The Deepest Thing Inside

Before you know kindness as the deepest thing inside,
you must know sorrow as the other deepest thing.

–from Kindness, by Naomi Shihab Nye

This week, I have been overwhelmed as I’ve watched and experienced our democracy in action. I have never been a particularly political person and, except for the year I lived overseas, I have never really appreciated or acknowledged what being an American means to me. Very quickly and very clearly, though, I am now recognizing what is at stake.

Instead of hiding behind fear and confusion, I am learning to lean in: I am asking questions when I don’t understand; I am engaging in honest, open dialogue with everyone, even those who disagree; I am marching for what I believe in; I am trying to avoid hyperbole; and always, I side with what is kind and just. I respect others who do the same.

With this focus in mind, I am ready to launch my second shawl auction. For this auction, all proceeds of the winning bid will go to the ACLU. I am also committing to matching the winning bid with my own donation to the ACLU up to $200 (but, of course, I’m open to bidding going higher…). 🙂

This shawl really is one of my very favorite shawls I’ve ever knit. It is the Amulet Shawl, by Helen Stewart. It is knit out of Madelinetosh Merino Light, a 100% merino wool, and I used gold glass beads. It is easy to wear, just the right size, and has lovely drape and just the right amount of lace. It would look equally lovely draped around your shoulders or accenting a favorite armchair.

Please feel free to share this post with anyone and everyone, because the higher the bidding goes, the more impact this one beautiful shawl can have.

  • The opening bid starts at $50 and begins NOW.
  • Please bid in whole dollar amounts.
  • All bids need to be within the comment thread of this blog post in order for everyone to keep track of the highest bid.
  • I will close the auction at 6:00 PM MST on Friday, February 3rd.
  • When the auction is over, I will send the winner an email; the winner must donate directly to the ACLU within 48 hours and then forward the confirmation email to me as proof; I’ll coordinate getting the shawl to you by February 14th.
  • If the winner lives away, I will cover the cost of shipping the shawl via Priority Mail.

Here’s hoping this idea takes flight… Much love to all of you…and happy bidding!


The lovely Maria, in her new Jujuy Shawl:

Our Call to Share

“We are called upon to use our gift, our gift we have to share with the world.”   –Terry Tempest Williams

Here I am, ready to begin this year with renewed focus, an open willingness to take risks, and great optimism about the impact many small actions can have.  As a knitter, I am well-versed in what a million different tiny stitches, created one at a time, can create. I have many sweaters, hats, socks, and shawls to show for it in fact.

As a result, I have found myself in a position of abundance. Quite honestly, I have more shawls than I could ever hope to wear. Creating these gorgeous wings of wool, I’m finding myself feeling weighted down by the sheer number of them. I’m ready to let some of them take flight and find new shoulders to warm, new bodies to embellish.

It is not enough for me to give them away, though, or even just to sell them. As I knit, I feel a deep sense of purpose, clarity, and peace. To sell them for profit negates the beauty of the shawl for me. Instead, I want my knitted shawls to continue creating that peace in this world, carrying with them all that I felt while knitting them to the recipient and even to the broader world.

My idea is this: I will auction off one shawl at a time, committing to auctioning six shawls over the next three months, and all the money will go towards a charity or cause of my choice. Once the winner has been notified and donates the winning bid to that charity, I will pass the shawl along into the hands of the kind winner. If the winner lives away, I will cover the cost of shipping the shawl via Priority Mail.

Every shawl I auction will be knit out of the very best yarn, will be free of errors, and filled with good karma.

The first shawl is the Jujuy Shawl. This shawl is knit out of Dream in Color Smooshy with Cashmere, a gorgeous blend of merino wool, cashmere, and nylon. I knit this shawl along with an amazing group of women in coordination with my first ever Knitalong. Because this shawl embodies the strength, comraderie, and kindness of women, all proceeds of this shawl’s winning bid will go towards Planned Parenthood.

Please feel free to share this post with anyone and everyone, because the higher the bidding goes, the more impact this one beautiful shawl can have.

