I decided to rip back a book – Kurt Vonnegut’s Cat’s Cradle to be exact. Now, quickly let me assure everyone that I am not actually tearing up a book! I am ripping back the book the way I rip back knitting – and for similar reasons.
I began reading Cat’s Cradle last summer (I enjoy Vonnegut), but then I set it down. I think it was when we headed to the beach for our family vacation and I probably decided to take some lighter reading. Anyhow, Vonnegut stayed home. And then it was September and Vonnegut did not seem to fit my autumn mood. I read other books. Same with Christmastime, Winter, and now it is Spring and Vonnegut has sat untouched.
Now, I rather feel like reading him again. So, I picked up the book and opened to the bookmarked page and felt all at sea. Whereas I knew exactly the page I had left off, I had only the barest shadowiest memories of what was going on in the book where I had left off. And skimpier ideas about what had gone on in the previous pages. I knew if I started reading, I would start to remember – enough, at least, so that the current pages would make sense. But I would lose out on Vonnegut’s brilliance because I would not be reading the book in any kind of consciousness of the book as a whole. I could finish the book, but I would have lost a lot of the meaning.
So, I pulled out my bookmark and “ripped back” to the beginning of the book. I will start over — and so I will get the fullest experience of the book that I am capable of having. And Vonnegut is worth that.
Before I became such an avid knitter, I doubt I would have “ripped back” to the beginning of any book. I would have felt it to be a waste of the time I had spent reading already. And I would have felt that I was entitled to be where I was in the book, that I had earned it by the hours spent reading. And so, I would have had (and did have!) inferior and probably unsatisfying reading experiences.
In knitting, I have ripped back a lot. Sometimes there was really no other choice. More often, I did so because I knew I would be happier with the final product if I re-did a section. And while it is never a jubilant experience at the time, I am always glad I did it. I have made peace with the “wasted hours.” And this peace – and patience — is extending to other parts of my life. Like reading.
Sarah and I like to call ripping back “freeing the yarn.” But it is really freeing the knitter. I am not held to a poor choice in stitch pattern or a mistake in arithmetic. I am entitled to do my work the best I can – even if it means starting over sometimes. And I am happy to bring this philosophy to the rest of my life. Knitting gives me the courage, patience, and confidence to re-do, re-read, re-consider, re-arrange.
And I only hesitated briefly and flinched mildly when I had to rip back four very long rows of garter stitch (and the pick-up-and-knit stitches) on my baby blanket this evening. I had begun a block in the wrong color (oops!) and I could have left it – but I realized that the color arrangement of the blanket would look better if I used the correct color. So, zip! Out it went.
I respect my craft enough to invest the time to correct an error. I can be humble about my mistakes. And the ideas that seemed workable at the time, but weren’t, I can accept as learning experiences. Wow. I can thank knitting for a lot of life lessons!
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