Finally! After three months away from my sewing machine due to life events, health challenges (chronic back pain) and my looming book deadline (read more about that in my next post), I've been sewing again! And, after a very long hiatus, I've returned to meditating. That the two "events"
coincide is a joy to contemplate, and in doing so, I've found how related they
are. Serendipity? Perhaps!
In the process, I've quietly re-discovered that sewing can have the same qualities as a quiet meditation. In meditation, you try to turn your attention to your breath—breathing in and breathing out—returning to that rhythmic rotation when your mind wanders.
When you sew by machine, the needle goes up and down, up and
down, just as the breath goes in and out, in and out. The calmer you are when
you sew, the slower you go, ensuring seams that are true and stitches that are
straight. With hand sewing, which I find even more meditative, it's the hand moving
the needle into and then out of the fabric in a soothing, rhythmic pattern that creates the "meditation."
If you are at all like me, it's not uncommon to find yourself "multi-tasking"
while you meditate or while you sew. The mind wanders while you meditate, while
you continue to see where it goes and then lovingly bring it back to the breath. And while
sewing, whether by hand or machine, it's easy to lose focus on the in-and-out or the up-and-down of the needle as you the needle or the fabric with your hands. What's for dinner:, what will I make
next; how fast can I get this thing finished; why can't I
get this right? And so many more distracting questions and observations. Your focus gets fractured and the results of your stitching just don't measure up to your expectations. Worst of all, frustration sets in because you must
rip out and redo seams.
When I was teaching sewing seminars all over the country in
the early 1980s, one of things I talked about was learning "how to sew
fast," so the sponsoring stores could sell more fabric and the sew-ers could make
more clothes. (Note: I use sew-ers instead of sewers, for obvious reasons of pronunciation; I just don't like the new word "sewist" that
everyone seems to be adopting. I'm a traditionalist, through and through.)
Now I realize that more wasn't really better and I wasn't really enjoying the process—because inevitably, I spent lots of time ripping out bad
stitching. Now I know that slowing down and breathing in and out along with the up-and-down or in-and-out of the needle as I go,
may mean I get less done, but I'm happier with the results because I've
eliminated the frustration of sewing do-overs! And, ultimately, slowing down
means less unstitching.
Ah, just stitch and breathe, stitch and breathe, stitch and
breathe, and enjoy the journey!
When I take the time to slow down, breathe and allow myself to "live" the
process, I enjoy it more and I am happier with the results—plus sewing do-overs are
fewer and I don't have to spend the time for them!
Ah, just stitch and breathe, stitch and breathe, stitch and
breathe--and enjoy the journey! I think I'll just go and do that right now!
Until next time!
Keep smiling and sewing,
Barbara
1 comment:
I love the 'stitch and breathe'. I was thinking of inncorporating the text into a wee wallhanging I'm creating. Whether it works or not is a whole different story but the words resonate with me and that sall that matters at this point.... ;-)
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