Attention

Growing up I would likely have been labelled ADD or even ADHD had the labels been available then.  I am bright enough to have gotten by, gotten both undergraduate and graduate level degrees, however, I didn’t perform up to my potential, often being put in the Honors level course one year, then the average level course the next when I didn’t make as high a grade mark as they Honors level demanded.  Thus went high school.  I had a difficult time being still and focused, I was a leg swinger, foot shaken, fiddler with a pen or pencil, all those activities that as an adult, trained as a school counselor, I recognize as “symptoms” of the attention disorders.

By college, I realized that I had never really learned how to study and after a dismal first semester and after having the most awesome General Biology professor, who taught us how to take notes and revealing what worked for him, I realized that I learn best by repetition and hands on.  I took notes in class on any paper handy and when back in my room, transcribed those notes neatly into my notebook.  What a great trick to have learned.

Even as an adult, I flit from one task to another.  Ask my family.  I can not just sit for long, I pop up and fold a load of clothes, sit and read for a few minutes, jump up and do another task.  Even when sick, I have difficulty staying still.

This presents itself as a problem for me as a knitter.  I can make a sweater, design a hat or scarf, reverse engineer a garment and create a pattern for it, IF it isn’t a lace pattern, especially one that has a stitch repeat of more than half a dozen stitches or more than about 6 rows.  I have tackled many lace patterns and have learned to read a lace chart, not just the written out instructions, though I do better with the written instructions.  I have never, I repeat, NEVER, completed a lace pattern successfully if it has more than a 6 stitch/6 row repeat.  I find myself off in stitch count and not wanting to TINK (knit backwards to remove stitches one at a time) back to the last row that was correct, so I generally end up finding a simpler lace pattern to complete the shawl or scarf and trying to convince myself that I am happy with it that way.  Some of the projects have turned out to be lovely anyway.

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This time, I’m determined.  The pattern is 12 stitches and 32 rows.  I worked on it at knit night last night, but only the simple stockinette with eyelet row part.  That I can do anywhere anytime and still carry on a conversation.  Once home, with hubby watching TV (surprisingly, I can tune it out), I sat and started on the lace part of this cowl.  If I got to the end of the row and the pattern came out right, I whooped and air fived.  I am counting every increase row to make sure that I have just what the pattern requires.

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Maybe I am be premature and jinxing myself by posting this, but I am 6 rows into the lace and so far so good.  I am determined, but I will not work on this project in the car or at a knit group, I just can’t be distracted.

Comments

5 responses to “Attention”

  1. oneshoeshy Avatar
    oneshoeshy

    Good luck.

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    1. mountaingmom Avatar

      Thank you, Thom. I’ll post it when finished.

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  2. Astrid Avatar

    Isn’t it interesting that traits you’ve been able to work with and aroudn because you had to, are now seen as signs of a disorder? I hope you stay determined and finish this pattern.

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  3. Cat Leonard Avatar
    Cat Leonard

    That yarn is so lovely!
    You just described Cat Leonard perfectly 🙂 I knew we were kindred spirits!

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    1. mountaingmom Avatar

      😁😁Yep, that explains a lot.

      Like

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