
I can't sew. I can mend things -- hem a pair of pants, re-attach a button, take in a waistband, darn a sock -- but I can't actually sew something from scratch. At least, I was sure I couldn't.
My little guy, though, was certain that I could. So I go to work.
My mother-in-law hauled out her ancient sewing machine. I scrounged around and came up with a length of green fleece, originally intended to transform a frog costume into a dinosaur costume, and a barely-used fleece baby blanket. I fussed and arranged and pinned and unpinned while he watched me, with absolute faith.
I cut the fleece. Badly. The sewing machine sewed a beautiful 6-inch-long seam in no time, and then jammed. I left the pieces of fleece on the dining table while I supervised a playdate for our 11-year-old son, and then, hours later, picked up part of a sleeve and started sewing by hand.
It took ages, and I sewed one sleeve inside out -- but there was no way I was going to pick out the stitches at 11 p.m. -- and I totally cut the arm holes wrong, but the mutant, patchwork snuggie was done by midnight, made entirely by hand, and not too shabby, if I do say so myself. Or maybe it was horribly shabby, but my 3-year-old didn't care. He put it on immediately, paraded around in it, and was thrilled to have it during our 29-hour-long car ride home.
He was so sure that I could do it. I was equally sure that I couldn't. But I did it anyway, and there's a lesson for me in that.
In spite of this snuggie, I still think I can't sew. Which says a lot about me, actually -- in spite of the fact that I make more than half my living by writing, I still don't think of myself as a writer.
So, what's the point of this snuggie experience? It was a sharp reminder for me of the fact that we really can do anything if we put our minds to it.
I can't sew. But I did. And it doesn't look perfect, but it's fine. How many other things do I avoid because I think I can't do them? Why not try, anyway?
2 comments:
What a great lesson here, Lylah. I think I can't garden because I didn't learn it as a child. I think I can't play music or paint because I haven't done either since high school (I'm 56). But your piece is a reminder to open our minds.
I'm setting myself a challenge: for the next three months, I'm going to do (not try, but do)one thing each month that I habitually think I can't do. Thank you!
Thank you for reading! I'm glad your feel inspired by the post!
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