Twenty Scarves!

kw box This month we got a box of 20 scarves from a group.

I asked one of the ladies to tell me more about them so that I could share about it here.  Below is the information she sent.

Our group is called “Knit-Wits” at Putnam City United Methodist Church in Oklahoma City.  We started our group in the fall of 2007. We have approximately ten members and meet every other Thursday morning at the Church.  We started knitting prayer shawls for our Church members who are hospitalized or in nursing homes or confined to their homes and in need of comfort.

Over the last three years we have made baby caps and blankets for the Infant Crisis Center.  We have made hats and scarves, pot holders, hot pads, dish cloths, baby blankets and sold at our  Church bazaar in the fall and contributed the money to our Daily Bread food pantry.  We have donated knitted and crocheted items to Skyline, a Methodist Mission in Oklahoma City.

Our Church secretary became aware of Threads of Compassion through a television ad she had seen and mentioned it to our group and I contacted you for information.  About that time, we were looking for other projects to knit and crochet.

I’m so glad that they found Threads of Compassion OKC and I look forward to future gifts from the “Knit Wits”!

kw packages

Here are the 20 scarves, packaged and ready to go!

Planning Ahead

We’ve scheduled our Threads of Compassion OKC Work Days for the first half of 2011!

You can join us in the Potter’s Room at MRCC on the following Sundays from 2-5 PM. These are a fun time to work with others and learn some new skills.

2011 Work Days:

January 16

February 6

March 6

April 3

May 1

June 5

I’m looking forward to this coming year and seeing what can happen with Threads OKC. Our first year was great, and I imagine 2011 will be even better!

Quick Update

We’re ten months into Threads of Compassion OKC, and it seemed like a good time to stop and reflect for a moment.

We’ve received scarves from 28 different people! Most of them live in Oklahoma, but they also have been mailed in from other places.

We’ve received other gifts (yarn, hooks, needles, cash) from 14 people.

As of November 1st we have delivered 166 scarves to the YWCA!

It’s really been encouraging to see this project grow, to have others join me in reaching out to people at such a difficult time.

I look forward to seeing more people join us in creating scarves over during the next several months!

Another great pattern

We’ve been trying out a pattern found on Lion Brand’s website lately and decided we like it! 

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It works up quick and looks great. The only trick is that the yarn needs to not be too thin –the ones designed for baby blankets aren’t great for this pattern.  But any regular medium weight one looks good.

You can find the pattern here.

It’s fun to have partners!

Here’s a picture from today’s mail…

priscilla kelly

This scarf was mailed by a lady that I’ve never met. I think she learned about Threads of Compassion OKC when we were on the news months ago.

I think it is so neat that people from lots of places are all working together to make Threads a reality!

A Sweet Gift

from aunt helenNot too long ago one of my great aunts asked if we could use yarn for Threads of Compassion OKC. I told her yes, we definitely could. So, she got my address and I came home one day to the above package at our front door.

Talk about exciting! I was so curious to see what was inside. After unwrapping it, I discovered it was brimming with skeins of yarn.

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Then, I dumped them out so I could see them all! Here they are:

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I find it so encouraging that through an email I sent to much of my family about something unrelated to Threads my aunt found out about it and wanted to help. I love that technology allows me to share about important things with people, no matter where they live. I think it has been 6 years since I saw this precious lady, and we’ve never even talked about Threads. But she read about it, and wanted to help. How cool!

I look forward to seeing the beautiful scarves that come out of this yarn!

Planning Ahead…

At Hobby Lobby I saw Christmas decorations already!

holidaysYep, they were just across from Halloween and Thanksgiving ones. Seeing all that made me think that “the holidays” are going to be here before we know it.

While that can mean some really yummy food and good times with friends and family, I’m concerned that the general busy feeling of November and December may make it difficult for some people to keep going on making scarves for Threads of Compassion OKC.

And, I’d hate for someone to be at the hospital and not get a scarf and note from us!.

So, I’m hoping that the rest of September and October will prove fruitful for scarf making & donating.

Of course, I’d still love to take packages to the YWCA in November and December, but I’m hoping we can get ahead in the next 6 weeks or so.

Our next work day is October 10th –if you can make scarves by then please drop them by the Memorial Rd. church building that day. Or, we can meet up any other time that is good for you, just let me know.

Scarves in the Summer?

Yes, we still need scarves for Threads of Compassion OKC!

to deliver 31Aug

 

Earlier this week Karla from the YWCA called me because the supply of scarves had gotten pretty low.

 

Last night she met me to pick up the 22 scarves pictured above that had been donated by a variety of people.

Our next work day is Sunday, September 19th from 2-4 PM, I hope to have another great batch of scarves to deliver after that. 

It’s been fun to watch!

My friend Kayla has been helping with this project. 

When she started several months ago in my dining room it had been a long time since she’d crocheted.

Now, she’s working at it like a pro!

Her blog has pictures of her last 2 masterpieces, and they just seemed worth sharing!

You can find them on her blog.

I can’t wait to see what she brings next month!

Why threads?

Now that we’re 7 months into Threads I thought it could be good to share a bit about why it started here.  I wrote most of this months ago, when I had my two minutes on the news to talk about threads of compassion OKC. That chance to be on TV made me want to share some more about why I even began doing this. Here goes…

A little over nine years ago I was raped.  Talk about a surprise, that sure was something I never thought would happen to me! 

Back then I didn’t know how to crochet, and I had no idea I’d be telling the whole world (or at least the part of it that finds this blog) about my experience.  In fact even saying or hearing the word was hard for me, and for my family. What I did find, even back then, was that when I was willing to be a bit open about my experience I came across others who had been through the same thing. No story was exactly the same as mine, but many parts of the experience were. It’s almost like once it was open people kind of came out of the woodwork and said “that happened to me too”.

I can’t explain why people feel shame following rape – it seems to creep in even for those of us who know without a doubt that the situation was not our fault, that there was nothing we could have done to prevent it, that it was the result of some person making evil choices. I think that it has something to do with silence –with feeling like it’s something that shouldn’t be talked about.

But I can say that there is comfort in not being alone, that finding someone else having the same crazy emotions is a great reminder that though life can be crazy that doesn’t mean we have to be; that the turmoil of emotions is often a very normal reaction to trauma. And that sense of not being alone can help remove some of the shame.

So, when almost 9 years to the day after my attack I saw a description of Threads of Compassion on the Lion Brand Yarn website in the charity section, I thought “hmm, maybe I can do that here.” I learned to crochet about 2 years ago with some ladies at church. I’ve loved it –it’s been so fun to make baby blankets for friends. Threads seemed like a perfect way to reach out to others and put my hobby to good use. I contacted the YWCA and they said yes, let’s do it!

Giving or getting a scarf is certainly not a magic tool to healing –but I do think that it can be a step towards it. For the receiver it is a reminder that you’re not alone and it gives you something soft to cling to at a time that everything around you may feel cold and yucky. For some givers it is a way to move forward, a way to say “yes, I was hurt, but now I can help others”.  For others who give, it’s a way to express sorrow that such a horrible thing is happening and to try to offer some assistance. 

For me this has been a great project! It’s encouraging when others give me yarn or a gift card to help get yarn. It’s been fun to help friends re-learn to crochet so they can help. It’s been neat to experiment with new patterns. It has felt like a huge vote of confidence when someone brings me a scarf to give. And, it’s just incredible when I hear back from the Y that people are thankful for the scarves, that some cling to them like teddy bears.

OK, this was a lot to read, and if you’re skipping to the end, the bottom line is: I’m doing Threads because it’s a way for me to offer support to others a time when they really need it.