I told you that knitting has become an anxiety coping mechanism for me but recently it turned into THE MOST STRESSFUL THING ANYONE HAS EVER DONE.

I guess I thought I was the world's greatest knitter. Unstoppable. No pattern too complicated. That's why I didn't even bother looking at this one pattern before purchasing it to verify whether it was within my skill set.

I downloaded the five or so pages, a little surprised that it was five or so pages because most patterns for scarves are only like two pages and most of page one is just giant pictures of some woman's kids modeling the finished product in front of a barn.

But then I got it home and pulled it out and this is what it looked like:


And that was only step one!

But I went to the mirror and looked into it and I says to myself I says "Eli. This knitting pattern is not better than you. You are a strong, independent grandmother."

I enrolled in my local higher ed institution that goes by the name "Youtube University" and began taking advanced calculus until I thought I mostly understood every abbreviation and wildly complicated stitch in the pattern, and then I got started.

Over the next two weeks I knitted and unknitted and knitted and unwound over and over and over. Usually when I make a mistake in a knitting project I can just undo my knits until I get back to the error and correct it. But this pattern is so complicated for me that I am wholly unable to undo a single stitch so when I mess up I just have to pull the needles out, unravel it, and start all over.

At first this was no big deal. I would just be like "THAT'S OK BECAUSE EVERY TIME WE MAKE A MISTAKE IT'S JUST AN OPPORTUNITY TO FIX A MISTAKE!" but then after several days of this I started losing my mind until I had a full on screaming meltdown last Tuesday at 11:30 PM.

I had made it like 30 rows and was finally getting the hang of it. It had taken me hours to get to this point. And then suddenly I accidentally pulled a needle out and lost several stitches at once. I froze and stared at the project, realizing I would have to unwind everything and start. all. over.

The next thing I knew I was screaming obscenities so loudly I'm surprised the neighbors didn't call the police, throwing my knitting project across the room.

Skylar came home from school or the casinos or affairs during the middle of this. He walked in, looked at the 12 feet of yarn that was basically wrapped around all of the furniture, saw my bright red face, and said "so I see this project is still going well."

At the end of each night I make a note in my phone about where I left off so I can pick it back up the next day. If you look at the below, it should be obvious which days were Tuesday and then Wednesday.



I am sorry for the profanity, but also you should know that I edited that crap before I posted it here.

I caught back up over the next few days and things were going pretty well when I brought the project to a little get-together with Skylar's classmates on Friday night.

A few hours into the wild party wherein I was sitting in a corner, knitting, with my glasses all the way to the end of my nose, sipping red wine, and chatting with a lovely woman named Emma, it happened. I made a mistake.

Y'all. I was on like row 35.

Every muscle in my gorgeous body flexed at once and I felt all of the blood rush to my face.

As luck would have it, Emma is an expert knitter. Like, the knitting store I go to displays her projects in the windows. Literally.

She recognized my panic, and in a moment of pure sainthood, took the entire thing from me, went to another room, sat on the floor with all five pages of pattern, and tried to figure out what was going on.

Eventually she came to me and said "can I take this home and spend some time with it when I haven't just been drinking wine?"

I told her she could keep it forever and immediately summoned some adoption papers for us to both sign, but she said that wasn't necessary.

The next day she came to my house and handed me the completely repaired project, giving me several tips for avoiding the problems going forward.

I am naming all of my children "Emma." I'm naming all of you "Emma." I'm going to call every single one of you Emma for the rest of your lives. I'm writing her in for every election I vote in as long as democracy exists. If she ever starts a cult I will immediately join it and give her all of my money.

God bless you, Emma. You deserve happiness.

And now, please enjoy Rebbie's story from Strangerville Live:


This time in Strangerville, Meg and Eli are apparently unsanitary–don’t eat at their houses. And a woman takes the Strangerville Live stage to talk about her infertility.Story:The Woman Who Got Me Pregnant, by Rebbie BrassfieldProduction by Eli McCann & Meg WalterStrangerville is a production of The Beehive


~It Just Gets Stranger