  • The opening bid starts at $50 and begins NOW.
  • Please bid in whole dollar amounts.
  • All bids need to be within the comment thread of this blog post in order for everyone to keep track of the highest bid.
  • I will close the auction at 7:00 PM MST on Monday, January 23rd.
  • When the auction is over, I will send the winner an email; the winner must donate directly to Planned Parenthood within 24 hours and must forward the confirmation email to me as proof; I’ll coordinate getting the shawl to you by February 1st.

Here’s hoping this idea takes flight… Much love to all of you…and happy bidding!

2016 Projects in Review

At the end of each year, usually just a few weeks before Christmas, I compile all the photos my family took throughout the year and create a “Best of” Photo Book that we give to our parents and keep one for ourselves. Every year, we seem to have more and more photos, especially since all four of us actively take pictures now on all our phones and our “real” cameras. It’s always a huge undertaking at a very busy time of year, and every year I complain and stress and lament about why I don’t work on it earlier and throughout the year.

And yet, every year, once I’m actually working on our book, I find such joy in reliving our year through the pictures. Trips I had almost forgotten even taking come back to me in full technicolor detail, I revisit people we got to see, and am reminded of beautiful moments which become even more beautiful upon the recollection.

It is only upon actually hunkering down and doing the work that I realize how important it is to take the time to reflect on our lives. I have written before about how busy my family is and how frenetic our lives can be, but upon reflection, I can appreciate all the beauty that was there. It has become an almost sacred act for me to create this book, keep it on our coffee table for a while, and then place it on its shelf next to the ones that came before.

As a knitter, I’ve found it equally fulfilling to look back on my year’s projects and appreciate all that I have created throughout the year. This doesn’t involve anything nearly as laborious as creating a book, but is usually as simple as me going to my Ravelry project page and adding tics to a post-it which I then wander around my house with exclaiming in shock to anyone who will listen to me over how much more I knit than I even thought.

 

Since I have a blog this year, I thought I’d use this space to more publicly exclaim in shock and catalog my finished projects (because I really can’t believe I knit so many things!).

Here’s hoping you care a little more than my fourteen-year-old–and that you don’t think I’m too nutty after I let you look inside my crazy…

Projects Finished in 2016

In total, I knit thirty-three things, I frogged one sweater (of dye-lot-issue-fail-fame) and I have six things that I started this year (or earlier) that I have yet to finish.

Knowing all I have knit this year, I really am shocked (and a little embarrassed). Any sane person would recognize I probably have enough knitwear, right?

And yet, I admit that I can’t wait to cast the next thing on…

With that, I wish everyone a Happy New Year filled with warm wool, successful projects, and lots of opportunities to learn new skills. We all have lots left to learn, don’t we? And that is the very best news of all!

Recomposed

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Last night I had to pleasure of hearing Terry Tempest Williams speak and read from her recent novel, The Hour of the Land. Without my even quite knowing it, Terry Tempest Williams has been my guide throughout my adult life in Utah. Her words show me the importance of place and its connection to identity. She inspires me to actively appreciate, engage, and defend the land where I live and love.

The first book I read after moving to Utah was Williams’ Refuge, a book firmly  rooted in family and place. Although this state was new to me, it was her home and she introduced me to it. I got to know her and her husband, Brooke, as I served them bagels in Sugarhouse, watching the sun rise over the majestic Wasatch Mountains every morning. It was then that I began to appreciate the rhythms of light, the stability of the mountains, and their relationship with one another. It was a love affair quickly begun and yet has remained steadfast and true.

For the next twenty-two years, I have returned to her books, falling in love over and over again with her voice, her wisdom, and her passion for place. She continues to remind me what matters.

And so, it was without hesitation that I bought tickets for Adam and I to hear her speak on the night of December 12th. I knew she would be good. I knew I would love hearing her read and I was excited to get a copy of her newest book.

