitters beginning new projects, hunting for yarn, lots of inspiring people ticking off the items on their holiday knitting list, beginners and true experts, and surprisingly, lots of really young knitters (like 9 and 10 year olds).  These kids are so amazing to me—many of them have worked their way through hats and socks and sweaters and they all have tried their hand at designing for their dolls.  I love how these little people have no fear or inhibitions around their knitting—they seem to be completely free of the second guessing and insecurities that sometimes plague us as we get older.  It makes me so happy to see their enthusiasm and joy in creating, and the fact that they are completely free from negative thinking chatter is a glorious thing to behold!

I've been thinking about internal chatter and creativity a lot lately.  For the past couple of weeks I've been taking a wonderful online course by Marisa of Creative Thursday.  I can't say enough good things about this course—it's really gotten me thinking.  One of the topics that has come up in the course is intention and blogging, which has brought up the question of how much of your "self" you are comfortable sharing online.  I'm still trying to find the balance there.  I don't want this to be a place for venting, I want it to be a place where I will feed my better self and connect with others.  At the same time, I want to remain honest and true...so...I am going to indulge in some shameless self-reflection for the next few minutes—be forewarned and move on if you feel the need—I won't take it personally.

Needless to say, there has been much pondering around here lately...about happiness, the creative journey, my life at home and at large, about balance and congruency.  Two of the questions that Marisa asked in the first week were, what do you love about what you create and what does success look like to you.  A lot to think about, right?  This has been a real chance to step back and take a hard look at what makes me happy, where I want to go and how to get there, how I tick, what makes me wither and what makes me thrive.  I tend to be one of those people who is always running to the next thing—waiting has never been my strong suit.  It's not that I'm not a self-reflective person, it's more that I feel like a total slacker if I'm not doing something productive.  I want to do...fill in all the gaps with activity or productivity—that's not to say that I'm always productive, but it is to say that if I'm not, I am as likely as not, to berate myself.  I don't know if this sounds familiar to anyone out there, but I can't believe that I am unique in this.

I have had some wonderful opportunities in my life and have gotten to go places and do things that have challenged me, given me great joy and even some measure of success.  As a parent, a teacher, and a friend, I know that love, creativity, dreams, and individuality need to be nurtured.  As a mom,  I feel with my whole being, that it is my great privilege to nurture the souls in my keeping, to encourage them,  to guide and empower them, to hold their hand and to patiently and lovingly watch and wait for them to find their way, and then to let them go.  It's not rocket science, I know, but I am struck all of a sudden by the fact that I and, indeed, many of my friends do not nurture ourselves in remotely the same way.  How can my creativity thrive, my best self emerge, or my way become clear if I am perpetually striving to fill the gaps and being critical of myself.  For today, just for today—mind you—baby steps and all—it is my goal to parent myself as I would one of my kids, to give myself a little leash, to encourage myself to make choices that make me feel good—whether that means sitting and knitting on something that may or may not turn into something productive, taking a walk in the woods, doing the dishes or just moodling.  I'm not saying that I want to be an enabler of my own lethargy—after all sometimes what makes me feel good and able to be happy is getting things done and living in an orderly space, but sometimes, in those in-between, not-so-sure times a I might want to try a little tenderness.

Here's wishing you a little tenderness this weekend wherever your path may lead...Alison

One more day!...

Today is the final day to enter the pirate yarn and book give away!!!  Tomorrow (probably after school) my faithful cabin boy will don his pirate gear and randomly select the winner of the give away.  I can't tell you how much we love this kind of stuff around here!  The drama...the pageantry...we happily take any excuse we can get to dress-up and play a new part!  I have a feeling that talk like a pirate day will have nothing on tomorrow afternoon's festivities! 

And while we're on the subject...I can't tell you how much I have enjoyed reading the responses to the pirate give away post.  I love the enthusiasm for talk like a pirate day...really too much fun, and I am truly honored by all of the nice comments about the book and the designs therein.  Writing and designing the pieces for this book was so much fun for me—a dream come true really.  It gave me the opportunity to take leisurely strolls down memory lane to a time to when my three buccaneers were shorter than I am (5'2").   It is so nice to hear that the designs appeal to others and most especially that they appeal to the littles out there.  When I was working on this book it meant a lot of private  knitting.  Normally when I knit I have lots of opportunities to share my knitting all along the way.  Everyone from knitting friends, to shoppers in the yarn store, to complete strangers  see a project at various stages from beginning to end, but with a book the pieces are designed, knitted and then sort of secreted away until publication.  A few people see it in process (and I am ever grateful to those few), but those are usually editors, friends and family, not random people I don't know.  The work goes along that way—the pile of knits growing and growing, without much outside feedback to help you get a sense of how others see and interpret the collection.

Actually, this was one of the hardest parts of the book for me.  You see, I am no good at secret keeping—confidences I can keep, I hold them close to my heart without the slightest need to tell another soul, but surprise secrets like this, not so much.  I'm the girl who practically dies trying to not tell you the cool thing I've gotten or made for your birthday (you know the type..."I won't tell you what it is but how about if I just give you a teensy-tinsy hint").  I'm insufferable at Christmas time and luckily for me my loved ones let me believe that they think it's endearing, although I have a sneaky suspicion that it's really just annoying.  Thus, it felt a little strange not sharing my knitting projects along the way, and now it's nice, really nice, to finally be able to share the book and the designs and get some feedback.  So thank you, thank you—thank you for your time and your kind words—it means so much...honestly, I can't tell you how much, but just know that it's more than a lot. 

I'll be back tomorrow to announce the winner of the drawing along with a little something sweet!...Thanks again! xoxoxox—alison