The sky was dreary and hectic as I attempted to get into the car with my arms full. I shoved my crochet bag into the seat and watched as it tumbled on its side, spilling the contents. While I picked up scattered yarn and shoved everything back into the bag, a nice drizzle began to sprinkle the ground.
As we got under way, I reached for the bag to pull out a skein of yarn and discovered, the yarn I needed was missing! I must have missed it when I picked everything else up.
When we arrived home 12 hours later, I found a rain soaked mass of yarn with the bent needle still attached. We had run over the yarn as we left.
I decided to wash the yarn and see if it could be saved. I found a nylon laundry bag for washing dedicates and dropped the yarn inside. What came out of the dryer …… a tangled mess!
Still hoping I could save the skein, I spread the mass of yarn on the guest bed.
I stared at the tangle of thread and smiled. It reminded me of another web of string I had untangled as a young camp fire girl.
My mother was my Camp Fire leader and a quilter. She had a wooden quilting rack suspended from the ceiling. For a fun activity at one of our meetings she created a web of fun. Twine was looped around the rack and left to hang a few feet off the floor. At the end of each string, she tied a piece of candy or a pack of gum or some other small token. It looked like a multitude of prizes hung from that rack. In reality only 10-15 strands dangled. The strings were then crisscrossed and woven through each other until she had created a web with treats suspended at varying levels across the network of twine.
To my eight year old self, it was a treasure hunt. The idea was to pick a string and work to the prize of choice. It sounds easy now, but with 8-10 girls vying for a position and pulling on strings, it was near impossible to predict which prize dangled from which beginning. I wish I had a picture to show you, but I don’t. There is a lovely picture, but it only exists in my memory. The package of Wrigley’s spearmint gum dangled at the end of my string. At that moment the gum was a treasured prize. This has always been one of my favorite childhood memories. As I sit in the floor and work on my tangle of yarn, my heart is happy.
It took hours and tremendous patience to untangle this mess. I considered stopping and tossing the lot in the recycle bin several times. Now I am glad I persevered!
The untangling is done and I will find something special to create from it. Maybe I will create a new memory that will give someone else a smile.