What I didn’t expect was how perfect her words would be for me to hear right now. She voiced my fears; she captured the beauty of what is worth protecting; she created a community within the space of sixty people where even if we may not all agree politically, we all care deeply about our land and protecting what  is at risk. For the first time since the election, I felt completely safe within a community of people. I hadn’t realized I was missing that so much, and it literally brought me to my knees, tears flowing down my cheeks.

You see, this month has been a difficult one. Although I have no desire to make this blog a political space, I will admit that not wanting to address our current political climate here has rendered me speechless over the past month, because I am at a loss. I am honestly struggling with comprehending our world and am trying to make sense of how to function within it. Our world no longer makes sense. Everything I hold truly dear is under attack. Each day brings even more bad news. Each appointment, each headline is like a kick to the gut. I am simultaneously infuriated, terrified, incredulous, and depressed. I find myself caught between wanting to be–needing to be–informed, and yet for sanity’s sake sometimes opting to ignore it all for a while. I have, so far, deleted the Facebook app off my phone four times since the election. I never stay away too long, but just the act of deleting it helps me regain my balance and a needed sense of peace.

Last night, within the space Terry Tempest Williams created, I felt allowed to grieve and experience my fears within a community of people. What felt profound was the silence within the group. It was not a discussion. I didn’t need to defend or assert my thoughts or hear anyone else’s. We were all just there together.

Listening.

Contemplating the land and this place we call home.

Being called upon to use our gift, our gift we have to share with the world.

To be awake.

To be ready.

And, most importantly, to remember that “from love we lose nothing.”

So, it is with this spirit, thinking of this purpose and these words, that I will pick myself up, dust myself off, and move forward. I will remember what matters. I will be kind to myself and to others. I will listen and I will speak.

Within this new world reality, I will hold what I care for and about close.


Recomposed by Max Richter: Vivaldi, Spring 1


Terry Tempest Williams – November 9 2016

It is morning. I am mourning.
And the river is before me.
I am a writer without words who is struggling to find them.
I am holding the balm of beauty, this river, this desert, so vulnerable, all of us.
I am trying to shape my despair into some form of action, but for now, I am standing on the cold edge of grief.
We are staring at a belligerent rejection of change by our fellow Americans who believe they have voted for change.
The seismic shock of a new political landscape is settling.
For now, I do not feel like unity is what is called for.
Resistance is our courage.
Love will become us.
The land holds us still.
Let us pause and listen and gather our strength with grace and move forward like water in all its manifestation: flat water, white water, rapids and eddies, and flood this country with an integrity of purpose and patience and persistence capable of cracking stone.
I am a writer without words who continues to believe in the vitality of the struggle.
Let us hold each other close
and be kind.
Let us gather together and break bread.
Let us trust that what is required of us next will become clear in time.
What has been hidden is now exposed.
This river, this mourning, this moment — May we be brave enough to feel it deeply.

Yet Four More Beautiful Days

It continues to surprise and delight me how very easy it is to find beauty when I take the time to notice it. I’m counting on all this beauty to help get me through this coming week. Please join me over on Instagram where #thingofbeautyalong is helping flood our world with the good instead of the bad. We have already accumulated over 130 posts in just three weeks, which delights me to no end. Keep ’em coming!

November 3rdimg_3958 Needlepoint Joint. Back Door. #thingofbeautyalong

November 4thimg_4025 Sky. Bursting. #thingofbeautyalong

November 5thimg_4049I have the deepest respect for the Juniper tree, sinking its roots into the harshest conditions and flourishing as if it’s no big deal. #thingofbeautyalong

November 6thVersion 2This guy. My love, my light, my friend. #thingofbeautyalong

Mountain Sunrise

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I was just realizing this morning that I have lived in Utah just over half of my life. In those twenty-two years, I have grown used to many things, and yet I do not think I will ever tire of watching the way light mingles in and against the mountains. It still mesmerizes me every single day.

Growing up in Oregon, I don’t remember light being quite this interesting. When the sun rose, it was just up. When the sun set, it gradually just grew dark. There were so many trees everywhere really that I don’t even remember watching the sun actually rise or set unless we were at the coast (which really is a phenomenal experience worthy of poetic ramblings for another day).

