Most of my work days seem to follow the pattern of “Feast or
Famine.” There are very few days when I am just steadily busy. And today fell
squarely in the famine category. I
performed a total of seven exams….the equivalent of two hours of work in a nine
hour day. So on days like this I have to find ways to keep myself busy so I
don’t end up drooling on my keyboard.
Since I work at a satellite branch of the clinic (and
because of the advent of digital imaging and electronic medical records) there
really isn’t any paperwork for me to do. And of the tasks there are; I can
usually accomplish them in about a half an hour. So that still leaves me with
six and half hours of nothing much going on…This is where having a strong post-apocalyptic
skill set comes in handy. (A.K.A. “Knitting”)
I have achieved a status similar to that of an eccentric
mascot among my coworkers since I moved to this location. I am now officially
known as “The One Who Knits.” (Personally I think it sounds kind of
mystical…like I could be sitting in a Buddhist-style temple dispensing eternal
wisdom as I work the fabric of the universe on my needles of destiny…)
As I worked on a variety of Christmas projects, and now as I
am about halfway through a baby blanket, I have gathered a small “following” of
nurses, MAs, and receptionists who stop by my desk on their way to check faxes
in order to ooh and ahh over whatever I packed with me that day.
It’s definitely a big stroke to my ego every time I get a
comment on how even the gauge is, or how intricate the pattern is turning out.
I’ve even convinced one of the After Hours receptionists to let me teach her
during the slow evenings. (She kept saying how much she would like to knit, but
that she just didn’t have the patience for it. I just had an inner giggle
thinking of all the Yarn Harlot quotes about how much patience doesn’t have
anything to do with knitting…and how most knitters aren’t patient at all. Yours
Truly included.) But today I reached a new level of greatness in one nurse’s
eyes.
You see, despite my best intentions (and the arsenal of
music and audio books I have on my kindle), I do sometimes get drowsy after the
third straight hour or so of knitting. (Sometimes not even that long. Ask
Chrissy—she has photographic proof.) And today I must have nodded off in the
middle of a lace row on the blanket or something; because by the time I got to
the end, I realized that I was way off on my stitch count…way off.
Not realizing that the nurse was right behind me, I muttered
a not-very-ladylike phrase and proceeded to rip back the offending stitches. I
heard her startled gasp and I turned around to blush…I thought she must have
heard me and been offended. But she just rushed over to the blanket and picked
up the bottom as if it were made of glass. After a confused beat on my part, I
asked her what was the matter. She just looked at me and stroking the blanket, said
quietly, “You put in so much work...and now you’ll have to start all over.”
I was so surprised by her response that all I could muster
up was the phrase, “Umm…no, actually.” I proceeded to explain that I was just
pulling back a few rows in order to fix a mistake, and that I would put the
stitches back on the needles in just a second. Apparently, that concept rocked
her world.
She told me that her mother-in-law had tried to teach her to knit
when she was first married. But every time she made a mistake, her
mother-in-law made her pull everything out and start over. After the third
time, she decided she’d had enough and never tried again. She watched me put
the blanket back on the needles and was even more amazed when I fixed the
twisted stitches as I came to them…I have to admit, watching myself through her
eyes, I felt pretty darn cool. And it seems I’ll have another pupil whenever the evenings
get slow. Yay!
So, to paraphrase the Yarn Harlot once more: there are plenty of
other really scary things in life to be afraid of, don’t be scared of string
and needles. Knit boldly on! (If nothing else, it can spare you six hours of
mind-numbing boredom on a slow workday!)
4 comments:
Look at you! You've posted three days in a row! I'm enjoying getting to know you a little better. :)
Oh how I do love a good knitting yarn... (Ahhh ahh, you see what I did there?) :) Actually my favorite thing about this post is that it was only about a year or so ago that you were coming to me to rip back and fix mistakes and now the student has become the master. Knit on Grasshopper, knit on.
Thanks for the comments you guys! Such warm fuzzies :)...
Love your stories!! Oh, miss you guys! It should be yours and Chrissy's goald to spread knitting happiness every where you go. Its a dying art form, KEEP IT ALIVE! :)
Post a Comment