Love Letters
Two years ago, I learned to knit at Christmastime, and my mom asked me if I wanted to look through the trunk of clothing my grandma made for my brothers and me when we were children. The trunk is full of treasures, all of them a little worse for the wear. There is a pink dress sized for an infant with a white yoke embroidered with tiny yellow chickens. There is a dark blue, satin-lined cabled coat for a four-year-old girl. There are matching hats with Snoopy on them, one brown and one green, knit for two little boys. My grandmother was an excellent knitter, and the clothes display her skill.
In my closet at home, I have adult-size sweaters Grandma made that I wear often. I have a green wool pullover with a gray and yellow pattern that she knit for my father — to his exacting specifications — when he was in junior high school. Many years later, he shrunk it slightly, and it has been my favorite sweater ever since. I have an orange acrylic cabled cardigan that I can remember my mother wearing on an autumn walk we took when I was very young. Every year when the leaves begin to turn, I want to find that sweater and put it on. One year for Christmas, Grandma knit six wool fisherman’s sweaters, one for each of her grandchildren. Mine she made shorter, with a V-neck, just because I asked her to. It is the sweater I reach for on the coldest winter mornings.
Grandma taught me to knit once, but it didn’t stick. These days, though, it is pretty much all I want to do. Many of my friends are having babies, and I have been knitting for them, making small, elaborate things that take me days, sometimes weeks, to complete. The babies don’t need these clothes, they probably won’t get much use out of them, and my friends don’t expect them. So why do I feel compelled to knit them? When my sister-in-law, Amy, told us that she was pregnant with twins, I immediately began making them little dresses, felted booties, and a double-sided blanket of my own design that took ages to finish. To be honest, I would prefer for Amy to remain ignorant of exactly how long it took me to make these gifts, because I think she might find it a bit ridiculous. But I didn’t make them for her, exactly. I made them for my nieces, Lilly and Ella, as I looked forward to their birth.
Ann Shayne of Mason-Dixon Knitting wrote recently about knitting a scarf for a friend. Her friend’s daughter is very sick, and in the face of Ann’s utter inability to do anything to help, she began knitting the scarf as a way of offering this woman the only thing she could give: her time. Her thoughts and her good wishes were silently worked into every stitch.*
The act of knitting for babies and children is like that: it is also an offering of time, a message of love, but with the added twist that the recipients can’t possibly understand it and maybe never will. Knitting for babies is a bit like putting a love letter in a time capsule. Lilly and Ella may never learn to knit, and they may never understand that those little dresses are a record of me thinking about them and loving them before they were born. I wore the clothes my grandma knit for me for decades without giving much thought to them.
But things are different now. My grandma has Alzheimer’s disease, and she is dying. She lives in a nursing home hundreds of miles away from me. I wish that there could have been years in which we both knit. When I visited her, I could have showed her what I was making, and she could have given me tips. But I take some small comfort in knowing that at least now that I am older, and now that I am a knitter, I get what she was doing when she knit sweater after tiny sweater for me and my brothers. Every hand-knit baby dress, every sweater in my closet was a gift of her time, her energy, her thoughts. Every one still bears her message of love.
Sometimes the only thing you can do to express your love is to spend your time, to focus your thoughts and your actions in the direction of the person you’re loving. I try to write to my grandma every week. I often tell her about what I’ve been knitting, sending her pictures of finished objects and little bits of yarn for her to touch. This week, I will tell her about my friend Anne, who called the other day to tell me that she had her baby ten weeks early. I will tell my grandmother that the baby’s name is Matthew, that he’s doing well, and that I knit him a tiny yellow hat and mailed it off as quickly as I could.
18 May 2006
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I wrote this essay last year at a time when my grandma’s illness was much on my mind. I found out last night that she died yesterday afternoon and thought it would be appropriate to post it here as a sort of tribute to a woman who was a master knitter and a wonderful and loving person to everyone lucky enough to know her.
* The entry in question is here under March 15, 2006 — which is, incidentally, the very day my twin nieces were born.