But here, in Utah, the sun rises in stages depending on where you are against and in the mountains. Just to the west of this picture, the sun rose almost an hour ago, and yet here, right against the mountain in this particular spot, I have the privilege of watching the sun rise against the mountains to the north while still in the shadows myself for yet another half an hour.

It reminds me of camping as a girl, that slowing down and taking the time to appreciate the beauty of nature all around me. I love that I have the opportunity to do that here just out my back door.

(Immediately after taking this picture, Maggie took off after a deer loping across the path; I was hoping it would show up in the photo…)

Look Up

Today was a particularly rough day.

Perhaps it was just the inevitable lull that comes after the flurry of getting ready for and hosting two big events in our little home this weekend, but everything about today just felt harder than usual. I just felt raw and weak and anxious. And tired. Really, really tired.

Actually, I think my entire family is tired.

We are the kind of family who I’m sure many people think has our shit together. And we may have it more together than some sometimes. But, at the same time, often our lives feel like we’re spinning plates on canes, keeping our eyes and energy focused just on those plates, keeping them moving lest they all come crashing to the ground. We each do so much. And, I think every single one of us thinks we should be doing more. Each of us worries about what we’re not doing and questioning the choices we’ve made. All of the time. It’s exhausting.

And, I know we’re not alone. We are in no way unique. But, sometimes it takes recognizing that fact, over and over again, to make days like today a little easier. Everyone has their own struggles, their own anxieties and doubts, their own kind of busy, that makes some days just plain hard.

Sometimes all it takes is taking the time to look up. img_4005

I almost missed this sky. I was so focused on filling out my planner and catching up with social media on my phone as I waited for the girls to get out of school, lamenting about my stomach hurting and about the optical shop screwing up my new glasses, that I was holed up in my car as if my world existed only within the confines of my CRV.

Fortunately, my world is much bigger than that. Thankfully, I looked up with enough time to see this amazing sky and remind myself of that.

Catching Up on All the Beauty…

Here are the photos I posted on Instagram in the past two weeks that didn’t make it to the blog:

October 23 
img_3921-1A bit of honey harvest  #thingofbeautyalong

October 24
img_3946Democracy   #thingofbeautyalong

October 26img_3918Doesn’t matter the season, this is perennially one of my very favorite spots on the mountain.   #thingofbeautyalong

October 28img_3952More Mags in the mountains   #thingofbeautyalong

October 29img_3964 Fall is just showing off now. Beauty is absolutely everywhere.   #thingofbeautyalong

October 30img_3969Spending the day baking fresh soudough bread and making pots of soup for Halloween night is one of my favorite traditions.   #thingofbeautyalong

(Better) Late (Than Never?)

(For more description on #thingofbeautyalong, please refer to this post.)

I cannot help myself. These prolific Maximillian Sunflowers deserve another post.
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Like clockwork, every year they surprise me with their tremendous growth and unfortunate timing.  I planted some seeds a few years ago, have given starts to multiple neighbors and friends, and yet every year they multiply by the hundreds. They grow all summer long, slowly and yet aggressively, without any additional water beyond the infrequent rain they receive during the arid Utah summers. They grow to heights that reach well over seven feet tall, with twenty to thirty blooms per stalk, often growing so tall and full with blooms that their stalks can’t handle their own weight, causing them to flump over pathetically.

I always feel sorry for them, blooming so big and so late. It’s almost like they’ve put so much energy into impressively growing that they’re late to their own party. By the time they bloom, it’s usually well-past anything else blooming in the garden, leaves are falling, and most years they burst open right before wind, hail, rain, or snow prematurely end their season.

Of course, this makes me love them, too. I love that they seem to spend a summer of effort in order to be my garden’s masterpiece, and yet if they just didn’t need to grow quite so big or develop quite so many blooms, they could bloom earlier and last longer.

But that’s not the way of the Maximillian Sunflower. So I will just continue to love these giants for as long as they last each year.