Well, I took my knitting (a dog coat as I recall) and the
first person to spring me was dear Joan, the housekeeper. Soon we were engaged
in a lively exchange about wools and patterns and the need to have something to
do while doing something else – knitting while watching TV, listening to music,
talking around the fire. During one of our corridor conversations we were joined
by one of the leading lights of Varuna whose eyes lit up with enthusiasm about knitting and
asked for the pattern we were at that stage discussing.
You can’t categorise knitters. They spring up in all manner
of places and professions. Knitting lets ideas in, allowing them to grow and
branch out in all sorts of directions. It is often while knitting that I see
solutions for plot problems in my writing. ‘Ha! I know – I’ll make Sebastian
the real father!’
Andrea Goldsmith knits and knitted her way right through the
writing of The Memory Trap. She says: ‘Knitting is
one of the few constructive occupations that allows you, simultaneously, to do
something else equally constructive. Last winter for example, I knitted a
poncho-cloak affair (in a beautiful maroon wool that felt like cashmere) while
working my way through a few of the several thousand requiems that have been
written in the past four hundred years. A vest for a friend took me through
much of Schubert’s piano music.’ http://andreagoldsmith.com.au/category/passing-thoughts/
My good friend Margaret B. is a knitter and also a quilter
and a seamstress. She and I knitted up over 30 dog coats between us for the Animal
Aid shelters last winter. She also writes poetry, memoir and - oh, did I
mention? - has a Ph. D. in Sociolinguistics in which she lectured at university level for years. At the height of the Fifty Shades blitz she knitted me this tea cosy
for my birthday – Fifty Shades of Blue.
I’m still a bit intimidated by the prejudices against
knitters. Despite training it to and from the city 3 times a week I still don’t
have the courage to knit on the train. A few do and I’m full of secret
admiration. ‘Put your money where your mouth is,’ do I hear you say? When it happens I’ll let you know.
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