Since taking up knitting, I've done a fair amount of
unraveling. For one thing, I'm new enough that sometimes the instructions
confuse me, and I only realize I'm wrong after repeating the error over and
over. For another, if I get the least distracted during a critical section and
lose count, I might cable left when I should cable right, or knit two together
in the wrong place.
Three hats |
Once I even had the experience of not liking the way a
particular yarn worked in a particular pattern, so I unraveled the entire ten
inches I'd done and started over, doubling the yarn with another.
Happily, most yarn is forgiving, and can be unraveled and
reknitted. And I have a local yarn shop where the patient and knowledgeable
staff will sit with me and work me through a tricky spot. I'm there at least
once a week.
Knitting is so analogous to writing it's perhaps one reason
why so many authors I know are knitters.
I've unraveled more than one book in revision. I've repeated
errors over and over (pet phrase, anyone? character tics, everybody?), and
gotten distracted by a subplot or character and lost the thread of the main
plot. I've had to start over countless times. And I've counted on the genius of
my critique partners, beta readers, and agent to work me through a tricky spot.
Partial selfie with cowl |
Like yarn, words - and diction and syntax - are forgiving.
It's the underlying pattern that counts, coupled with what I bring to it - with
every project, there's a bit of difference. Those three hats were knit from the
same pattern, but the yarns and how I was feeling during the project made them
come out with a unique finish, one knit tight, one knit loose, one stretchier
than the others.
It's no wonder that we describe both writing and knitting as
crafts. We craft a novel, and when we get it wrong, we can unravel and start
again. It won't come out the same way each time but with each effort we draw
closer to something we think fully expresses the pattern we want to show to the
world.
4 comments:
I should have known I wasn't the only one to make that connection. Writing and knitting are very similar for me. I have been knitting for almost 14 years and have knitted nearly everything under the sun. Having seen improvement in my knitting craft over the years, it gives me hope that my writing will get better the longer I write :) Thanks!
Heather- I really think knitting strengthens writing. I do a lot of meditating on my stories while I knit. Thanks so much for your insight and for coming by!!
This post is so apt for my life. Only I'm crocheting, rather than knitting. But it's so true. I also think about my story as I crochet. I can solve thorny problems by working with my hands on some other project.
Exactly, Linda. And the vest I'm working on now? Really complicated? Unraveled the whole thing yesterday. But it's better now. I lost a stitch somewhere and it was never going to be right. Kind of like when you feel something is wrong with the story. Take it back a few steps until you get back to the good.
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