March 20th, 2007 at 10:11 am
I’m so sorry to see that you lost your grandmother.
That was a lovely tribute.
March 20th, 2007 at 4:56 pm
I agree, what a beautiful essay - I’m sitting here almost in tears. I’m so sorry for your loss, but I think it’s wonderful that you were able to appreciate her (as a person and as a knitter) in this way.
March 20th, 2007 at 6:04 pm
I’m so very sorry to hear about your grandmother’s passing. I couldn’t think of a better tribute for a knitter and a grandmother than your beautiful essay. Take care!
March 20th, 2007 at 10:52 pm
This entry is just lovely: pure, heartfelt, and elegantly written. As a recipient of some of those baby gifts and a maker of a few myself, I know how much thought and care you put into every one. Even if Gwendolyn never can tell a dpn from a crochet hook, and even when she outgrows her knitted gifts, *her parents* will always know the love and hope threading every stitch. And like all good family stories (including the one you’ve posted), we’ll spin the yarns of her origins and the people who love her for the rest of her life.
Our condolences to your family, and thanks for sharing this tribute with your loyal readers…
March 21st, 2007 at 3:35 pm
You have put it so well. The loss of a grandmother is a very big loss. I’m so sorry. love, Kay
March 22nd, 2007 at 7:46 am
I’m sorry that you lost your grandmother.
I’ve lost my mother 11 years ago, and it lookes like it was yestreday.
After a lot of mourn over, i started to remember the good things that she teached me. And i know she is still present with me when i do some knitting or other thing, pulling my ears. Heheheh
March 26th, 2007 at 12:28 pm
Oh Ruth, I’m so sorry. What a beautifully written tribute to your grandmother. I come from a long line of knitters and it is very sad to me that I never knit with them in actuality, but I am happy & privileged to knit with them in spirit. Alzheimer’s just sucks, but (the way I picture it anyway) now she’s got all her memories back and I bet she is just so proud of you and just loves the fact that you became a knitter too! Big hugs to you and your family - you’re in my thoughts.
August 16th, 2007 at 9:39 am
Found you on Yarnival, what a beautiful post. I am sure that your Grandmother’s spirit lives on through your knitting.
August 16th, 2007 at 9:42 am
What a touching story about your grandma. Thanks for sharing it with us.
August 16th, 2007 at 10:49 am
I also got here through Yarnival. I’m so sorry that you lost your grandmother and I share your thoughts about a gift of knitting is a gift of time and love.
I’m glad you have some of the things that your grandmother knit. I also had a grandmother who knit and taught me how as a grade schooler but knitting didn’t really become my hobby until several years after she passed away. I do have some of her notions which I enjoy using such as row counters and a cable needle. Those things are my ‘knitting connection’ with her.
I lost my father to Alzheimer’s Disease almost two months ago. It is a disease that is very difficult for family members. Like one of your other commenters I now think of my dad as all put back together in heaven.
Again, my sympathies in regard to your loss.
August 16th, 2007 at 11:17 pm
very very meaningful knitting
it touched a nerve as I am sure others will tell you
I found you via YArnivale
August 19th, 2007 at 8:59 am
I found you on Yarnival. I am sorry about the loss of your grandmother. This is a beautiful post. I’ve often tried to describe what knitting for loved ones means. You’ve described it perfectly - an offering of time and love. That is how I’ll think of gift knitting from now on.
August 20th, 2007 at 5:49 am
What an amazing tribute to an amazing woman! My grandma passed away almost 13 years ago and it still feels like yesterday. She’s the one who taught me to knit oh so long ago. When I was home for her funeral, I picked up needles and yarn and knit my first pair of mittens, after an extended knitting hiatus. It made me feel so close to her…not a day goes back that I don’t see my yarn and think of Mama. Thank you for your wonderful words.
August 20th, 2007 at 3:50 pm
Thank you, Ruth, for a very lovely post. Like some others, I was referred to it via Yarnival. It’s a beautiful tribute to your grandmother and to the act of knitting.