I embarked on my third afghan venture on Saturday after two glorious hours lost in the craft store. Every time I visit, I enter with peaceful anticipation, peruse the colorful yarns and fabrics in wistfulness or indecision, and exit drowning in creative juices.
After a brief hiatus of recovery from my last afghan, I was ready to take another one on. With every project I do, I try to learn a new stitch or pattern, and granny squares have been on my list ever since I started crocheting. Being the nerd that I am, my brain soon jumped to the mathematical possibilities involved in setting a goal for completion. I knew I wanted to finish it by summer, when my job would get busy, fast. So I worked it out:
72 days (12 weeks, six days a week)
181 granny squares
= about 2.5 squares a day
Finishing what I started has never been difficult for me; I’ve always been a self-motivated perfectionist, so the prospect of this neat calculation, while satisfying, held no particular challenge. And then, it occurred to me: what if I put the same kind of time, effort, enthusiasm, and persistence into my prayer life as I did into a mere hobby? Here was an area in which I could benefit from some discipline and perseverance; this could make something mindless, meaningful.
Handmade afghans are heirlooms, and there is something special about the thought of every square representing time spent in a conversation with the Lord, representing the pieces of my life brought before Him. In this way, I could weave a memory rather than just an antique.
This is the beginning of my rosary of yarn, the story of my prayers and squares.
Wonderful, Sarah!
ReplyDeleteWhat an excellent idea! I'm looking forward to more updates!
ReplyDelete~Hannah