I came to a point in the middle of my knitting last night where the pattern in the row I was knitting was not matching up with the pattern two rows below. It's lace; the pattern is the whole point. The group of five plain stitches in the row I was knitting had to be centered on a group of three stitches below it, but that group of three had somehow turned into five, with holes intentionally made by yarnovers falling in the wrong places. As I studied the work in front of me I saw that midway through a previous row my eyes had slipped down to the wrong row on the chart and there was much more that was wrong than just a few stitches. I remembered that the previous right-side row had ended with only half a repeat of the pattern. Now I knew why.
There was no easy remedy. Some knitting mistakes can be fixed with just a five or ten-minute digression. To fix this one I was going to need to rip out two rows, which doesn't sound that bad -- except that each row currently holds approximately 350 stitches long. The silk yarn is slippery as a guppy in a fish tank, and the pattern is complicated, so they have to be taken out one by one. When a stitch slips away from me I have to grab it fast and then solve the puzzle of how to bring it back into the pattern.
Mistakes and correcting them. Isn't that a lot like life?
I've long had a rule for myself about mistakes in knitting or sewing: you don't have to fix them before you put the project down and go to bed, but you do have to rip out the mistake so that when you next pick up the work you can go forward rather than back. This has kept messed-up projects from spending an indefinite amount of time tossed into a corner or abandoned altogether. I don't like to get up in the morning and look at what went so wrong the night before. Late last night however I put the knitting down with a couple hundred stitches left to rip out and a long, twisty strand of yarn lying on the couch cushion. It's full of static electricity; it's not going anywhere.
I am a maker. Not in the larger economic sense of job-creator, business person, technology innovator, youthful start-up entrepreneur, etc. Just in the humble sense of always being in the middle of making something: shawls, sweaters, socks, quilts, handwoven dish towels, occasionally even a meal. We are a category of people, we makers. I am more likely to give you something I've made if you, too, make things, because I know you'll appreciate it.
I started this blog on February 26, 2006 -- twenty years ago. I was at a point in life where I was waiting to see what was next. I had sent one child off to college the previous fall; the other two would soon be in high school. My husband was in a nursing home with late-stage dementia. Transitions all around. What do I do while I'm waiting? I make something.
Writing is a kind of making, working with words, information and images to create something where there once was nothing. Fixing mistakes is easier on a screen than in real life, easier even than rearranging quilt blocks. The finished project? Here at The Perverse Lutheran it's often some kind of discovery: a new idea, grace, endurance. It seems to me that I found those things more readily twenty years ago or ten years ago when much of the light shining in The Perverse Lutheran came from Gronks Finding Grace, my son Kris's blog about his journey through ALS.
In 2026 it feels harder to make a path through the weeds, harder to find the clearing. It's a much noisier world. Empathy is overextended; cynicism is easy. I'm tired, I say to myself. I'm overwhelmed. I start blog posts hoping to figure something out but then abandon them.
I'll pick up the silk shawl tonight. I'll finish pulling out those stitches and then reknit them. And tomorrow, maybe, the quilt blocks spread on my dining room table made of print fabric purchased years ago will be joined together with a teal blue solid purchased yesterday.
It's good to be making things instead of being pushed around by tides and time. I hope that making blog posts, too, continues to be a good thing, putting words together to make small islands of grace and light.
FROM THE ARCHIVE
"Shining" from ten years ago. I think "Do the Next Thing" would also be a good title.
A Lenten Prayer from 2006.



